CIBEL member Dr Jonathan Bonnitcha and co-author Emma Aisbett have won the 2021 Journal of International Economic Law (JIEL) John H. Jackson Prize for their article on ‘A Pareto-Improving Compensation Rule for Investment Treaties.’
A recent co-authored article by Associate Professor Weihuan Zhou is one of the first systemic studies of China’s policy and legal responses to security-related actions and disputes in the international trade regime.
Associate Professor Xiaochuan (Charlie) Weng’s co-authored article explores the structure of weighted voting rights (WVR) in the context of the two financial centres of the Asian continent.
Professor Qingjiang Kong and Associate Professor Weihuan Zhou consider the impact of China's zero-COVID policy on global supply chains in the wake of the country's ease on COVID restrictions.
Many countries have imposed extensive sanctions on Russia following its invasion of Ukraine. CIBEL held a virtual roundtable in May to discuss the impact of these restrictions on businesses both in Australia and worldwide.
Meeting for the first time since 2017, the WTO’s highest decision-making body managed to agree on some things – including its first treaty with environmental protection as the objective.
CIBEL member Weihuan Zhou and co-author Xiaomeng Qu have produced one of the first comprehensive reviews of the WTO’s jurisprudence on anti-dumping in their new article.
CIBEL Member Weihuan Zhou has co-authored a new article which offers extensive analyses of China’s emerging practice of subsidising their way through the LCE transition with Mandy Meng Fang.
This Conference will bring together industry stakeholders, regulatory officials and academics to discuss important topics such as the treatment and adoption of digital currencies and assets.
This year, we will explore the theme of “Changes in international economic law: Digitalisation, sustainability and beyond”. Submit your application for the Young Scholars Workshop now!
The day is coming – some say has already arrived – when artificial intelligence starts to invent things that its human creators could not. But our laws are lagging behind this technology, UNSW experts say.
A new article by Professor Wei Shen and Professor Heng Wang explores the emergence of two underexplored paths for the future of digital currencies as a whole.
What opportunities and challenges do the amendments create for foreign arbitration? Will they bring the arbitration practice in China more in line with transnational standards?
On 3 February, CIBEL Co-Director Professor Deborah Healey joined a roundtable discussion which examined four aspects of the Beijing Olympics: boycotts, COVID-19 control, law reform, and the economics of the Olympics.