CIBEL Centre's Professor Deborah Healey spoke at the first Competition Law Conference at Shenzhen University on "Competition Law and Policy under the Digital Economy" on 9 December.
The Co-director of UNSW Law’s Herbert Smith Freehills China International Business and Economic Law (CIBEL) Centre, Dr Heng Wang has been officially announced to be promoted to professor at UNSW in December 2019.
Herbert Smith Freehills and UNSW Law are delighted to launch the Herbert Smith Freehills China International Business and Economic Law (CIBEL) Asia-Pacific Pathway Program.
CIBEL member Associate Professor Heng Wang was invited to serve as a panellist at the DC FinTech Week at Capitol Hill, Washington DC on 22 October 2019.
A recent book chapter authored by Associate Professor Heng Wang studied the legal issues related to the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP).
On 8 November,CIBEL's Associate Professor Heng Wang took an interview with SBS Madarin on the impact of the RCEP to RPCs, especially China and Australia.
Associate Professor Heng Wang has been invited to visit and speak at several top-ranked law schools in the UK including King's College London (KCL), the University of Oxford, and the University of Edinburgh in October.
Associate Professor Heng Wang was invited to serve as a panellist at the Herbert Smith Freehills 2019 Global Partner Conference in Sydney on 14 September.
An article co-authored by CIBEL's Associate Professor Heng Wang and CIBEL PhD student Zhenyu Xiao has been published in the Law Science, Volume 2019 Issue 2.
CIBEL member Associate Professor Kun Fan's paper was presented at a plenary session of the American Society of Comparative Law (ASCL) 2019 Annual Meeting Program on 18 October 2019.
Herbert Smith Freehills China International Business and Economic Law (CIBEL) Centre Member Associate Professor Kun Fan presented at the conference "China's Legal Construction Program at 40 Years: Towards an Autonomous Legal System?”
Dr Weihuan Zhou, CIBEL Seed Grant recipient Associate Professor Henry Gao and CIBEL PhD student Xue Bai challenge the widespread view that existing WTO rules are insufficient for dealing with State capitalism in China.
Kun is our 9th CIBEL member and joined UNSW Law on 2 September 2019. She studied and has worked in Mainland China, Singapore, the U.S., Switzerland, France, Hong Kong and Canada.
“Forced” technology transfer is one of the most longstanding and significant issues in the U.S.-China trade war and international trade regulation in general.
The WTO is facing the most significant crisis since its establishment 24 years ago after the U.S. blocks the appointment of Appellate Body (AB) Members for almost two years, which may cause the system paralysed.