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Former Scholars, Fellows, and Research Associates

The Paul Tsai China Center’s faculty, fellows, and permanent staff direct and guide our many activities and projects, both at Yale Law School and in China. Each semester the Center also welcomes Visiting Scholars from all over China. Student Fellows are involved with many aspects of our work, collaborating with China Center staff on a variety of legal reform and U.S.–China relations projects.

Fall 2023

Zining Jin
Zining Jin is an influential Chinese scholar of Chinese administrative law and environmental law, with a special emphasis on environmental risk regulation and the relationship between public and private law.  Prior to 2021, she was a Professor of Law at the Peking University School of Transnational Law in Shenzhen, where she taught for over a decade. She is currently a Faculty Research Fellow of Law at Peking University Law School in Beijing.  She has published leading books and more than 40 articles in peer-reviewed academic journals, and has translated into Chinese significant Western legal works. While at the Paul Tsai China Center at Yale Law School, Professor Jin will research lessons for China from the experience to date with carbon emission trading systems, and their relation to climate change.

Fengli Wang
Since 2014, Professor Fengli Wang has been a scholar at the Hebei Academy of Social Sciences, where she focuses on the sociology of the family and vulnerable groups in China, including gender/sexual minorities and people of Catholic faith. During her doctoral studies at the China Academy of Social Sciences, she assisted Professor Li Yinhe, China’s pioneering scholar of gender and sexuality research, in editing several books on the protection of women's rights and on homosexuality in China. Professor Wang’s research informs policymakers and advocates for improving the living conditions for vulnerable groups. At the Paul Tsai China Center, Professor Wang will research the development of legal protections for diverse families.

Daojiong Zha
Daojiong Zha is a Professor in the School of International Studies and the Institute of South-South Cooperation and Development, Peking University. His work focuses on non-traditional security studies, international political economy and China’s international economic relations, and his specific areas of expertise include energy, cross-boundary water management, development aid and public health.  He has published extensively in these fields.  He studied at the University of Hawaii and the East West Center, where he earned a Doctorate in Political Science. Before joining the faculty of Peking University, he taught in the University of Macau, International University of Japan, Miyazaki International College, and Renmin University of China (2003-2007). 

At the Paul Tsai Center, Dr. Zha will study issues pertaining to global development and areas for Chinese and American collaboration.

Hui Zhou
Dr. Hui Zhou is an Associate Professor and the Deputy Director of the faculty of Cyber and Information Law at the Institute of Law, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.  His main fields of work are data governance and the regulation of artificial intelligence (AI). Dr. Zhou has participated in the drafting of impactful legislation, including China's Personal Information Protection Law and China’s first draft model law on artificial intelligence. He engages with government regulators, private sector entrepreneurs, and other academic experts in the course of his work. As the Standing Deputy Secretary General of the China Cyber and Information Law Society and the founding executive chief-editor of the Journal of Cyber and Information Law, he organizes multiple national conferences and workshops related to law and artificial intelligence, data protection, and other subjects relevant to the digital economy that provide recommendations for decision-making by local and national government agencies. 

At the Paul Tsai China Center, Dr. Zhou will study the regulation and governance of AI in the United States as well as AI and U.S.-China relations.

Spring 2023

Feng Ge
Feng Ge is an environmental protection lawyer in China with extensive experience in litigation and policy advocacy. For six years, Ge led the legal department at Friends of Nature, the first environmental non-governmental organization (NGO) in China with national influence. Ge and her colleagues at Friends of Nature played a key role in lobbying for revisions to the Environmental Protection Law that gave NGOs standing to sue polluters in 2015. Since then, Ge and her team have brought nearly fifty environmental public interest lawsuits, including to protect endangered species in Yunnan province, which was later recognized by China’s Supreme People’s Court as a model case and by the United Nations as a Sustainable Development Goal Good Practice. Ge has a doctorate in environmental law from the China University of Political Science and Law and instructed Renmin University Law School’s environmental law clinic from 2017 to 2020. At the Tsai Center, Ge will research citizen suits against ocean polluters, climate change law and litigation, and legal clinical education focused on environmental protection. 

Yu Jen (Jason) Hsu
Yu Jen (Jason) Hsu is a visiting fellow at Paul Tsai China Center Yale Law School. From 2016 to 2020 Hsu served as Legislator At-Large in Taiwan’s Legislative Yuan (national parliament) where he focused on defense, technology and foreign affairs. Among the crucial legislative bills that he initiated and sponsored include FinTech Regulatory Sandbox Act, Autonomous Vehicles Management Act, Amendment on Anti-Money Laundering Law, Cybersecurity Management Act and Virtual Currency Guidelines (Security Token Offerings), Artificial Intelligence Development Act, Digital Economy Principle Act. Hsu is also prominent advocator for socially progressive legislation. He co-led the effort to pass Same Sex Marriage Act and championed for End of Life Dignity Act (Voluntary Euthanasia).

Previously, Hsu held the position as senior research fellow at Harvard Kennedy School where he conducted research on semiconductor and geopolitics. While at Harvard Hsu has taught seminar and gave lectures on Taiwan and geopolitical risks of semiconductor. Hsu has published and  is widely quoted and interviewed by media for his views on tech and geopolitics including the Brookings Institution, New York TimesFinancial Times, BBC, Bloomberg, MIT Technology ReviewFast Company, and etc.

Hsu is a recipient of Eisenhower Fellowships Global Fellow program in 2022 and a Draper Hills Summer Fellow at Stanford University’s Center for Democracy Development and Rule of Law (CDDRL) and also selected as an IVLP (International Visitor Leadership Program) fellow by U.S. State Department in 2019. 

At the Paul Tsai Center, Hsu will conduct research on Taiwan’s defense competitiveness and geostrategies for tech and supply chain against U.S.-China competition.

Qiang Xin
Professor Qiang Xin is the inaugural director of the Center for Taiwan Studies and deputy director of the Center for American Studies at Fudan University. He teaches and studies China-U.S. relations, Taiwan issues and maritime security issues. Xin has published multiple books and articles published world-wide in English and Chinese. In 2002, Xin received his Ph. D in international relations from Fudan University and joined the Center for American Studies. Since then, he has also been a Visiting Scholar at Johns Hopkins University, Harvard University, and American University, and he worked for U.S. Rep. Jim McDermott from November 2001 to May 2002. 

At the Paul Tsai China Center, Xin conducts research on how to manage discussion and issues around the increasingly turbulent subject of Taiwan, particularly in an environment of intensifying U.S.-China strategic competition.

Zhong Zhao
Zhong Zhao is the founder and director of Green Camel Bell, a grass-root environmental NGO in Northwest China. At the local level, he conducts a range of programs and projects focusing on environmental education, water pollution monitoring, and community-based eco-agriculture and sustainable development. At the national level, he promotes and researches public participation in environmental decision-making and provides training and mentorship to grassroots partners. At the global level, he bridges Chinese overseas energy and forest investors and impacted communities of host countries promoting responsible green investment. Zhao was a Yale World Fellow in the Fall of 2022. From 2015-16, as a Hubert H. Humphrey fellow, Zhao completed a year of course work and professional affiliation at the University of California, Davis on Natural Resources Management and Climate Change. In 2009, he was named a “Hero of the Environment” by Time magazine, and in 2017, he was nominated as an Asia 21 Young Leader by Asia Society. Zhao received his Bachelor’s degree in Electronic and Information Engineering from the Hefei University of Technology and a Master degree of Laws from the University of Hong Kong. At the Tsai Center, Zhao will research public participation in environmental legislation and decision-making and the localization of international environmental law.

Fall 2022

Yongzu Bian
Dr. Yongzu Bian was a visiting scholar at the Paul Tsai China Center for Fall 2022, where he will research Sino-U.S. economic ties.  Formerly deputy director of the Department of Industries, Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies at Renmin University in Beijing, he is now a research fellow of the Center for International Security and Strategy at Tsinghua University.  He is also the executive deputy editor of Modernization of Management, an influential economic magazine with a long history in China. His research and writing interests include Sino-U.S. economic relations, international macroeconomic trends, and China’s foreign trade policies and capital markets.  He has authored books on finance and China’s Belt and Road Initiative and numerous articles on China’s economic policies, international trade and finance.

Liang Mei
Dr. Liang Mei was a Visiting Scholar at the Paul Tsai China Center for Fall 2022 working on comparative innovation policy and business systems. He is currently a Research Associate Professor at the National School of Development at Peking University and a Visiting Researcher at the Research Center for Technological Innovation at Tsinghua University, based in Beijing. His research focuses on innovation policy, industrial evolution, and technology management practices. He has been a visiting scholar at the Haas School of Business at UC Berkeley and at the Hitotsubashi University Business School in Japan. Dr. Mei has written extensively on innovation and strategic management and has published in numerous business and economic management journals.

Yanhui Peng
Yanhui Peng is a researcher at the Nankai University Zhou Enlai School of Government’s Institute on Community Development and the former director of LGBT Rights Advocacy China. Peng founded LGBT Rights Advocacy China in 2013 to advance LGBT equality through China’s legal system. LGBT Rights Advocacy China built professional networks of lawyers and journalists, and supported impact litigation against conversion therapy, employment discrimination, media censorship, and homophobic university textbooks. In 2019, Peng and his colleagues started a campaign to submit proposals to lawmakers that called for legalizing same-sex marriage in China’s Civil Code, catalyzing a large number of submissions and drawing significant attention to the issue. From 2007 to 2013, Peng was a program manager at Sun Yat-Sen University’s Institute for Civil Society, and in 2019 he was a visiting scholar at the University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law. At the Paul Tsai China Center, Peng conducted research and writing on the parental rights of LGBT people.

Zhijun Hu
In 2008, Zhijun Hu (AKA “Ah Qiang”) founded China’s Parents, Family, and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG) to help members of China’s LGBTQ community come out to their families, a step Hu wished he had taken before his mother’s untimely passing. Since then, PFLAG has supported thousands of parents across China on their journey toward affirming their LGBTQ children by facilitating difficult-yet-heartfelt conversations, building peer networks, and creating educational resources. At the Paul Tsai China Center, Hu researched legal and management strategies for how LGBTQ organizations can develop sustainably in China’s rapidly evolving philanthropic sector and regulatory environment.

Zhaoyi Zhu 
Dr. Zhaoyi Zhu was a Visiting Scholar at the Paul Tsai China Center for Fall 2022, researching Sino-U.S. trade ties and bilateral technology cooperation. He is currently a Research Associate Professor at the Institute of International Economic Studies, University of International Business and Economics (UIBE), based in Beijing. His research focuses on world economics and digital economy, and regional economic studies of the Middle East, Israel, Africa, and Eastern Europe. He is the founder of the Israel Studies Center and deputy director of the BRICS Center, both at UIBE. Dr. Zhu has published extensively on Sino-US economic ties, Israeli innovation, and the Belt and Road Initiative. He is a fluent speaker of Hebrew, Arabic, and Persian, as well as English.

Spring 2022

FAN Xiaolu
FAN Xiaolu ’22 LL.M. was a visiting scholar at the Yale Law School Paul Tsai China Center. She holds an LL.B. from Peking University, an LL.M. in public international law from Peking University, and recently graduated from Yale Law School. In 2020, she was a research associate at the Peking University Institute of International Law. During her time at the Center, her research will focus primarily on international environmental law and international climate law and policy. She brings to these fields particular interests in historical perspective, the North-South divide, and U.S.-China relations.

Spring 2020

CAI Peiru
Cai Peiru is a Doctor of Laws candidate at Peking University Law School, having completed her LL.M. degree at the University of Pennsylvania Law School. She focuses on constitutional law, administrative law, privacy, and regulation of technology. She is currently researching personal data, privacy, and cybersecurity regulation, particularly with respect to issues of notice and choice. During her time at Yale Law School, she conducted comparative research on protection of information privacy in the United States, China, and the European Union.

LI Qiang
Dr. Li Qiang is an Associate Professor of Law and the Director of the Military Law Institute at the School of Law, China University of Political Science and Law (CUPL). He is also the Deputy Secretary-General of the Beijing Military Law Society and serves as a member of an expert panel on lawfare for the Chinese PLA Air Force (2015-2020). He obtained a Ph.D. in law with a focus on international humanitarian law (IHL) from Renmin University of China in 2009. In this capacity, he was involved in the modification of Chinese laws relating to civil defense and the Red Cross Society. His research is mainly focused on basic principles of IHL, new means and methods of warfare, and the implementation of IHL in China.

LIU Chunling
Liu Chunling is an associate professor at China Women’s University School of Law in Beijing, and an adjunct lawyer in Beijing P.H. Law Firm. Professor Liu’s academic work focuses on civil procedure law and evidence law, with an emphasis on anti-sexual harassment law and civil protection orders in anti-domestic violence law. Professor Liu received her Master of Law and Ph.D. from Renmin University Law School. In the lead up to China’s passage of the Anti-Domestic Violence Law in 2015, Professor Liu advised its drafters on rules regarding civil protection orders. In 2019, she published a book, Civil Protection Orders Against Domestic Violence. As a visiting scholar at Yale Law School's Paul Tsai China Center, Professor Liu is researching Title IX and university anti-sexual misconduct policies. She aims to design mechanisms for Chinese universities in preventing and responding to sexual misconduct on campus.

