作者簡介
AIbert H.Y. Chen (陳弘毅)
AIbert H.Y. Chen (陳弘毅) was born in and grew up in Hong Kong. In February 1984, Chen began his academic career as a Lecturer in Law at the University of Hong Kong
He served as Head of the Department of Law in 1993–1996 and as Dean of the Faculty of Law in 1996-2002. He is currently the Cheng Chan Lan Yue Professor in Constitutional Law in the
Department of Law.
Professor Chen has, over the years, taught the subjects of legal system and legal method, constitutional law, administrative law, law and society, jurisprudence, the legal system of the
People s Republic of China, Rule of Law in modern China, research methodology, and the use of Chinese in law. In addition to the present work and over 200 journal articles and book chapters in
English and Chinese, he has written the following books: Hong Kong’s Legal System and he Basic Law ( 1986) (in Chinese); Human Rights and the Rule of Law. The Challenges of Hong Kong’s
Transition (1987) (in Chinese, co-authored); The Workers’ Compensation System in Hong Kong ( 1987) (co- authored); Law and Politics in Hong Kong (1990) (in Chinese); The Rule of Law,
Enlightenment and the Spirit of Modern Law(1998) (in Chinese); The World of Legal Theory (2003) (in Chinese); Hong Kong’s Search for the Rule of Law under “One Country, Two Systems” (2010) (in
Chinese); and The World of Constitutional jurisprudence (2014) (in Chinese). He is also a co-editor or editor of several books in English and Chinese, including The Basic Law and Hong Kong’s
Future (1988); General Principles of Hong Kong Law (3rd Edition, 2015) (in Chinese); Administrative Law and Governance in Asia (2009); Legal Reforms in China and Vietnam (2010); Public Law in
East Asia (2013); Constitutionalism in Asia in the Early Twenty-First Century (2014); Perspectives on the Hong Kong Basic Law(2015) (in Chinese); and Constitutional Courts in Asia (2018).
Professor Chen is currently a member of the Hong Kong Basic Law Committee under China’s National People s Congress Stan din g Committee (NPCSC) (a position which he has held since 1997) and a
Justice of the Peace. He is an honorary professor at several universities in mainland China and a member of the Academic Advisory Committee of the Institute of Law of the Academia Sinica,
Taipei. He is also Associate Editor of Hong Kong Law Journal and a member of the editorial or advisory boards of several other journals published in Hong Kong, mainland China, Taiwan, and
overseas, incIuding he China Re view, Journal of Comparative Law, Legal Studies, Transnational Legal Theory, Chinese Journal of Comparative Law, Asian Journal of Law and Society, Asian Journal
of Comparative La w, and National Taiwan University La w Review.