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Macau and Hong Kong: Convergence or Divergence? An Analysis of the 2023 Macau National Security Law
In: 54(1) Hong Kong Law Journal (2024) 55-65
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Book Review Essay: Neil J. Diamant. Useful Bullshit: Constitutions in Chinese Politics and Society (Cornell University Press 2021)
In: 22(2) International Journal of Constitutional Law (2024)
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Rights Movements, Civil Disobedience, and Civil Unrest: Social Movements and Constitutionalism in Mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan
In: Handbook of Constitutional Law in Greater China (Routledge 2023) 204-220
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A Chinese Law Wedge into the Hong Kong Common Law System: A Legal Appraisal of the Hong Kong National Security Law
In: Vol 21(1) Northwestern Journal of Human Rights (2023) pp.43-108
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Working paper
The Hong Kong National Security Law: The Shifted Grundnorm of Hong Kong's Legal Order and Its Implications
In: University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law Research Paper Forthcoming
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Democratic Legitimacy vs. Rule of Law: A Comparative Study of Oath-Taking Controversies in Hong Kong and Taiwan
In: Democracy and Rule of Law in China's Shadow(Hart, 2021) pp 49-71
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Beijing's "Rule of Law" Strategy for Governing Hong Kong: Legalisation without Democratisation?
In: China perspectives, Volume 2019, Issue 1, p. 2333
ISSN: 1996-4617
Beijing's "Rule of Law" strategy for governing Hong Kong: legislation without democratisation
In: China perspectives: Shenzhou-zhanwang, Issue 1, p. 23-33
ISSN: 2070-3449, 1011-2006
This paper examines the evolution of legal strategies that the central government has used in managing Hong Kong affairs in the past three decades. It demonstrates that the Beijing government appears to have successfully employed the tactic of "legalisation without democratisation" to neutralise political resistance, to resolve thorny issues, and to stifle pro-independence voices. However, as Beijing's legal strategies for Hong Kong have become more hands-on and assertive, the flaws and instrumentalism of Chinese-style "rule of law" have become increasingly salient, giving rise to deepening conflicts with the Hong Kong common law system. Legalisation without democratisation has given rise to a worrying trend of rising authoritarian legalism in Hong Kong. (China Perspect/GIGA)
World Affairs Online
Beijing's 'Rule of Law' Strategy for Governing Hong Kong: Legalization without Democratization
In: China Perspectives, No.2019/1, pp 23-33
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Law-Oriented Lawyering vs Political Lawyering: A Comparative Study of China, Taiwan and South Korea
In: Hong Kong Law Journal Volume 48:2 (2018)
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Book Review: Human Rights in China: A Social Practice in the Shadows of Authoritarianism
In: Asia-Pacific Journal on Human Rights and the Law 19 (2018) 69-79
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《论政府》译者言 (Introduction on James Mill's Essay on Government and Reply to T. B. Macaulay)
In: 朱含译:《论政府》(詹姆斯·密尔著)(商务出版社2016)
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A Divided Society: Chinese Public Opinion on Resistance Movements, Democracy and Rule of Law
In: Critical Neighbors: Sunflower Movement and Umbrella Movement (London: Routledge) Chapter 10
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