Fall 2019

CAI Peiru
Cai Peiru is a Doctor of Laws candidate at Peking University Law School, having completed her LL.M. degree at the University of Pennsylvania Law School. She focuses on constitutional law, administrative law, privacy, and regulation of technology. She is currently researching personal data, privacy, and cybersecurity regulation, particularly with respect to issues of notice and choice. During her time at Yale Law School, she conducted comparative research on protection of information privacy in the United States, China, and the European Union.

LIU Yiqiang (Michael Liu)
Michael Liu is a lawyer and civil society leader from China. In 2012, he founded the Chinese Initiative on International Law (“CIIL”), an NGO dedicated to raising Chinese law students’ and lawyers’ awareness of and participation in international law and justice issues. In 2016, CIIL launched Rainbow Law School, a project for legal advocacy capacity and community building for the next generation of Chinese lawyers focusing on LGBT rights advocacy. In 2016, CIIL also worked with a first-tier public foundation in China to incubate the Common Future Fund (“CFF“), a first-of-its-kind project in China that provides relief and economic opportunity to Syrian refugees. CIIL has offices in Beijing, The Hague, and Beirut, and has been granted a consultative status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council. Previously, Mr. Liu was a victims’ counsel at the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia and worked at the International Criminal Court, the International Committee of the Red Cross, and Fangda Partners, a private law firm. 

XIAO Pinghui
Dr. Xiao Pinghui is a senior lecturer at the Guangzhou University School of Law. He obtained a PhD in law focusing on food regulation from the University of South Australia in 2013. Since 2014, he has been advising the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization and the United Nations Development Programme on Chinese food laws and agricultural policy, among other issues. In 2018, he was nominated as a fellow of the International Visitors Leadership Program administered by the U.S. Department of State and joined leaders from 12 countries to visit U.S. federal government agencies to discuss the opioid crisis. Prior to pursuing his academic career, he worked in the former China Food and Drug Administration (CFDA) and in this capacity was heavily involved in the drafting of policies and laws relating to food and drug e-commerce, among other things. His research is mainly focused on food and drug laws (including alcohol and controlled substances) and internet governance (especially platform liability). He is currently in charge of two research projects granted by China's National Social Science Fund and Ministry of Education to examine China’s digitalization policy and its interaction with the food and drug sector.

ZHANG Shaohua
Zhang Shaohua is Deputy Director General of the Office of Senior Advisors, People's Bank of China (PBOC), and Secretary General of the Financial Research Center, Counsellors' Office of the State Council (COSC) of China. Her fields mainly cover secured transactions, financial inclusion, financial consumer protection and digital finance. In 2007, she led a team to widely broaden the scope of collateral by adding inventory and account receivables into the content of the PRC Property Law. During her time at Yale, she will continue research on security interests with an eye toward helping to establish a unified registry system for movable assets securing transactions in China’s Civil Code.

Spring 2019

FEI Wenting
Fei Wenting is a deputy division chief of the Shanghai Justice Bureau’s Department of Administrative Litigation. She participates in resolving administrative appeals and lawsuits on behalf of the Shanghai Municipal Government, drafts and conducts research on related rules and policies, and provides training for other staff members. She received her LLM from Fudan University and her undergraduate degree in public administration and administrative law from East China University of Politics and Law. While at Yale, Ms. Fei will conduct comparative research on the development, organization and safeguards for administrative law judges and the U.S. administrative appeals system, in connection with ongoing reforms to China’s administrative adjudication system and related revision of China’s national Administrative Reconsideration Law, which is included for action during the current five-year term of the National People’s Congress.

Lynn Kuok
Dr Lynn Kuok is a visiting scholar at Yale Law School’s Paul Tsai China Center. She is also a senior research fellow at the University of Cambridge and an associate fellow at the International Institute for Strategic Studies headquartered in London. She has held fellowships at Brookings Institution, Harvard Law School, the Harvard Kennedy School, the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) and the Centre for International Law at the National University of Singapore. Dr. Kuok works on the politics, law and security of the Asia-Pacific region, with a focus on the South China Sea dispute and the United States’ and China’s ties with each other and with Southeast Asia. She also studies nationalism and race and religious relations in the region. She is an advocate and solicitor and has worked as a senior producer at a television news station. She served as Editor-in-Chief of the Cambridge Review of International Affairs and the Singapore Law Review.  Her articles have appeared in a broad range of publications, and she is a frequent speaker at international conferences.  

LIU Xiaonan
Professor LIU Xiaonan, a graduate of Yale Law School (LL.M. ’04) is currently the Director of the Constitutionalism Research Institute at the China University of Political Science and Law, and is one of China's foremost experts on employment discrimination law. She leads the Anti-Employment Discrimination Law experts drafting group, is the chief editor of the Anti-Discrimination Law Review, and has conducted numerous projects on nondiscrimination with the United Nations’ International Labor Organization, the Ford Foundation, Yale Law School's Paul Tsai China Center, and other international universities. In addition to her LL.M. from Yale Law School, Professor Liu hold an LL.B., Master of Law and Ph.D. from Jilin University School of Law. As a visiting scholar at the Center, Professor Liu is researching anti-sexual harassment policies at U.S. institutions as well as legal rules and best practices for improving gender equality in the workplace.

Fall 2018

HE Xia
Professor He Xia is an associate professor at Southwestern University of Finance and Economics Law School in Chengdu, China. She is an expert on employment discrimination law and has published articles and books on anti-discrimination law, labor law, and the intersection of gender and the law. In 2018, she served as an expert witness in China’s first transgender employment discrimination case. Professor He earned a Ph.D. in law from Kyushu University in Japan. During her time at Yale, she will research employment discrimination law, particularly LGBTI discrimination and legal mobilization of LGBTI movements in the United States.

ZHU Lixin
Professor Zhu Lixin is Director of the Teaching and Research Department of Criminal Prosecution at China’s National Procurators College, the only institution in the country that trains prosecutors at the national level. Since joining the College in 1992, Professor Zhu has taught and conducted research in the areas of criminal law, criminal prosecution, and the procuratorial system. While at Yale Law School, she will research plea bargaining systems in the United States, with a particular focus on felony cases.

Spring 2018

AN Ning
An Ning is Division Director of the Trade and Industry Section of the Department of Industry, Transportation and Business in China’s State Council Legislative Affairs Office, which he joined in 2005. His work involves drafting and revising legislation for the energy and industrial sectors and commercial and investment fields, including the PRC Energy Law, Anti-Monopoly Law, Safe Production Law, and Foreign Investment Law. While at Yale Law School, he will research the regulation of foreign investment in the United States in connection with the drafting of China’s Foreign Investment Law.

CHEN Dingding
Chen Dingding is Professor of International Relations and Associate Dean of the Institute for 21st Century Silk Road Studies at Jinan University, Guangzhou, China; Non-Resident Fellow at the Global Public Policy Institute (GPPI), Berlin, Germany; and Vice-President of the International Studies Association (Asia Pacific Region). He is also the Founding Director of Intellisia Institute, a newly established independent think tank.

ZHANG Xinjun
Zhang Xinjun is an Associate Professor of Public International Law at Tsinghua University in Beijing. His research interests include the Law of the Sea, International Environmental Law, Non-Proliferation Law, and the Law of Treaties. His recent publications include “The Latest Developments of the US Freedom of Navigation Programs in the South China Sea: Deregulation or Re-balance?” (2016); “Jurisdictional Objection to the Philippines’ Submissions Regarding Nine-Dash Line: Exclusion of the Dispute Concerning Sources of Maritime Entitlements under UNCLOS Article 298.1(a)(i)” (2016, Chinese); “Diaoyu/Senkaku Dilemma: To Be or Not to Be” (2014); “The ITLOS Judgment in the Bay of Bengal Case between Bangladesh and Myanmar” (2013); and “Intentional Ambiguity and the Rule of Interpretation in Auto-Interpretation: The Case of ‘Inalienable Right’ in NPT Article IV” (2009). He is the Executive Director of the Center for Law of the Sea Study at Tsinghua University Law School. He is currently working on a comparative study of US and Chinese approaches to international legal dispute resolution. He may be contacted at: zxinjun@tsinghua.edu.cn.

Fall 2017

YU Sihai
Yu Sihai is a Principal Staff Member of the Shanghai Municipal Government’s Office of Legislative Affairs. As a member of the Urban Development Law and Regulation Department, he participated in drafting a series of local Shanghai municipal environmental protection regulations, among other work. He received his M.A in law from the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, on the subject of the “right to tranquility.” While at Yale, Mr. Yu will conduct comparative research on the development, regulation and resolution of “not-in-my-backyard” (NIMBY) incidents.

LI Ying
LI Ying is a leading women’s rights advocate and public interest lawyer specializing in issues relating to gender equality and domestic violence. She is the Director of Beijing Yuanzhong Gender Development Center, and had served as Executive Director of the China Anti-Domestic Violence Network and Executive Director of the prominent Peking University Women’s Legal Research and Service Center, China’s first NGO specializing in providing legal aid to women. Over the past decade, Ms. Li has handled hundreds of cases, including groundbreaking cases in domestic violence, employment discrimination, and sexual harassment. Ms. Li is a leading voice in NGO participation in developing China’s domestic violence law and policy. Her Center is also at the forefront of providing legal aid and support services to victims of domestic violence, and working with government partners to develop innovative enforcement mechanisms to stop domestic violence and ensure victim safety. 

LIU Mingke (刘明珂)
LIU Mingke  is a graduate of Peking University Law School, and now serves as Legal Program Officer at Common Language (同语), an LGBT NGO based in Beijing. She researches and publishes on a range of issues including LGBT-related employment discrimination and school bullying, and helps shape Common Language’s legal advocacy strategies for advancing LGBT equality in China. She also facilitates workshops for local LGBT organizations throughout China to build their capacity to conduct legal advocacy. During her time at Yale, she will research policy best practices for preventing gender-based violence at schools.

MIAO Shuquan
Professor MIAO Shuquan is a faculty member of China’s National Prosecutor’s College. He is an expert in criminal law, having written extensively on corruption and dereliction of duty. He has also participated in several international cooperative programs, including six years with the Sino-Swedish program on “the Procuracy and Human Rights.” During his time at Yale, he will be researching American plea bargain procedures.

CAI Xiongshan
Cai Xiongshan is an adjunct fellow at the Peking University Internet Development Research Institute.  He received a master’s degree from the Transnational Law and Business University (TLBU) in Korea and a master’s degree from the University of Paris I (La Sorbonne), EU and International Economic Law Programme.  He speaks Chinese, English, French, and some Spanish.  He is currently deputy director and chief researcher of the Cyberlaw Research Center at the Tencent Research Institute, and has previously worked at the China Academy of Telecommunication Research and the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, where he assisted in drafting a series of laws and regulations covering the Chinese Internet and telecommunications industries.  His areas of expertise are telecommunications and Internet law.  During his time at Yale (October 2-27, 2017), he will conduct research on legal and ethical issues related to artificial intelligence.

Spring 2017

ZHOU Hanhua
Dr. Zhou Hanhua is professor of law in the Institute of Law at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, an academic research institution that is the think tank of China’s central government. Zhou has over 20 years of experience in research and practice in law and government regulation, and has held numerous positions including Vice Chairman of the China Cyber and Information Law Society. He led the Task Force to draft the State Council  Regulations on Open Government Information and has participated in many legislative and policy  projects, including for the Administrative License Law, Cybersecurity Law, State Liability Law, Energy Law, Food Safety Law, and Credit Industry Management Regulations. He was a Visiting Scholar at the Yale Law School China Center in Fall 2000 (researching freedom of information law) and Spring 2007 (researching e-government law and practice), a visiting scholar at the Institute of Human Rights in 1998 and a research scholar at the University of Michigan Law School from 1993-95. He is also a guest professor and researcher for several other universities in China. While at Yale Law School, he will research legal and policy issue relating to regulation of the sharing economy and privacy-related aspects.

LU Haina
Professor LU Haina is the Associate Professor of the Renmin University of China Law School and the Secretary-General of the Renmin University of China Human Rights Center. She is an expert in labor law and international human rights law. Professor Lu has a Ph.D. in law from the Catholic University of Leuven of Belgium and an M.A. from the Norwegian Center for Human Rights at the University of Oslo. She earned her B.A. at the China Foreign Affairs University in Beijing. During her time at Yale, Professor Lu researched employment discrimination against LGBTI people in the U.S.

Fall 2016

GAO Qinwei
Professor GAO Qinwei is a Professor of Law at the Central University of Finance and Economics in Beijing. He is an influential administrative law scholar in China and a leading expert on food safety issues. His research interests include regulatory reform, food safety law, and comparative administrative law. While at Yale, Professor Gao will research private regulation and regulatory reform, with a particular focus on food and drug regulation.

