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Asian Legal History – Extradition and Empire Sovereignty and Subjecthood in Hong Kong (Dr. Ivan Lee, Assistant Professor, National University of Singapore)

October 20 @ 4:30 pm - 5:45 pm

In the first book-length study of the imperial history of extradition in Hong Kong, Ivan Lee shows how British judges, lawyers, and officials navigated the nature of extradition, debated its legalities, and distinguished it over time from other modalities of criminal jurisdiction – including deportation, rendition, and trial and punishment under territorial and extraterritorial laws. These complex debates were rooted in the contested legal status of Chinese subjects under the Opium War treaties of 1842–43. They also intersected wider shifts and tensions in British ideas of territorial sovereignty, criminal justice and procedure, and the legal rights and liabilities of British subjects and alien persons in British territory. By the 1870s, a new area of imperial law emerged as Britain incorporated a frontier colony into an increasingly territorial and legally homogenous empire. This important perspective revises our understanding of the legal origins of colonial Hong Kong and British imperialism in China.

Ivan Lee is Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Law at the National University of Singapore. He has taught undergraduate and graduate courses in criminal law, legal theory, and legal history. He writes on the legal history of the British Empire, focusing on ideas and practices of criminal law, jurisdiction, and procedure in the nineteenth century.

Details

Date:
October 20
Time:
4:30 pm - 5:45 pm
Event Categories:
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Venue

9.01, Chen Yu Tung Tower, Law Faculty

Organizer

Faculty of Law, University of Hong Kong