LI Xiuhong
Ms. LI Xiuhong is a public interest lawyer and program officer at the Beijing Children's Legal Aid and Research Center. A graduate of the China University of Political Science and Law, where she obtained her master's degree in legal studies, Ms. Li has worked on juvenile justice and migrant worker legal issues since 2008. She ahs provided legal assistnace to over 100 children and migrant workers, and has co-authored a number of books and reports on the state of China's juvenile justice and legal aid systems. During her time at Yale, Ms. Li will conduct research on mandatory reporting systems for child abuse.

ZHU Zhensheng
Mr. ZHU Zhensheng works for the Legislative Affairs Office of the Shanghai Municipal People’s Government. He holds a master’s degree in law from Fudan University. While at Yale, Mr. Zhu will be researching standards governing administrative investigations and enforcement.

PAN Bo
Dr. PAN Bo is a staff member of Legislative Affairs Office of the State Council of China. He received his doctoral degree in administrative law from the China University of Political Science and Law. While at Yale, Dr. Pan will be researching U.S. systems of administrative mediation and organization. 

Spring 2016

HUANG Bin
HUANG Bin is Director of the Constitutional and Administrative Law Research Division in the China Institute of Applied Jurisprudence, Supreme People’s Court of China.  Mr. Huang received a B.A. in law from Lanzhou University, an M.A. in jurisprudence from Nanjing University, and a Ph.D. in jurisprudence from the Graduate School of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.  His research at Yale explores various aspects of judicial reform, including the role of public confidence in the judiciary.

Fall 2015

YU Wenguang
Professor YU Wenguang is an associate professor at Renmin University Law School in Beijing, where she also serves as Executive Director of the school’s Sino-German Regulation Law Research Institute. Her fields include administrative law, regulation, constitutional law, and comparative public law. She is currently researching legal issues involving public-private partnerships (PPP) in the delivery of public services and infrastructure.

YUAN Haiyong
YUAN Haiyong is Principal Staff Member of the Shanghai Municipal Government’s Office of Legislative Affairs.  He received his bachelor’s degree from Anhui Agricultural University and his master’s and Ph.D. degrees from the East China University of Political Science and Law.  Mr. Yuan is currently researching the roles and functions of government lawyers in the United States.  

ZHOU Cheng
ZHOU Cheng is Deputy Director of the Division of Financial and Fiscal Affairs at the State Council Office of Legislative Affairs.  He received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in law from Fudan University in Shanghai, China.  His research at Yale explores American legal mechanisms for consumer financial protection.

Spring 2015

BI Yanying
Professor BI Yanying is a professor of law and Deputy Dean of the University of International Relations Law School, where she teaches administrative law, administrative litigation law and national security law. She has edited, authored, and co-authored 15 books on administrative law and more than 50 papers on administrative and national security law. She has been appointed Director of the newly established Research Center of National Security and Administrative Law of the University of International Relations. While at Yale, Professor BI will research issues relating to the development of administrative procedure and national security laws for China.

Fall 2014

Nicholas Bequelin
Dr. Nicholas Bequelin is senior researcher on China at Human Rights Watch, based in Hong Kong. He obtained his PhD in History from the School of Advanced Studies in Social Sciences (EHESS), Paris, in 2001, and is a graduate in Chinese from the School of Oriental Languages and Civilisations (INALCO), also in Paris. His publications have appeared in The China Journal, The China Quarterly, Asian Studies as well as many newspapers and magazines. He is a regular commentator for major international media on legal, political and human rights developments in China. During his visit to Yale, Dr. Bequelin will research the rule of law and human rights.

SONG Jihong
Ms. SONG Jihong is the Deputy Division Chief for the Administrative Reconsideration Department of China’s State Council Office of Legislative Affairs. She received her B.A. in law from Qingdao University and her M.A. in law from China University of Political Science and Law. Director SONG’s research while at Yale will focus on the U.S. experience with certain issues relating to implementing and improving government information disclosure.

GUO Xinmei
Ms. GUO Xinmei is an official with the Administrative Reconsideration Department of the Shanghai Municipal People’s Government Office of Legislative Affairs. She received both her B.A. and M.A. of law from Soochow University. During her tenure at Yale, Ms. GUO will research U.S. law and practices related to commercial registration and supervision as part of China’s current initiative, in which Shanghai plays a pioneering role, to relax market entry requirements and strengthen ex-post regulation.

Spring 2014

ZHENG Nan
ZHENG Nan is an official of the Shanghai Food and Drug Supervisory Institute, a department of the Shanghai Food Safety Regulation Division of the Shanghai Food and Drug Administration. His research at Yale will focus on procedures for food safety appraisal and law enforcement, particularly with respect to criminal cases. He hopes to further rationalize and proceduralize the regulation of food safety through administrative and criminal enforcement in Shanghai.

SONG Hualin
SONG Hualin is an Associate Professor of Law in Nankai University. Dr. Song’s main academic interests concern comparative administrative law, administrative regulation (risk regulation, rule-making, regulatory tools), food and drug law, and health care reform. He has had more than 40 articles published in various academic journals including China Legal Science, Management World, Peking University Law Journal, Tsinghua Law Journal, Journal of Comparative Law, and Global Law Review. While at Yale, Dr. SONG will research U.S. law and policy on pharmaceutical safety.

WANG Yong
WANG Yong is a Professor and Director of the Office of Constitutional and Administrative Law at the Party School of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China. He holds a LL.M and a Ph.D. in Administrative Law from China University of Political Science and Law and from 2009 to 2012 was a postdoctoral fellow in economics at the University of International Business and Economics. Professor WANG has published numerous articles on these topics in Chinese academic journals including Chinese Academy of Governance Press and Intellectual Property Publishing House. While at Yale, Professor WANG will research the development and operation of civil society in the U.S.

LU Jun
Mr. LU Jun is the Chief Coordinator of Beijing Yirenping Center, a non-profit organization dedicated to promoting social justice and public well-being in China. Yirenping offers education on communicable disease prevention and control, provides community outreach and assistance for patients, and works to eliminate discrimination and stigma. Mr. Lu is best known in China for his advocacy on behalf of carriers of HBV (Hepatitis B virus), for which he has won recognition in China, Hong Kong, Italy, and elsewhere. While at Yale, he will conduct research on improving the protection system for food and drugs on behalf of consumer protection groups.

ZHANG Qianfan
ZHANG Qianfan is a Professor of Law at Peking University Law School. At the Law School he is also director of the Center for the People’s Congress and Parliamentary Studies and the senior deputy director of the Constitutional and Administrative Law Center. Professor Zhang obtained his Ph.D. in Government from University of Texas at Austin (1999). He taught comparative constitutional law and administrative law at School of Law, Nanjing University, before joining the law faculty in Peking University in 2003. He has authored or edited over 30 books and published more than 150 articles in the field of constitutional law. Representative works include an influential two-volume treatise The Constitutional Systems in the West (2nd Ed., 2004/2005),Comparative Administrative Law: Systems, Institutions, and Processes (2008, first author), From Constitution to Constitutionalism: A Comparative Study of Judicial Review (2008, first author), Legalizing Central-Local Relations (2009, coeditor with Paul Gewirtz), Principles of Constitutional Law (2011),Equality in Rights and Local Diversity: Another Perspective of Central-Local Relations (2011), State Sovereignty and Local Autonomy: Legalizing Central-Local Relations (2012), For Human Dignity: A Critique and Reconstruction of Classical Chinese Philosophy (2012), The Constitution of China: A Contextual Analysis (Hart, 2012), The Future of a Constitutional China (2013), Introduction to the Study of Constitutional Law (3nd Ed., 2014). He is also Vice President of China’s Constitutional Law Association.

Fall 2013

YING Feihu
YING Feihu is a Professor of Law at Shenzhen University Law School, Vice Chairman of the Division of Social Sciences and Humanities of the Shenzhen University Academic Commission, and Director of the Institute for the Protection of Disadvantaged Groups. Professor Ying received his Bachelor’s degree from Zhejiang University of Economics and Finance and his Master’s and Ph.D. degrees from the Southwest University of Political Science and Law. In 2010, he was named one of China’s Top Ten Young Distinguished Jurists. In 2011, he was selected as one of Shenzhen’s Top Ten Distinguished Talents. Among his publications are Information, Rights and Transaction Security: Research on Consumer Protection (2008) and Research on Overcoming the Informational Failure through Institutions (2004). During his stay at Yale, Professor Ying will conduct research on how to use informational tools to protect food safety.

LI Jianfei
LI Jianfei is a Professor at the Renmin University of China in Beijing. He received his LL.M from the Southwest University of Political Science and Law and his Ph.D. from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and is a leading authority in labor law, social security law, and the disabilities law. Currently, Professor Li is the Executive Director of the Chinese Labor Law Research Association and also of the China Social Law Society. He also serves as the Director of Renmin University’s Maritime and Insurance Law Research Institute and Deputy Director of the China disability institute at Renmin University. During his stay at Yale, Professor LI will conduct research on American disability law, including the protection of disabled individuals’ lawful rights and interests.

ZHU Jing
ZHU Jing is a Section chief for the Legislative Affairs Office of Shanghai Municipal People's Government. He received his B.A. in international economic law from Ningbo University in 2001. From 2002 to 2005, Mr. Zhu studied international law, specializing in international private law at East China University of Political Science and Law where he received his M.A. While at Yale, Mr. Zhu will conduct research on U.S. law and practice concerning the resolution of medical disputes through alternative dispute resolution.

ZHANG Xun
ZHANG Xun is a staff member for the Department of Industry, Communications and Commerce of the Legislative Affairs Office of the State Council of China. From 1990 to 1994, Ms. Zhang studied economic law at the Renmin University of China Law School, and was awarded her LL.B. Degree in 1994. From 1997 to 2000, she studied civil law as a part-time postgraduate student at the Renmin University of China Law School, and was awarded her LL.M in 2000. While at Yale, Ms. Zhang will conduct research on alternative regulatory options for administrative licensing.

LI Ying
LI Ying is the Director of Beijing Yuanzhong Gender Development Center and Executive Director of China Anti-Domestic Violence Network (ADVN). Prior to her current position, Ms. Li was the Executive Director of the prominent Peking University Women’s Legal Research and Service Center, China’s first NGO specializing in providing legal aid to women. Over the course of a decade she handled some 200 cases (including a number of groundbreaking cases) relating women’s rights, ranging from domestic violence, employment discrimination and sexual harassment, to rural women’s land rights. Ms. Li now heads a cooperative project with our Center and has helped to establish China’s first prototype of an EEOC-like agency in Hebei Province tasked with administrative enforcement of China’s employment promotion law.

LI Weiwei
LI Weiwei is a Professor at the Center of Basic Laws of Hong Kong and Macao, Shenzhen University. She received her B.A. from Tsingtao Normal University and her LL.M from the China University of Politics and Law. Currently, Professor Li is the Executive Director of Constitutionalism and the Human Rights Law Center in Shenzhen University. She also serves as Vice Director of the Center for the Protection of the Venerable Vulnerable at Shenzhen University. While at Yale, Professor Li will research the implementation of gender discrimination laws in the U.S. and the claims handling process of the EEOC.

Summer 2013

ZHANG Qing
Ms. ZHANG Qing is Deputy Director of the Department of Drug Registration for the Shanghai Municipal Food and Drug Administration. She holds a bachelor's degree in Pharmacology from the Shanghai Medical University, and over the past sixteen years she has gained valuable experience in the field of food and drug regulation through her work in conjunction with China's State Food and Drug Administration (SFDA). During her stay at Yale Law School, Ms. Zhang will conduct research on the U.S. and Chinese regulatory regimes and systems of ethical review with respect to pharmaceutical clinical trials in order to improve the protection of the rights of clinical research subjects in China.

Spring 2013

LIN Guanghua
Dr. LIN Guanghua works in Beijing in the Legislative Affairs Office of the State Council. Dr. Lin earned his Master’s degree in law at the Law Department of Southwest University of Politics and Law and his Ph.D in law at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. While at Yale, Dr. Lin will conduct in-depth research on U.S. practices relevant to the improvement and further development of community corrections in China.

YI Yanyou
Professor YI Yanyou currently teaches criminal procedure courses for undergraduate and graduate students at Tsinghua University School of Law. Upon receiving his Bachelor’s Degree at China University of Politics and Law, Professor Yi went on to receive his Master’s Degree and Ph.D. from the same institution, graduating among the top of his class. Over the course of the 2013 Spring Semester, Professor Yi will conduct research on the application of the exclusionary rule in the U.S.

WANG Jingbo
Professor WANG Jingbo currently teaches classes and serves as the Vice Dean of the Research Center for Governance by Law at China University of Political Science and Law. Professor Wang earned her Master’s Degree at Northwest University of Political Science and Law in 1996 and her Ph.D at China University of Political Science and Law in 2005. She has risen through her alma mater’s ranks quickly, and was elevated in 2008 from an Associate Professor to full Professor. While at Yale, Professor Wang will conduct research relating to open government information and related remedies, including litigation.

Fall 2012

ZHENG Chunyan
Professor ZHENG Chunyan is an Associate Professor and Director of the Institute for Public Law and Comparative Law at Guanghua Law School, Zhejiang University. After receiving her Ph.D. in law from Zhejiang University, she was a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Peking University for two years, after which she taught for two years at Zhejiang Gongshang University before joining Zhejiang University in 2010 to teach constitutional and administrative law. From August 2012 to August 2013, Professor Zheng researched mechanisms and practices of participatory governance.

WU Zongxian
Professor WU Zongxian is a Professor and Supervisor of Ph.D candidates at the College for Criminal Law Science, Beijing Normal University, where he is also Director of the Institute for Crime and Corrections and the Research Center of Community Corrections. Upon receiving his Bachelor of Law Science at Northwest Institute of Political Science and Law, Professor Wu went on to receive his Master of Law Science in Criminal Law at China University of Political Science and Law, where he then joined the law faculty in 1986. Professor Wu has also taught and worked within the Ministry of Justice Institute for Crime Prevention and was a Visiting Scholar at Yale Law School in the Fall of 2007 and at the Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law for seven months in 2008. While at Yale in the Fall of 2012, Professor Wu hopes to help improve community corrections in China through in-depth research of U.S. law and experience regarding community corrections.

WANG Xiaomei
Ms. WANG Xiaomei has been with the Legislative Affairs Office of the Shanghai Municipal Government since 2006 and has participated in a variety of rulemakings and policy development. She received her Bachelor of Law from Fudan University and her Master of Law from East China University of Political Science and Law. Currently she is enrolled as a Ph.D student in Jiao Tong University of Shanghai. While at Yale, Ms. Wang will conduct research on United States law and practice concerning major administrative decision-making procedures.

DONG Lei
Ms. DONG Lei works in Beijing in the Judicial Affairs Bureau of the Internal and Judicial Affairs Committee of the National People's Congress. As a Principal Staff Member, Ms. Dong has been involved in various lawmaking projects and amendment of such major laws as the Civil Procedure, People’s Mediation and Prison Laws. She received her Bachelor of Law at Zhongshan Univeristy in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, and her Masters in Civil and Commercial Law at People’s University of China in Beijing. While at Yale, Ms. Dong will be researching community corrections law in the United States for possible assistance in drafting a community corrections law in China.

Spring 2012

FANG Fang
Ms. FANG Fang is a Principle Staff Member of the Information Bureau for the Standing Committee General Office of the National People’s Congress of China. She holds a Master’s from Tsinghua University in Journalism and an undergraduate degree from Xiamen University in Economics. A world traveler, Ms. Fang’s position is like our Press Secretary. She will be researching open congressional information and existing problems in the United States, as well as specific measures for greater disclosure of information, transparency and public involvement in the legislative process.

LI Fucheng 
Dr. LI Fucheng is a Deputy Director of the Private Law Section in the Government Legal Affairs Research Center of the State Council Office of Legislative Affairs. He holds a Doctorate and Masters from Peking University Law School and an undergraduate degree from Yantai University’s Law Department. He joined the Government Legal Affairs Research Center after two years as a Post-Doc at Renmin University of China Law School. During his stay at Yale Law School, Dr. Li will conduct research on U.S. law and practice concerning administrative decision-making procedures, including transparency and public participation.

XU Chen 
Dr. XU Chen is the senior officer of the Shanghai Institute of Food and Drug Supervision at the Shanghai F.D.A. Born in Shanghai, she graduated from the Fudan University School of Public Health. Dr. Xu has accumulated over 10 years of working experience in food safety and relative law enforcement. Her most recent responsibilities in Shanghai include legislative projects on risk monitoring and assessment of food safety. While at Yale, Dr. Xu will conduct research on U.S. laws and regulations concerning food safety risk analysis for purposes of developing similar regulatory tools to improve the safety of food products in China.

ZHANG Wenjuan 
Ms. ZHANG Wenjuan is deputy director of the Beijing Children’s Legal Aid and Research Center and specialist in child law. In 2004, Ms. Zhang graduated with a master’s degree in Law from the Peking University Law School, and in 2006-2007 she was a visiting scholar and Public Interest Law Initiative fellow of Columbia University Law School. While at Yale, Ms. Zhang will be researching the role of non-governmental organizations in international law and governance.


SU Mingyue 
SU Mingyue is an Associate Professor for the Beijing Normal University College for Criminal Law Science, where she teaches undergraduate and graduate courses on criminology and criminal law. Ms. Su received her Bachelor of Laws from China’s Youth University for Political Sciences in June 2004 as well as her Ph.D from China’s University of Political Science and Law in 2007. Her main research focus has been on criminal law, where she specializes in juvenile justice and corrections.

Fall 2011

CHANG Jiang
Mr. CHANG Jiang is a Principal Staff Member with the Economic Laws & Regulation Department of Legal Affairs Office of Shanghai Municipal People’s Government. He received a M.A., Law, specializing in Economic Law, from the East China University of Political Science and Law in 2004. During Mr. Chang's stay at Yale Law School he will research the wide range of United States law and practice into how government contracts with the private for-profit and nonprofit sectors to provide public services and how to effectively supervise the delivery of those services.

DU Rong
Ms. DU Rong is a Senior Staff Member with the Internal Affairs Bureau of the Internal and Judicial Affairs Commitee of the National People's Congress. She obtained a Master of Law, majoring in Constitution and Administration Law, from the China University of Political Science and Law. During Ms. Du's stay at Yale Law School she will conduct research on revising China's Elder Rights and Interests Law.

ZHU Changzheng
Mr. ZHU Changzheng is the macro-economic desk chief of Caixin Media and a senior editor for the public sector, which includes government regulation. Caixin Media is publisher of Century Weekly and China Reform. Before that, he was Shanghai bureau chief of Caijing Magazine, an editor at China Securities Journal and an editor of the China Daily Index. He also served as deputy general manager of LW Investment Consulting Co., Ltd. Mr. Zhu holds a B.A. from Nanjing University. During Mr. Zhu’s stay at Yale Law School he will conduct research on government regulation.


Spring 2011

DUAN Hongqing
Mr. DUAN Hongqing is the Senior Editor and Director of Legal Affairs of Caixin Media Co., Ltd., publisher of Century Weekly and China Reform magazine. He graduated from the Renmin University of China Law School. During his visit at Yale, he will conduct research on media law and Freedom of Information Act.

LI Xueyao
Professor LI Xueyao is Associate Professor of Law at the KoGuan Law School of Shanghai Jiao Tong University. He earned a Ph.D degree and a masters degree from Zhejiang University. While at Yale, he will conduct research on issues related to the development of the legal profession and legal ethics.

LIANG Zhixiang ("Victor")
Mr. Liang Zhixiang ("Victor") is the General Counsel of Baidu, Inc. Mr. Liang received his Law degree at Peking University and earned his LL.M degree at the University of New South Wales in Australia. During his visit at Yale, Mr. Liang will conduct research on laws and regulations related to the internet and search engines.

LIU Renwen
Professor LIU Renwen is Professor and Director of the Criminal Law Department of Law Institute, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS). He earned his PhD at China University of Political Science and Law, and earned Post-Doctoral Certificates at CASS and Peking University. He has been a visiting scholar at Yale Law School, Harvard Law School, Columbia Law School, NYU School of Law, and others. During his visit at Yale, Professor Liu will conduct research on criminal justice reform and community corrections.

ZHU Chengjun
Mr. ZHU Chengjun is with the inspection team of Shanghai Food and Drug Administration. He earned a Master of Law degree from the East China University of Political and Law. During his visit at Yale, Mr. Zhu will conduct comparative research related to legislation on off-label use of pharmaceutical drugs in China.


Fall 2010

CHEN Biwen 
Mr. CHEN Biwen is with the Legislative Affairs Office of the State Council of China. His area of responsibility is administrative review. Mr. Chen earned his master sand bachelor degrees from East China University of Political Science and Law in Shanghai. During his stay at Yale law School for the Fall semester, Mr. Chen will conduct research on the U.S. systems for administrative review and how to improve China’s administrative reconsideration system.

GENG Miao 
Ms. GENG Miao works in the Internal and Judicial Affairs Committee of National People’s Congress in China. She earned her masters degree from Peking University Law School and bachelor degree from Beijing Union University. During her three months stay at Yale, she will conduct research on volunteer service regulation in the United States.

LI Xingxiang 
Mr. LI Xingxiang is from the Legislative Affairs Office of the Shanghai Municipal Government., where he is responsible for drafting local regulations and government documents. Mr. Li earned his LL.M from the Law School of Fudan University and LL.B from East China University of Political Science and Law, both in Shanghai. During his two months at Yale law School, he will conduct research on information disclosure in the administrative process.

LI Xueyao 
Professor LI Xueyao is Associate Professor of Law at the KoGuan Law School of Shanghai Jiao Tong University. He earned a Ph.D. degree and a masters degree from Zhejiang University. While at Yale, he will conduct research on issues related to the development of the legal profession and legal ethics.


Spring 2010

Nicholas Bequelin 

Dr. Nicholas Bequelin is senior researcher on China at Human Rights Watch, based in Hong Kong, and a fellow at the Universities Service Centre for Chinese Studies, the Chinese University of Hong Kong. He obtained his Ph.D in History from the School of Advanced Studies in Social Sciences (EHESS,) Paris, in 2001, and is a graduate in Chinese from the School of Oriental Languages and Civilisations (INALCO), also in Paris. His publications have appeared in The China Journal, The China Quarterly, Asian Studies as well as many newspapers and magazines. He is a regular commentator for major international media on legal, political and human rights developments in China. During his visit to Yale, Dr. Bequelin will research the rule of law and human rights.

HUANG Yong
Dr. HUANG Yong works in the Criminal Law Division of the Legislative Affairs Office of the National People’s Congress Standing Committee, where he is Deputy Division Chief. Dr. Huang earned a PhD in Criminal Procedure from Peking University Law School in 2004, and has worked for the Standing Committee since that time. Prior to matriculating at Peking University, he served as a judge in the Jinan Intermediate Railway Court. He has published articles on burdens of proof and China’s anti-drug law. During his stay at Yale Law School, he will conduct research on the exclusionary rule of criminal evidence.

LI Yuanyuan
Ms. LI Yuanyuan is the Deputy Director of the Center for Public Participation Studies and Supports of Peking University Law School, where she is a Ph.D candidate. She earned her LL.M and LL.B at Peking University Law School. While at Yale, Ms. Li will conduct research on implementation of government information disclosure at the federal and state levels, and the role of non-government organizations in this process.

LU Jun
Mr. LU Jun is the Chief Coordinator of Beijing Yirenping Center, a non-profit organization dedicated to promoting social justice and public well-being in China. Yirenping offers education on communicable disease prevention and control, provides community outreach and assistance for patients, and works to eliminate discrimination and stigma. Mr. Lu is best known in China for his advocacy on behalf of carriers of HBV (hepatitis B virus), for which he has won recognition in China, Hong Kong, Italy, and elsewhere. While at Yale, he will conduct research on antidiscrimination law and public interest law and practice.

SUN Nana
Ms. SUN Nana works in the Civil Law Division of the Legislative Affairs Office of the National People’s Congress Standing Committee. She holds a Master’s Degree in Civil and Commercial Law from East China University of Political Science and Law, and has written about corporate governance. During her stay at Yale Law School, she will conduct research on the civil evidence.

ZHAO Yanjun 
Ms. ZHAO Yanjun is the Deputy Director of the Institute of Shanghai Food and Drug Supervision of the Shanghai FDA. Ms. Zhao received a Master’s Degree of Public Administration from East China Normal University and a law degree from Shanghai University Law School. During her stay at Yale Law School from January to May 2010, she will conduct research on the issue of mass incident compensation in connection with food and drug regulation.

Fall 2009

DING Li 
Mr. DING Li is a principal staff member of the Economic Legislation Division of Shanghai Municipal People’s Government Office of Legislative Affairs. Mr. Ding received his law degree from East China University of Politics and Law in Shanghai, where he majored in international economic law. Prior to joining the government, he worked as an IP lawyer in an intellectual property firm and an in-house lawyer in a joint venture. During his stay at Yale, Mr. Ding will conduct research on personal information protection.

LUO Peixin 
Professor LUO Peixin is Professor of Law and Deputy Dean of the Economic Law School of East China University of Political Science & Law in Shanghai. He also serves as Director of the Research Department of ECUPL. Professor Luo received his Ph.D. in law from Peking University and LL.M. in law from East China University of Political Science and Law. During his visit at Yale from September to December, Professor Luo will conduct research in corporate governance.

LIANG Ying
Dr. LIANG Ying is Division Director of the Research Department of the Legislative Affairs Commission (LAC) of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress. Mr. Liang graduated from Hunan Normal University with a Bachelor's degree in Literature, the Foreign Affairs College with a Master's degree in Law, and the Central Party School with a Ph.D. degree. Mr. Liang had been working at the Politics & Law Department of the Central Party School for over ten years as an assistant professor, and has been engaging in legislative research for over three years at the Research Department of the LAC. During his visit at Yale from September to October 2009, Mr. Liang will conduct research on the use of public hearings in lawmaking.

TIAN Yanmiao
Ms. TIAN Yanmiao is Deputy Director-General of the Regulation Filing and Reviewing Department of the Legislative Affairs Commission (LAC) of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress. Ms. Tian graduated from Renmin University of China with a Bachelor's degree in Economics. She had been working at the Economic Law Department of the LAC for over fifteen years, and engaged in drafting and revising nearly 30 laws such as the Corporation Law, Securities Law, Insurance Law, Trust Law, Foreign Trade Law, Customs Law, Accounting Law, Individual Income Tax Law, etc. While at Yale during September to October of 2009, Ms. Tian will conduct research on the use of public hearings in lawmaking.

JIA Weiqian
Ms. JIA Weiqian is a principal staff member of the Foreign Affairs Department of the Legislative Affairs Office of the State Council of China. Ms. Jia graduated from Hong Kong University with a Master degree in common law. She also earned her LL.M. degree at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and LL.B. degree at China University of Laws and Politics. During her visit at Yale from late September to December 2009, Ms. Jia will conduct research on the US rulemaking process and the use and conduct of cost-benefit analysis and economic analysis in this process.


Spring 2009

CHEN Jinhua 
Chen Jinhua is an official responsible for legal advice in the Inspection Division of the Shanghai Food and Drug Administration. Ms. Chen earned her LL.B and LL.M from the East China University of Politics & Law, and is currently a PhD candidate in administrative law at the Shanghai Jiaotong University. She has published articles, in Chinese, on the petition system, administrative discretion and the legislative power of local governments. At Yale, Ms. Chen is carrying out research on information disclosure rules and practices relating to food and drug regulation and inspection, and the advisory committee system used by the Food and Drug Administration in the U.S. and other countries.

LI Cheng 
LI Cheng is a Ph.D candidate in law at Shanghai Jiaotong University. An active anti-discrimination lawyer and scholar, he has helped bring a number of lawsuits in fields such as gender, age and rural/urban discrimination. He has published articles, in Chinese, on administrative law and constitutional law. Mr. Li earned his LLB and LLM at Sichuan University. While at Yale, he will research American antidiscrimination law, and the role of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and other administrative mechanisms for resolving discrimination disputes.

MIN Chunlei 
For the past twenty years, Professor MIN Chunlei has taught criminal procedure at Jilin University, where she earned her bachelor’s, master’s and doctorate degrees. She is a leading criminal procedure scholar in China, and has recently published in the Peking University Law Journal and the Chinese Journal of Law. Dr. Min has also consulted extensively with various courts and prosecutor’s offices in Jilin province. During her visit, Dr. Min will conduct research on American sentencing procedure and proof standards for criminal convictions.

WANG Yifei 
WANG Yifei is a PhD candidate at the Peking University School of Law, where he works on criminal procedure. Mr. Wang received a bachelor’s degree in law, and another in English, from the Southwest University of Political Science and Law, where he also earned a master’s degree in criminal procedure law. He has published articles on expert witnesses, criminal defense and the limits on prosecution power. Mr. Wang is also currently involved on a pilot project involving criminal sentencing reform in various Chinese courts. While at Yale, he is doing comparative research on the sentencing procedures of the United States, and various civil law countries.

ZHANG Jingjing 
ZHANG Jingjing is one of China’s leading public interest lawyers. She has litigated, and won, a number of landmark environmental cases throughout China, including a class action lawsuit with over 1,600 plaintiffs in Fujian province. Ms. Zhang is the litigation director of the Center for Legal Assistance to Pollution Victims (CLAPV), one of the leading environmental law organization in China. Ms. Zhang earned her LL.B from Wuhan University, and LL.M from China University of Political Science and Law. In Fall 2008, she was a World Fellow at Yale University. While at the China Law Center, she will study American environmental law and litigation.

ZHAO Deguan 
ZHAO Deguan is Chief of the Administrative Reconsideration Division of the Legislative Affairs Office of Shanghai Municipal People’s Government, where he is responsible for handling administrative appeals. After earning his master's degree from Soochow University Law School, Mr. Zhao worked in the Nanjing Municipal Intermediate People’s Court and the Shanghai Administrative Law Institute. He has published articles on public participation in urban management and on administrative litigation topics. During his visit at Yale in April 2009, Mr. Zhao will conduct research on administrative adjudication and the use of mediation in administrative procedure, give a talk about the use of mediation in administrative adjudication in Shanghai and meet with government officials and administrative law judges who are involved with administrative adjudication in the United States.

Fall 2008

WU Hongyao
Professor WU Hongyao is Associate Professor and Assistant Dean of the Procedural Law Research Instititute at China University of Political Science and Law (CUPL). He received his Ph.D. from CUPL in 2002. His research focuses on constitutional criminal procedure, particularly in interrogation, search and seizue; human rights and criminal procedure; analysis of evidence and fact-finding in adjudication; and restorative justice. While at Yale from September to December 2008, Professor Wu research criminal procedure and legal reform in the U.S. and abroad.

ZHANG Yu
Dr. ZHANG Yu is a researcher with the Government Legal Affairs Research Center of China's State Council Legislative Affairs Office. He earned his Ph.D. in constitutional and administrative law from Renmin University Law School in 2005. Dr. Zhang's research centers on constitutional review; emergency responses; and administrative rulemaking, enforcement and mediation. While at Yale Law School from September to December 2008, Dr. Zhang studied the regulation of administrative user fees.

Summer 2008

HE Haibo
Dr. HE is an Associate Professor of Tsinghua University Law School. He earned a Master of Jurisprudence degree from the University of Durham, UK, a Ph.D degree and a Master's Degree from Peking University. He was a Lecturer and then an Associate Professor at the Law Department of China National School of Administration before he joined Tsinghua. While at Yale Law School from August 2007 to July 2008, Professor He will conduct research on the legitimate foundation of judicial review.

SHI Lan
Ms. SHI Lan is a division chief in the Department of Inspection & Investigation of the Shanghai Food and Drug Administration, where she is responsible for designing inspection and investigation strategies, handling enforcement actions and dealing with the illegal drugs and medical devices. Ms. Shi received a Bachelor’s Degree in Law from China University of Political Science and Law, and a Bachelor’s Degree in Pharmacy from Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine. During her stay at Yale Law School from June to late August 2008, she will conduct research on drug recall systems, “black list” law and procedure and information disclosure systems in United States.

TONG Lihua
Mr. TONG Lihua is the founder and director of two of Beijing's most important public interest law organizations: the Beijing Children’s Legal Aid and Research Center and the Beijing Legal Aid Working Station for Migrant Workers. Mr. Tong, widely recognized as one of China's leading public interest lawyers, has developed networks of lawyers to handle juvenile and migrant worker rights cases across China. He also serves as a deputy of the Beijing People's Congress, and holds leadership positions in China's lawyers association. Mr. Tong holds a Master Degree in law from the China University of Political Science and Law. While at Yale from June to December 2008, Mr. Tong will research public interest law, legal aid programs, the role of the legislature, and related topics.

WANG Fang
Ms. WANG Fang is a lawyer and researcher of Beijing Legal Aid Working Station for Migrant Workers, providing legal consultation and case representation for migrant workers who come to work in Beijing from rural parts of China. Ms. Wang holds a Master Degree in law from the China University of Political Science and Law. While at Yale Law School from July to December of 2008, Ms. Wang will conduct research on public interest law, legal aid programs and labor and employment law.

Spring 2008

DAN Wei
Dr. DAN Wei is a professor and senior researcher of the Institute of Procuratorial Theory of the Supreme People’s Procuratorate. He is also the Deputy Editor-in-Chief of the journal Chinese Criminal Science. Professor Dan’s research subjects include criminal law, criminal procedure law, criminology, and human rights protection. He holds a Ph.D. from Wuhan University and was a postdoctoral researcher from June 2000 to June 2003 at Renmin University. During his stay at Yale from January to May 2008, he conducted comparative research on arrest and detention procedures and standards for the pre-trial release of criminal suspects. Professor Dan is currently working on a series of empirical studies and pilot projects related to the pre-trial criminal process in China.

HE Haibo
Dr. He is an Associate Professor of Tsinghua University Law School. He earned a Master of Jurisprudence degree from the University of Durham, UK, a Ph.D. degree and a Master's Degree from Peking University. He was a Lecturer and then an Associate Professor at the Law Department of China National School of Administration before he joined Tsinghua. While at Yale Law School from August 2007 to July 2008, Professor He conducted research on the legitimate foundation of judicial review.

LI Ping
Ms. Li Ping is a principal staff member of the Municipal Construction Law and Regulation Division of the Legislative Affairs Office of Shanghai Municipal People's Government, where she is responsible for drafting regulations, handling legal affairs and researching and writing. Ms. Li received a Masters degree in law from the Central University of Finance and Economics in Beijing. While at Yale Law School from April to June 2008, she conducted research on determining the "public interest” and appropriate procedures for the use of eminent domain in the U.S.

SUN Zhongxin ("Cindy")
Dr. SUN Zhongxin ("Cindy") is associate professor of sociology at Fudan University, and research fellow for the Nordic Center, the Human Rights Center, and the Center for Gender Studies of Fudan University. She graduated from East China Normal University in 1997 with a Ph.D. in Sociology and then began teaching at Fudan University. Her research and teaching interests include: Women's/Gender Studies, Sexuality, Lesbian and Gay Studies, Feminist Research Methods, Urban Middle Class Culture, Youth Studies, Globalization, and Contemporary Chinese Society. In addition to her teaching duties at Fudan University, she has been co-teaching an Internet-based master's degree course, "Gender and the Globalization/Transformation Process," hosted by Lund University, Sweden. She offered the first LGBT course for undergraduate students at Fudan University in Fall 2005. Dr. Sun was a guest professor at the Centre for East and Southeast Asian Studies, Lund University, from February to June 2006. While at Yale Law School, she conducted research on gender equality and the law.
 

Fall 2007

HE Haibo

Dr. HE is an Associate Professor of Tsinghua University Law School. He earned a Master of Jurisprudence degree from the University of Durham, U.K., a Ph.D. degree and a Master's Degree from Peking University. He was a Lecturer and then an Associate Professor at the Law Department of China National School of Administration before he joined Tsinghua. While at Yale Law School from August 2007 to July 2008, Professor He conducted research on the legitimate foundation of judicial review.

TENG Biao
Dr. TENG Biao is a lecturer at the Law School of the China University of Political Science and Law and a part-time lawyer at the Beijing Huayi Law Firm. In 2005, Asia Newsweek recognized Dr. Teng as one of China’s top fourteen human rights lawyers and as one of its “Persons of the Year in Asia.” Dr. Teng was also recognized as one of the “Top Ten Figures in the Legal System” for 2003 by the Ministry of Justice and China Central TV in 2003, and was awarded the Gleitsman Award for Achievement by the Gleitsman Foundation in 2003. He holds a Ph.D. from Peking University Law School. While at Yale Law School from September to December 2007, he conducted research on a number of issues, including constitutional law, public interest litigation, and criminal procedure.

WU Zongxian 
Dr. WU is a Professor at the College of Criminal Law Science at Beijing Normal University. For a number of years, he was the Director of the Penological Division of Institute for Crime Prevention, Ministry of Justice of China. While at Yale Law School from September to November 2007, Professor Wu conducted research on community corrections and criminal law.

ZHAO Wenmei
Ms. Zhao is the principal staff member of the Administrative Reconsideration Department in the Legislative Affairs Office of Shanghai Municipal People’s Government, where she handles administrative review cases. She holds a Master of Law (Civil Law and Business Law) degree from Southwest University of Political Science and Law. She served from 1995-2005 as a judge and then Presiding Judge in a district level people’s court in Guiyang, Guizhou province, China. While at Yale Law School from September to October 2007, Ms. Zhao conducted research on procedures for the use of mediation in administrative adjudication in the United States.

Summer 2007

TAN Yu
Ms. TAN is a staff member in the Constitutional Law Department of the Legislative Affairs Commission of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress. She received an M.A. degree in Constitutional and Administrative Law from Peking University School of Law in 2005. While at Yale Law School from July to August 2007, Ms. Tan conducted research on the revision of the State Compensation Law and also undertook related research on administrative law reform.

ZHOU Min
Ms. ZHOU Min is Vice Director General of the State Law Department of the Legislative Affairs Commission of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress. Ms. Zhou holds an LL.B degree and an LL.M. degree from Peking University Law School, and a Postgraduate Diploma of Common Law from the Faculty of Law of Hong Kong University. Ms. Zhou worked at the People’s Court of Haidian District in Beijing for one year, and worked at the Research Department of the Legislative Affairs Commission for over ten years. While at Yale Law School from July to August 2007, Ms. Zhou conducted research on the revision of the State Compensation Law and also engaged in related research on administrative law reform.

Spring 2007

CHEN Zhenyu

Mr. CHEN Zhenyu earned a BA and LLM degree from the East China University of Politics and Law, and is a Ph.D. candidate at Shanghai Jiaotong University. While at Yale Law School from February to May 2007, he conducted research on issues relating to public participation and open information in the urban planning process.

FENG Xingyuan
Mr. FENG Xingyuan is Associate Professor at the Rural Development Institute of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. He is co-founder and board member of the Cathay Institute for Public Affairs as well as co-founder and member of the Chinese Hayek Society. He earned a Master’s degree in Economics (banking and finance) from the Graduate School of Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. While at Yale Law School from March 20-May 18, 2007, he conducted research on central-local relations and local governance.

LAODongyan
Ms. LAO Dongyan is a lecturer at Tsinghua University School of Law. She earned a Bachelor of Law from East China Institute of Politics and Law in Shanghai, and a Ph.D. from Peking University Law School. While at Yale Law School from January to May 2007, she conducted research on criminal law reform.

WANG Jing
Ms. WANG Jing is a Ph.D. candidate at the Law School of China University of Political Science and Law, from which she earned her Master’s degree in law. She currently also serves as academic secretary and researcher at the Law Department of China National School of Administration (CNSA). She obtained a bachelor’s degree in International Economic Law from the Law School of Nankai University in Tianjin. While at Yale Law School from January to April 2007, she conducted research on how various issues relating to land requisition, including dispute resolution mechanisms, are handled in the United States.

XU Zhiyong
Dr. XU Zhiyong is a lecturer at the Humanities, Economics, and Law School of Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications. He received his Ph.D. in law from Peking University. He also is the founder of The Open Constitution Initiative, an independent center working to advance constitutional government in China. He was a visiting scholar at Yale Law School in 2004, conducting research on comparative constitutional law. He visited Yale again for a few weeks in April 2007 in order to participate in the Robert L. Bernstein International Human Rights Fellowship Symposium and other programs and activities at Yale Law School.

ZHOU Dan
Mr. ZHOU Dan is Executive Director of YU DAN, an organization based in Shanghai with a mission to achieve positive perception and full recognition of gay rights in China, and a lawyer with Shao Gang Law Office in Shanghai. He received his Master of Laws from Renmin University. Mr. Zhou was profiled in the June 27, 2005 issue of the TIME magazine and received the 2006 International Role Model Award from Equality Forum, an LGBT organization headquartered in Philadelphia. He was a visiting scholar at Yale Law School from January- May 2004, researching anti-discrimination issues, especially as they relate to sexual orientation and HIV/AIDS, and September-October 2006, when gave a lecture for the Workshop on Chinese Legal Reform at Yale Law School, and conducted research on civil rights, anti-discrimination law, and HIV/AIDS law and policy. He visited Yale again in April 2007 to participate in the Robert L. Bernstein International Human Rights Fellowship Symposium and other programs and activities at Yale Law School.

ZHOU Hanhua
Professor Zhou Hanhua is Director of the Constitutional Law and Administrative Law Department of the Institute of Law under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and a part-time professor at several other institutes and universities in China. He is China’s leading expert on open government information, led a scholars group to prepare a draft on what would be China’s first personal information protection law and has worked extensively on various issues of regulatory reform. He was a Senior Visiting Scholar at the China Law Center in Fall 2000 (researching freedom of information law), a visiting scholar at the Institute of Human Rights in 1998 and a research scholar at the University of Michigan Law School from 1993-95. While at Yale Law School from February 26 to March 12, 2007, he conducted research on issues relating to E-government law and practice.

Fall 2006

LI Jie
Dr. LI Jie is Deputy Director of the Institute of Food and Drug Supervision of the Shanghai Municipal Food and Drug Administration and has been cooperating with the Center in drafting China’s first food recall measures. Dr. Li obtained a bachelor’s degree from Fudan University’s School of Public Health in 1987 and has 20 years of experience in public health medicine, food safety and standards enforcement. While at Yale Law School from September to October 2006, she researched food recall systems at the federal and state level, as well as international experience, in order to improve draft food recall measures already being implemented on a trial basis in Shanghai.

LONG Xiaolin
Ms. LONG Xiaolin is a lawyer with the Research Center of the Guangzhou Municipal Government Office of Legislative Affairs. She is a graduate of Sichuan University Law School, where she obtained an undergraduate degree in law with a specialty in economic law, and earned a Master of Law from the Central Party School. While at Yale Law School from September to October 2006, she explored mechanisms to effectively and regularly evaluate and revise or abolish administrative regulations.

WANG Jing
Ms. WANG Jing earned a Master’s degree from the Law School of China University of Political Science and Law, and is a Ph.D. candidate in the same school. Ms. Wang obtained a bachelor’s degree in International Economic Law from the Law School of NanKai University. She currently also serves as academic secretary at the Law Department of China National School of Administration (CNSA). While at Yale Law School from November to December 2006, she conducted research on administrative dispute resolution mechanisms.

XIONG Qiuhong
Professor XIONG Qiuhong is the Deputy Director of the Department of Procedural Law at the Institute of Law of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. She holds a Ph.D. in Criminal Procedural Law from the China University of Political Science and Law. While at Yale Law School from September to December 2006, she conducted research on criminal procedure reform.

ZHOU Dan
Mr. ZHOU Dan is Executive Director of Yu Dan, an organization based in Shanghai with a mission to achieve positive perception of, and full recognition of, gay rights in China, and a lawyer with Shao Gang Law Office in Shanghai. He received his Master of Laws from Renmin University. Mr. Zhou was profiled in the June 27, 2005 issue of the TIME magazine and received the 2006 International Role Model Award from Equality Forum, an LGBT organization headquartered in Philadelphia. He was a visiting scholar at Yale Law School from January to May 2004, with research emphasis on anti-discrimination issues, especially as they relate to sexual orientation and HIV/AIDS. He visited The China Law Center at Yale Law School again from September 26 to October 10, 2006, in order to give a lecture for The Workshop on Chinese Legal Reform at Yale Law School, and conduct research on civil rights, anti-discrimination law, and HIV/AIDS law and policy.

Spring 2006

FANG Jingang
Judge FANG Jingang is a judge at the Institute of Applied Legal Studies of the Supreme People’s Court (SPC) in China, and a member of the Judicial Reform Group within the SPC. He obtained a doctoral degree in Procedure Law from the China University of Politics and Law. While at the Yale Law School from late February to late May in 2006, he conducted research on sentencing in criminal cases.

WANG Qinghua
Mr. WANG Qinghua is a lecturer at the China University of Politics and Law. He received a LL.M. degree from Harvard Law School. While at the Yale Law School from February 2 to May 22, 2006, he conducted research on the first amendment doctrine and administrative litigation in rural China.

YANG Lei
Ms. YANG Lei is a researcher at the Guangzhou Municipal Government Office of Legislative Affairs (OLA). Ms. Yang received her LL.M. degree in International, Commercial and European Law from the University of Sheffield in the UK. While at the Yale Law School from January 9 to March 1, 2006, she conducted research on U.S. and international practices of public participation in administrative rulemaking, and coordinated the cooperative project on rulemaking between The China Law Center at Yale Law School and the Guangzhou OLA.

ZHANG Lijuan
Dr. ZHANG Lijuan is a Lecturer in Law in the Political and Law Department of the Central Party School. She earned her Ph.D. in Law from the Renmin University of China. While at the Yale Law School from January 31 to May 19 in 2006, she conducted research on the role of representatives and their political parties in the legislature.

WANG Wei
Ms. WANG Wei is a government official in the Department of Agricultural, Natural Resources, and Environmental Protection of the State Council's Legislative Affairs Office (OLA). She received a master's degree in Civil and Business Law from Tsinghua University. During her stay at the Yale Law School from February 20 to April 13, 2006, she conducted research on water conservation.

LI Sheng
Mr. LI Sheng is a senior staff member in the Department of Industry, Communications, and Commerce of the State Council's Legislative Affairs Office (OLA). He received a LL.M degree in Legal Education from the Capital Normal University. During his stay at the Yale Law School between April 1 and May 20, 2006, he conducted research on government information disclosure regulations.

FU Yulin
Dr. FU Yulin is an Associate Professor of civil procedure and legal practice at the Peking University School of Law. She received a Ph.D. in civil procedure law from the Renmin University of China Law School and a Master’s Degree in civil law from Peking University School of Law. She served as a judge in the Wuhan Maritime Court from 1987-94. During her stay at the Yale Law School from April 3 to May 17, 2006, she researched the civil appeals system in the United States.

Fall 2005

LIU Qiang
Mr. LIU Qiang is Deputy Director of the Justice Research Institute of Shanghai, and a Professor at the Shanghai Institute of Politics and Law, teaching and writing primarily in the criminal law field. He received a masters degree studying criminology from Iowa State University. While at the Yale Law School he conducted comparative research related to introducing community corrections systems in China.

LUO Changqing
Ms. LUO is the Deputy Director of the General Division of the Office of Legislative Affairs, Shanghai Municipal People's Government. She received a Master of Law degree from East China University of Politics and Law, specializing in administrative law. While at the Yale Law School, she conducted research on alternative methods of administrative dispute resolution and public participation in administrative rulemaking.

JIN Jinping
Dr. JIN is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the National Institute of Law, Chinese Academy of Social Science, as well as Vice Director of the Center for Real Estate Law and Assistant Director of the Center for Nonprofit Organizations Law at Peking University Law School. She earned her Ph.D. in civil and commercial law from Peking University Law School. While at the Yale Law School, she researched issues relating to non-profit organizations, the emergence of homeowners associations in China, and charitable trusts.

ZHOU Wei
Professor ZHOU Wei is a Vice Dean of Shanghai Jiaotong University Law School and the Director of Jiaotong’s Human Rights Law Study Center and Institute of Procedural Law and Judicial Reform. His teaching and writing focuses especially on criminal law and criminal procedure. He received his Ph.D. in Law from the University of Hong Kong. While at the Yale Law School, he conducted comparative research on bail and other systems of pre-trial release

Spring 2005

CAI Wei
Ms. CAI, who earned a Master of Law degree from Jilin University, is an Editor and Assistant Research Fellow at the Institute of the Procuratorial Theory. While at Yale, she conducted research on how to prevent and deter coerced confessions, as well as the role of prosecutors in the American legal system.

CHEN Changxiong
Mr. CHEN Changxiong is a lawyer in the State Council’s Office of Legislative Affairs (OLA), working in the Department of Education, Science, Culture and Health. He earned a master’s degree in law at Northwest Institute of Politics and Law. While at the Yale Law School, he researched food safety issues in connection with a major revision of China’s Food Safety Law.

CHEN Duanhong
Mr. Chen Duanhong is an associate professor at the Peking University Law School and director of its Center for Constitutional Studies. He earned his Ph.D. in 1993 from the China Academy of Social Sciences. He is one of China's leading young scholars in the fields of administrative law and constitutional law. His research at Yale focused on issues of constitutional law and constitutionalism.

DONG Wenyuan
Ms. DONG is currently a Ph.D. Candidate in Administrative Law at Peking University Law School. She also has a Masters in Legal History from Peking University Law School. Her latest publication is called “Comparative Analysis of the Pursuit of Constitutionalism between George Washington and Sun Zhongshan”, which was co-authored with Professor Yuan Shuhong of China’s National School of Administration (CNSA). While at Yale, she conducted research on public participation in lawmaking, as well as assisted on other projects between The China Law Center and the CNSA.

PU Zhiqiang
Mr. PU is currently a partner of Beijing Huayi Law Firm. He is a pioneering free speech lawyer in China. His other areas of practice include finance, real estate, reputation protection, bankruptcy, unjust competition law, antitrust law, and private housing loans. His recent victory in a case representing "China Reform" magazine is seen by many as an important advance in protecting more independent media in China. While at the Yale Law School, he conducted comparative research on media and the law. An article about Mr. Pu recently appeared in the Washington Post: "In China, Turning the Law Into the People's Protector," by Philip P. Pan, December 28, 2004.

XIA Xueping
Mr. XIA is an official at the Central Propaganda Department Laws and Regulations Bureau in Beijing. He earned his Ph.D. at North-East Normal University and an M.A. in Economics from Tsinghua University. During his time at Yale, Mr. Xia conducted comparative research on the relationship between the government and the media within the United States as part of a cooperation program between our Center and Tsinghua University Law School.

ZHANG Dajun
Mr. ZHANG, an M.B.A. graduate of the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, has been working on business strategy issues at IBM Business Consulting Services in Beijing for the past two years. He is also a nationally recognized public interest advocate in China. Among his activities, he is the organizer of the biweekly Salon in Beijing, the leader of the media forum at the Open Constitution Initiative, and an active member of a leading independent rural development organization. While at Yale, Mr. Zhang conducted comparative research on privatization and corporate governance.

ZHANG Zhihui
Since 1996 Mr. ZHANG has been Director-General at the Institute of Procuratorial Theory at the Supreme People's Procuratorate. He has published thirty books and more than fifty articles on criminal law and justice. He earned his Ph.D. in criminal law from Renmin University Law School. While at Yale, his research focused on how to prevent and deter coerced confessions, as well as the role of prosecutors in the American legal system.

Fall 2004

XU Zhiyong
Professor Xu teaches law in the Law and Humanities School of the Beijing University of Post and Telecommunications. He received his Ph.D. in law from Peking University. Professor Xu was a key figure in the campaign to abolish the Chinese system of “custody and repatriation.” He also is the founder of The Open Constitution Initiative, an independent center working to advance constitutional government in China. He recently won the only openly contested election for a seat in the Beijing People’s Congress. While at Yale, Prof. Xu conducted research on comparative constitutional law.

LIU Renwen
Professor LIU Renwen is Senior Research Fellow of the Law Institute of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. He received his Ph.D. in law from the China University of Politics and Law. He has been a visiting scholar at Columbia University Law School and at the Oxford Criminology Centre. His recent work included groundbreaking research on the death penalty and the protection of human rights. He has also written on environmental crimes and reform of re-education through labor system. While at The China Law Center, Prof. Liu undertook research on the regulation and control of police agencies.

WANG Liming
Professor WANG Liming is Dean of Renmin University of China Law School. He is also a Deputy of the National People's Congress. He received his Ph.D. in Law from Renmin University, was a Fulbright scholar at Harvard Law School and has taught in France and Japan. He is widely-regarded as China's leading civil law scholar, and is an unusually prolific author of books and articles on a variety of legal subjects. He has played a key personal role in the drafting of China's contract law and property law as well as a variety of court reforms. He is currently working on the drafting of China's first-ever tort law, and tort law was the main area of his research while at Yale.

WANG Jiancheng
Professor WANG Jiancheng teaches law at the Peking University Law School, and is one of China’s leading criminal procedure scholars. He is also Deputy President of the China Procedural Law Association. Before joining the Peking University faculty, he was dean of the Yantai University Law School in Shandong. He received his Ph.D. in law from Renmin University and was a visiting scholar at the Katholic University of Leuven in Belgium from 1994 to 1996. As a Fulbright Scholar at Yale Law School, he researched plea bargaining in the United States and China.

WANG Lifen
Dr. WANG Lifen is the Director of the Information Program Workshop at China Central Television (CCTV) where she directs the network's principle economic news programs The Morning Show, Newslist, Economic News Affiliated Broadcast, and Economic Half Hour. Previously, she was the creator and producer of the popular and very successful and influential current affairs interview program Dialogue.

XU Yong'an
Dr. XU is a Section Chief in the Department of Criminal Legislation of the Legislative Affairs Commission of the National People’s Congress. He received his Ph.D. in criminal law from Peking University in 2003. During his time at Yale, he focused his research on community corrections and alternatives to incarceration.

Summer 2004

WANG Wansheng
WANG Wansheng is Director of the Section of National Resources and Environmental Protection in the Department of Agricultural, National Resources, and Environmental Protection of the State Council's Office of Legislative Affairs (OLA). Mr. Wang received his law degree from Jilin University. He participated in the drafting and revision of numerous laws, including China's basic land law, the Land Management Law, and other real estate-related laws. He has also written books and articles on law and legal reform in general and on land and mortgage law in particular. While at Yale Law School, Mr. Wang researched issues related to an expected revision of the Land Management Law, including when a state may expropriate land for the "public interest," what procedures and compensation standards should apply to such a taking, how best to implement land use controls, especially to protect and preserve agricultural lands, etc.

YANG Kui
Yang Kui works in the Department of Agriculture, National Resources and Environmental Protection of the Office of Legislative Affairs of the State Council. Mr. Yang received masters’ degrees in law from the University of Hong Kong and Renmin University. He participated in the drafting and revision of several laws relating to property and housing and has written explanations of various housing-related regulations. While at The China Law Center, Mr. Yang researched issues related to an expected revision of China's Land Management Law, including when a state may expropriate land for the "public interest," what procedures and compensation should apply to such a taking, how best to implement and use controls, especially to protect and preserve agricultural lands, and how to establish a land title and registration system.

Spring 2004

GAO Xiang
Judge GAO is a judge of the No. 4 Civil Division of the Supreme People’s Court of China. He received his LL.M. and Ph.D. in Law from the University of New South Wales in Australia in addition to an LL.M. from the China University of Political Science and Law. He has been active in Chinese and International forums and has written numerous books and articles in Chinese and English in many areas including Civil and Commercial law. As part of a cooperative project between the Supreme People’s Court, National Judges College and The China Law Center, Judge Gao conducted research on judicial reform and court organization and structure.

BI Yuqian 
Professor BI is a Professor and Director of the Judicial Center of the National Judges College. He also serves as chief editor of two legal journals and is author of many articles on civil evidence and civil procedure. He received his LL.M. and J.D. degrees from China’s University of Political Science and Law. As part of a cooperative project between the Supreme People’s Court, National Judges College and The China Law Center, Professor Bi conducted research on judicial reform and court organization and structure.

YANG Haining
YANG Haining is a lawyer in the Legal Affairs Office of the Shanghai Municipal People’s Government. Ms. Yang received her law degree from East China Politics and Law University. She is contributing to the draft of a national emergency law in China and conducted research on related issues while at Yale Law School in February 2004.

ZHOU Dan
ZHOU Dan is a lawyer with Richard Wang & Co. Law Offices in Shanghai. He received his Master of Laws from Renmin University. In addition to his work as a practicing lawyer, he is a founding member and legal advisor for Shanghai Hotline for Sexual Minorities and an active contributor to Ai Qing Bai Pi Shu – Zhong Huan Tong Zhi Wang ("White Paper on Love– Chinese Gay and Lesbian Web"), one of oldest and most popular gay websites in Chinese. While at Yale Law School from January to April 2004, Mr. Zhou researched anti-discrimination issues, especially as they relate to sexual orientation and HIV/AIDS.

Fall 2003

FENG Lixia
Ms. FENG Lixia is an Associate Professor in the Political and Law Department at the Central Party School in Beijing. She has written the books A Comparative Study on Codification and Outline of the Science of the Law in addition to many articles on jurisprudence, comparative law, law and society, and legislative science. Professor Feng received her Ph.D. in jurisprudence and comparative law from the Peking University Law School. While at Yale, Professor Feng conducted research on issues related to judicial reform.

ZHOU Qiren
ZHOU Qiren is a Professor at the China Center for Economic Research at Peking University. He has written numerous articles and books on economic and legal topics, including regulatory reform, new institutional economics, the telecommunications sector, and rural development. Professor Zhou received his Ph.D. in economics from the University of California, Los Angeles and his B.A. from Renmin University in Beijing. While at Yale, Professor Zhou conducted research related to the income and land tenure system in rural China, with an emphasis on transfer of land rights.

CHENG Jie
CHENG Jie is Associate Professor at the School of Law at Tsinghua University. She has written extensively on many aspects of law and legal reform in China, including Open Government Under Law--A Constitutionalist Perspective. She is the Secretary-General and Vice Director of the Center for Constitutional Law and Civil Rights at Tsinghua University and one of the founders of Tsinghua's clinical program. Professor Cheng received her Ph.D. in constitutional law from Peking University. As a Fulbright Scholar at Yale, she researched freedom of information and transparent government.

Summer 2003

ZHANG Jianhua

ZHANG Jianhua is Deputy Director of the Department of Education, Science, Culture and Public Health of the State Council's Office of Legislative Affairs (OLA), the ministry-level department that develops and drafts much of the central government's legislation and administrative law. He has been with OLA for seventeen years, and has been involved in drafting many important national regulations. Mr. Zhang has a Master Of Law from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. While at the Yale Law School during June and July 2003, he conducted research on public participation in administrative rulemaking.

HUANG Changjie
HUANG Changjie is a lawyer in the Department of Research of the State Council's Office of Legislative Affairs (OLA) and also a member of the Office of Administrative License Reforms. Mr. Huang has a Master of Law from Renmin University, and has written numerous articles and papers on administrative law. While at the Yale Law School during June and July 2003, he conducted research on public participation in administrative rulemaking.

GUAN Lijuan ("Jennie")
GUAN Lijuan ("Jennie") is a lawyer in the Shanghai Municipal Government's Office of Legislative Affairs. Ms. Guan received her law degree from East China University of Politics and Law. She conducted research on open government information laws and practice while at the Yale Law School during June and July 2003.

Spring 2003

GUAN Yi
Mr. GUAN Yi is Executive Director and Research Fellow of the Exchange and Cooperation Division of the National Judges College (NJC) of the Supreme People's Court (SPC). He is a graduate of Peking University Law School, and worked at the Chinese Training Center for Senior Judges of the SPC from 1988 through 1997. As part of a cooperative project between the SPC, NJC and The China Law Center, Guan Yi conducted research on comparative issues concerning court organization and structure.

JIANG Huiling
JIANG Huiling is a Senior Judge at the Supreme People's Court (SPC) and a member of the Judicial Reform Group within the SPC. He is also in charge of the Civil Division in the Research Department of the SPC, which drafts judicial interpretations at the request of the High People's Courts, and has published various articles on the Chinese judicial system and judicial reform. As part of a cooperative project between the SPC, NJC and Yale Law School, Judge Jiang conducted research on comparative issues concerning court organization and structure.

KE Rongzhu
KE Rongzhu, an economist, is a researcher at the Institute of Business Research (IBR), the research arm of Guanghua School of Management, which is Peking University's business school. His recent research has addressed topics related to law and economics, including enforcement of contracts, social trust and social norms, and corporate governance, and he has also published papers on bargaining, institutional change, and informal finance. Mr. Ke researched issues of social trust during his time at Yale Law School.

ZHANG Qi
ZHANG Qi is an Associate Professor and Executive Director of the Institute of Comparative Law and Legal Sociology at Peking University Law School. His major areas of interest are philosophy of law, comparative law, sociology of law and tort law. He was a Visiting Scholar at Harvard Law School from 1995-1997 and a Visiting Scholar at University of Heidelberg (Germany) in 1999-2000. Dr. Zhang mainly researched the precedent system while at Yale Law School.

ZHOU Wei
Professor ZHOU Wei is the Director of Constitutional and Administrative Law at Sichuan University Law School. He has been the Vice Director of the Legal Affairs Commission of the Standing Committee of Sichuan People's Congress for nine years. His major areas of scholarly interest are constitutional law and administrative law, and as a lawyer he has brought a number of innovative constitutional law cases in China. At Yale, Professor Zhou researched the right of equal protection under American law and its relevance to Chinese constitutional rights.

Fall 2002

CHEN Sixi
Mr. CHEN is Deputy Director of the State and Administrative Law Department of the Legislative Affairs Commission (LAC) of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress of China. He has worked in the LAC for eighteen years. His major areas of interest are constitutional law and administrative law. Mr. Chen researched American administrative procedure law while at the Yale Law School during the Fall Term 2002.

LI Ao
Ms. LI is Director of the Administrative Litigation Department of the Center for Protection of the Rights of Disadvantaged Citizens at Wuhan University in Hubei province. A former public procurator in Heilongjiang province, she earned her LL.M. degree from Wuhan University Law School in 1998 and is working on her Ph.D. in the field of constitutional law at the same school. She teaches administrative and administrative procedure law as well as a class on clinical legal education. Ms. Li was a Visiting Scholar at the Yale Law School, researching gender discrimination, during November and December 2002.

LI Zhong
LI Zhong is an associate professor at the Institute of Law in the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. His major teaching and research interest is constitutional law, and he is also interested in the fields of media law, administrative law and human rights. His first monograph, Constitutional Supervision, was published in 1999 (2d edition in 2002). To date he has published more than 20 academic papers. Born in August 1968, Professor Li has a J.S.D.

WANG Xixin
Wang Xixin LL.B. (1990), LL.M. (1996), J.S.D.(1999), is Associate Professor of Law at Peking University Law School. From 1998-99, Professor Wang was a Visiting Scholar and Senior Research Fellow at the Center for Chinese Legal Studies at Columbia Law School. He has also served as a Member of the China Legislation Research Group since 1998. Professor Wang has been involved in drafting legislation and consulting on legislative issues as a Research Consultant for the General Office of the Standing Committee of China's National People's Congress in the past few years. His major research interest fields cover administrative law, constitutional law, and comparative legal studies. He was a Visiting Scholar at the Yale Law School during the month of September 2002.

ZUO Weimin
Professor ZUO is Vice Dean of and Professor of Law at the Sichuan University Law School. He was a Visiting Scholar at the Yale Law School from October through December 2002 researching judicial reform issues.

Summer 2002

LI Lijun
LI Lijun is a member of the State Council's Legislative Affairs Office (OLA). Mr. Li was researching, together with Mr. Du Xingqiang, legal issues relating to credit reporting systems in support of a project to draft China's first credit reporting legislation.

DU Xingqiang
DU Xingqiang is a member of the State Council's Legislative Affairs Office (OLA). Mr. Du was researching, together with Mr. Li Lijun, legal issues relating to credit reporting systems in support of a project to draft China's first cr3dit reporting legislation.

XIANG Ti
XIANG Ti is Deputy Chief of Sub-section of the Shanghai Legislative Affairs Office. Mr. Xiang was researching legal issues relating to business associations.

Spring 2002

CHEN Ruihua
Professor CHEN teaches at Peking University Law School. He was researching issues of constitutional law while at Yale.

GAN Wen
Judge GAN is a judge at Supreme People’s Court (SPC) specializing in administrative litigation. While at Yale, he was working on issues related to judicial reform.

XU Anbiao
XU Anbiao is a member of the Legislative Affairs Commission (LAC) of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPC) and was a visiting scholar from at Syracuse University.

CAI Dingjian
CAI Dingjian was formerly a member of the Secretariat of the National People's Congress (NPC). Professor Cai is currently Director of the Institute for Study on Constitutionalism at the China University of Political Science and Law.

TENG Wei
Teng Wei is Deputy Director General of the Criminal Law Department of the Legislative Affairs Commission (LAC) of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPC).

SUN Ping
SUN Ping is Vice Division Chief of the Legal Department of the Ministry of Public Security.

LEI Jianbin
LEI Jianbin is a staff member of the Criminal Law Department of the of the Legislative Affairs Commission (LAC) of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPC).

TIAN Yanmiao
TIAN Yanmiao is a staff member of the Legislative Affairs Commission (LAC) of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPC). She was researching issues relating to revisions of China's Company Law.

Fall 2001

Albert Chen

Professor Chen is Dean of the City University of Hong Kong Law School.

ZHAO Xiaoli
Professor ZHAO teaches at Peking University.

SUN Chao
Professor SUN teaches at East China Institute of Politics and Law.

HONG Shi
HONG Shi is a staff member of the Civil Law Department of the Legislative Affairs Commission (LAC) of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress (NPC).

ZHANG Yaobo
ZHANG Yaobo is a staff member of the Department of Industry, Communications and Commerce of the State Council's Legislative Affairs Office (OLA).

Spring 2001

MA Huaide
Professor MA taught law at the China University of Political Science and Law when he was a visiting scholar in 2001. He later became Dean of the Law School and President of the University.  

FU Hualing
Professor FU taught law at the University of Hong Kong when he was a visiting scholar in 2001. He is now Dean in 2019 of its Faculty of Law.

TANG Weijian
Professor TANG teaches law at Renmin University of China Law School.

LANG Sheng
LANG Sheng is Director-General of the Department of Criminal Legislation of the Legislative Affairs Commission (LAC) of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress (NPC).

YANG Yuguan
Associate Professor YANG teaches at the China University of Political Science and Law.

Fall 2000

ZHAN Xingxiang

ZHAN Xingxiang is a staff member of the Department of Research of the State Council's Legislative Affairs Office (OLA).

ZHANG Yiqin
Associate Professor is a Senior Staff Member of the Department of Politics, Labor and Social Security the State Council's Legislative Affairs Office (OLA).

LIU Haitao

CHEN Zexian
Professor CHEN teaches at the Institute of Law, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and was a visiting scholar at Columbia University.

LIU Junning
LIU Junning teaches at Peking University and was a visiting research fellow at Harvard University.

ZHOU Hanhua

Professor ZHOU was an Associate Professor at the Institute of Law, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, when he was first a visiting scholar. He later became Deputy Director of the Law Institute.

HUANG Taiyun
HUANG Taiyun is a legislative researcher at the National People’s Congress (NPC).

WANG Qian
WANG Qian is a legislative researcher at the National People’s Congress (NPC).

Spring 2000

ZHU Suli

Professor ZHU taught legal theory at Peking University Law School when he was a visiting scholar in 2000.  He served as Dean of the Law School from 2001-2010.

BIAN Jianlin

Professor BIAN teaches criminal procedure at China University of Political Science and Law.

WANG Chenguang

Professor WANG taught law at the City University of Hong Kong when he was a visiting scholar in 2000. He later moved to Tsinghua University in Beijing, serving as Vice Dean of its Law School and Director of its Health Law Research Center.

Fall 1999

XIN Chunying 

Professor XIN was Deputy Director and Acting Director at the Institute of Law, Chinese Academy of Social Science when she was the Center’s first visiting scholar in 1999. She became Vice-Chairperson of the Legislative Affairs Work Commission of China's National People's Congress Standing Committee and Deputy Secretary-General of the National People’s Congress Standing Committee.

CHEN Duanhong

Professor CHEN teaches Constitutional and Administrative Law at Peking University Law School.

Fellows

Graham Webster, Senior Fellow
Graham Webster (魏光明) was a Senior Fellow of the Paul Tsai China Center, as well as Senior Research Scholar and Lecturer in Law at Yale Law School, where he focuses on the Center’s research and dialogues concerning U.S.-China relations and foreign policy.  His research areas include cybersecurity, Sino-Japanese relations, technology in politics, and maritime disputes. He has worked at the Center for American Progress and consulted for the Natural Resources Defense Council China Program, the National Bureau of Asian Research, and the Clinton Global Initiative.  Graham has taught East Asian politics at New York University’s Center for Global Affairs and has been a visiting scholar at China Foreign Affairs University. He holds a master’s in East Asian studies from Harvard University and a bachelor’s in international studies and journalism from Northwestern University.  His website is gwbstr.com, and he publishes the news and analysis e-mail brief U.S.-China Week.

Jonathan Hecht
Jonathan Hecht, a Massachusetts State Representative since 2009, is one of the country’s leading authorities on contemporary Chinese law and particularly Chinese criminal law and procedure. He founded The China Law Center with Professor Paul Gewirtz and served as its Deputy Director from 1999 to 2006. Before coming to Yale, Mr. Hecht worked as a program officer in the Beijing office of the Ford Foundation and taught Chinese law at Harvard Law School. He has been a consultant on Chinese legal reform projects for the United Nations, the U.S. State Department, the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights, and other organizations. Mr. Hecht is a graduate of Stanford University, Harvard Law School, and the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy.

John Balzano
John Balzano was a Senior Research Scholar in Law at Yale Law School, and Senior Fellow at The China Law Center. He is currently a Visiting Assistant Professor at the Boston University School of Law. Previously, he was a litigation associate at the law firm of Curtis, Mallet-Prevost, Colt & Mosle in New York. He was also a law clerk to the Honorable Joette Katz, associate justice of the Supreme Court of Connecticut, and the Honorable Steven M. Gold, Chief Magistrate Judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York. He was a postdoctoral fellow of The China Law Center from 2005 to 2006. He has also worked and studied in Mainland China and Taiwan and spent four months working as a legislative assistant in Tokyo to Takashi Shinohara in the Japanese House of Representatives in 2004. He has a B.A. in East Asian Languages and Cultures from Columbia University, and a J.D. and M.A. in East Asian Studies from Washington University School of Law in St. Louis.

Wang Xixin, Fellow
Professor Wang Xixin resides in Beijing, where he is Associate Professor Law at Peking University Law School, and Associate Dean for External Affairs. One of China’s leading younger scholars, Professor Wang researches and teaches administrative law, constitutional law and comparative legal studies. He has helped draft legislation as a Member of the Administrative Legislation Research Group, and consulted for the General Office of the National People’s Congress’ Standing Committee.

Timothy Webster
Timothy Webster was a Senior Fellow at the Center and Lecturer in Law at Yale Law School from 2008-11. He is presently Assistant Professor of Law and Director of East Asian Legal Studies at Case Western Reserve University.

Katherine Wilhelm
Katherine Wilhelm is a lawyer and Program Officer in the Beijing office of the Ford Foundation. She was formerly a Senior Fellow of The China Law Center based in Beijing. A former correspondent and bureau chief for The Associated Press and the Far Eastern Economic Review based in Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong and Hanoi, Katherine is a graduate of Columbia Law School and holds master’s degrees in Chinese studies from Harvard University and journalism from Columbia University. Her legal publications include Rethinking Property Rights in Urban China (2004).

Jeffrey Prescott, Deputy Director
Jeffrey Prescott was Deputy Director of The China Law Center, and also Senior Research Scholar and Lecturer in Law at Yale Law School. He started and managed The China Law Center's Beijing office from 2002 to 2007, and was a visiting scholar at Peking University Law School. He speaks and writes on a wide range of topics related to China, including legal reform, public interest law, education and human rights. Recent presentations include "Legal Reform, Human Rights, and U.S.-China Relations," Washington University in St. Louis; "Managing Sino-American Relations in Turbulent Times," National Committee on U.S.-China Relations China Town Hall; "Functions of American Legal Education," Shihezi University (Xinjiang, China); "Rule of Law in China," Princeton University; and "Public Interest Lawyers in China," University of Michigan. From 1998 to 2001, he was staff attorney at the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights in New York. He is a 1997 graduate of Yale Law School, and clerked for the Honorable Walter Stapleton, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.

Stanley Seiden 
Stanley Seiden was a research associate of The China Law Center based in Beijing. Mr. Seiden is a graduate of Yale College, where he majored in economics. He holds a graduate certificate in Chinese and American studies from the Johns Hopkins University-Nanjing University Center for Chinese and American Studies.

Philip Chen
Philip Chen was a Senior Fellow from 2007 to 2010. He is presently a project director of the China Health Law Initiative at the O'Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law at Georgetown University.

Zhen Liu
Zhen Liu was a fellow of the Center, based in New Haven, from 2007 to 2008. She is presently practicing law in Beijing.

Keith Hand
Keith Hand was Beijing Director and Senior Fellow of the Center, and Senior Research Scholar at Yale Law School. He is currently Professor of Law and Director of East Asian Legal Studies Program at the Hastings College of Law.

Neysun Mahboubi
Neysun Mahboubi was a Fellow of the Center, and Tutor in Law at Yale Law School. He is presently a Research Scholar at the Center for the Study of Contemporary China as well as Lecturer in Law at the University of Pennsylvania.  

Tom Kellogg
Tom Kellogg was a Senior Fellow of the Center and Lecturer in Law at Yale Law School from 2006-2008.  He is presently working at the Open Society Institute, and teaching Chinese law at Fordham Law School.

Ira Belkin
Ira Belkin was a Senior Fellow of the Center for 2004-2005. He is currently an Adjunct Professor of Law at New York University School of Law and the Executive Director of the NYU US-Asia Law Institute.

Andrea Worden
Andrea Worden was a Center Fellow for 2003-2004. She is currently working for O'Melveny & Myers in Washington D.C.

Donald Clarke
Professor Clarke was a Fellow in Residence at the Center during 2001 and again in 2003.  He is currently Professor of Law at The George Washington University.

Stephen Hsu (Xu Chuanxi)
Professor Hsu was a Center Fellow for 2001-2002. His major area of research was civil law. He is currently Dean and Professor of Law of the School of American and Comparative Law at the China University of Political Science and Law. 

Siodhbhra Parkin, Fellow
Siodhbhra Parkin (白茜娴) was a Fellow of the Paul Tsai China Center at Yale Law School from October 2015- July 2017. Before joining the Center, she spent three years in Beijing working with the American Bar Association Rule of Law Initiative, where she provided both substantive and technical support on a wide range of international collaborative legal reform projects. Her primary areas of work experience and research interests in the Chinese context include economic and social development, women’s rights, and LGBT rights. Siodhbhra has worked at the Financial Times and consulted for grassroots Chinese NGOs as well as the United Nations Trust Fund for the Elimination of Violence Against Women. She holds an LL.M. from the Renmin University of China School in Beijing and speaks and reads Mandarin Chinese. Siodhbhra completed a master’s degree at Harvard University as well as the London School of Economics and Political Science. She received her bachelor’s degree in History and East Asian Studies at Harvard University. 

Research Associates

Claire Yixin Ren
Claire Yixin Ren was a Research Associate of the Paul Tsai China Center at Yale Law School. Previously, she was profiled in Yale’s China Hands “25 Under 25” in U.S.-China relations, which features 25 people who have demonstrated exceptional promise in China studies and in furthering the future of the U.S.-China relationship. She holds an M.Phil. in Criminological Research from the University of Cambridge and a B.A. in Political Science from New York University (Shanghai). She is currently a student at Yale Law School.

Mia Shuang Li
Mia Shuang Li was a research associate with the Paul Tsai China Center. Previously she was an adjunct fellow at the Tow Center for Digital Journalism at Columbia Journalism School, following seven years of journalism career in Beijing, China. She holds an M.P.A. in Advanced Political and Economic Analysis from the School of International and Public affairs at Columbia University. 

Yiqin Fu, Research Associate

Raymond Lu
Raymond Lu was a Research Associate for The China Law Center Beijing Office and is now studying at the Yale Law School. Raymond came to Yale from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, DC. He received his B.A. in International Relations from Pomona College and also studied Chinese Language at Tsinghua University.

Liu Yuhan
Liu Yuhan was a Research Associate for The China Law Center in Beijing. Ms. Liu is a graduate of Yale’s M.A. program in East Asian Studies and holds a B.A. in journalism from Tsinghua University.

Gloria Gong
Gloria was a Research Associate at the Center based in Beijing. Before joining the Center, she studied on the U.S. government Flagship Program at Nanjing University, and interned at an NGO in Guizhou to support sustainable economic development for rural minority groups. She received a B.A. with distinction and honors in Chinese and Media Arts from Brigham Young University in 2009.

Ned Levin
Ned Levin was a Research Associate at the Center based in Beijing. Before joining the Center, he studied at Peking and Minzu Universities on a Harvard-Yenching Institute scholarship, and worked part-time as a paralegal and translator. He received a B.A. with distinction and honors in Silk Road Studies from Harvard in 2009.

Ivy Wang
Ivy Wang is currently a student at Yale Law School.

Jason Glick
Jason Glick is currently a student at Yale Law School.

Aaron Halegua
Aaron Halegua graduated from Harvard Law School in 2009, and is currently a Skadden Fellow with the Legal Aid Society in New York.

Jenny Lah
Jenny Lah is currently a master's candidate at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University.   

Grace Hsieh