I-N

LIU Han

2020-12-02
 

Han Liu

Associate Professor

Email: liuhan@tsinghua.edu.cn

J.S.D., Yale Law School, 2012

LL.M., Yale Law School, 2009

LL.M., Peking University, 2008

LL.B., Peking University, 2006

Associate Professor and Assistant Dean, Tsinghua University School of Law, 2017-

Director of International Affairs, 2014-2017

Assistant Professor, Tsinghua University School of Law, 2013-2017

Research Assistant (2009-2010), Yale Law School

International Society of Public Law

China Law Society

Chinese Association of Hong Kong & Macao Studies

Hong Kong and Macau Basic Law Association (Deputy Secretary-General)

Beijing Government Administrative Rehearing Committee

China Cyber and Information Law Association (Board Member)

Beijing Association of Real Estate Law (Board Member)

Global Fellow, Center for Chinese Studies at University of Exeter

Fellow, CITIC Foundation for Reform and Development Studies

Public Law, Comparative Constitutional Law, Internet Law

Tsinghua University Award for “Teaching Excellence of Young Teachers” (2017)

Yuecheng Award for Law Teaching (2014)

US-China Education Trust Fellowship for “Chinese Leaders in American Studies” (2014)

Tsinghua University Award for “Meritorious Staff in International Affairs” (2014)

Yale Law School Doctoral Fellowship (2008-2012)

Peking University Graduate Students “Academic Talents” (2008)

A.    in English

1.      Two Faces of Self-Determination in Political Divorce, 10 Vienna J. Int’l Const. L. 4 (2016);

2.      Towards Constitutional Re-Enlightenment: Teaching American Constitutional Law in China, 9 Tsinghua China L. Rev. 63 (2016);

3.      The Symbolic and the Functional, in the Constitution of China (Daniel Bell & Yongle Zhang eds., Princeton University Press, 2017), forthcoming;

4.      Carl Schmitt Redux: Law and the Political in Contemporary Comparative Constitutionalism, in Reorienting the Political 121-136 (Carl K. Y. Shaw & Marchal Kai eds., Lexington Books, 2017).

B.     in Chinese

1.      Equality, Empathy, and Imagining Others: The Moral-Sentimental Foundation of Universal Human Rights, 11 Tsinghua Univ. L. J. 164 (2017).

2.      DNS, Cyber-Sovereignty, and Internet Governance, 26 Peking Univ. L. J. 3 (2016).

3.      National Unity in Regional Democratization of Hong Kong: Comparative Studies on States in Democratic Transition, 6 Global L. Rev. 56 (2015).

4.      The Chinese Path of Constitutional Law, 3 China L. Rev. 196 (2015).

5.      Globalization of Constitutional Law: Origins, Trends, and Problems, 2 China L. Sci. 108 (2015).

6.      American Constitutional Exceptionalism: Institutions, Doctrines, and Culture, 2 J. Comp. L. 20 (2014).

7.      Judicial Review of Presidential Power and Executive Actions: Rereading Marbury v. Madison, 26 Peking Univ. L. J. 3 (2014).

8.      An Exception to Globalization of Law: The Foreign Law Debate in America, 8 Tsinghua Univ. L. J. 164 (2014).

9.      Privacy, Freedom of Speech, and Chinese Internet Culture: The Predicament of Human Flesh Search Engine Regulation, 23 Peking Univ. L. J. 4 (2011).

10.    Republican Regime and National Unity: The Northern Secessionist Movement in Early American Constitutionalism, 6 Global L. Rev. 110(2011).

11.    The Lincolnian Moment: Constitution, Secession, and the Basis of American National Unity, 12 Peking Univ. L. Rev. 2 (2011).

12.    The Second Revolution, Perpetual Revolution, and the Imagination of the American Constitutional Stability,” 1 Pol. & L. Rev. 127 (2010).

C.    Translations

1.      Jules Coleman, Law and Philosophy, in Extraordinary Times, Peking University Press, 2016.

2.      Paul Kahn, Putting Liberalism in its Place, Beijing: China University of Political Science and Law Press, 2015, with Tian Li.

3.      Lord Hope of Craighead, Mixed Legal Systems in the Common Law World, in Tsinghua Univ. L. J., 2012/6.

J.S.D., Yale Law School, 2012

LL.M., Yale Law School, 2009

LL.M., Peking University, 2008

LL.B., Peking University, 2006

Associate Professor and Assistant Dean, Tsinghua University School of Law, 2017-

Director of International Affairs, 2014-2017

Assistant Professor, Tsinghua University School of Law, 2013-2017

Research Assistant (2009-2010), Yale Law School

International Society of Public Law

China Law Society

Chinese Association of Hong Kong & Macao Studies

Hong Kong and Macau Basic Law Association (Deputy Secretary-General)

Beijing Government Administrative Rehearing Committee

China Cyber and Information Law Association (Board Member)

Beijing Association of Real Estate Law (Board Member)

Global Fellow, Center for Chinese Studies at University of Exeter

Fellow, CITIC Foundation for Reform and Development Studies

Public Law, Comparative Constitutional Law, Internet Law

Tsinghua University Award for “Teaching Excellence of Young Teachers” (2017)

Yuecheng Award for Law Teaching (2014)

US-China Education Trust Fellowship for “Chinese Leaders in American Studies” (2014)

Tsinghua University Award for “Meritorious Staff in International Affairs” (2014)

Yale Law School Doctoral Fellowship (2008-2012)

Peking University Graduate Students “Academic Talents” (2008)

A.    in English

1.      Two Faces of Self-Determination in Political Divorce, 10 Vienna J. Int’l Const. L. 4 (2016);

2.      Towards Constitutional Re-Enlightenment: Teaching American Constitutional Law in China, 9 Tsinghua China L. Rev. 63 (2016);

3.      The Symbolic and the Functional, in the Constitution of China (Daniel Bell & Yongle Zhang eds., Princeton University Press, 2017), forthcoming;

4.      Carl Schmitt Redux: Law and the Political in Contemporary Comparative Constitutionalism, in Reorienting the Political 121-136 (Carl K. Y. Shaw & Marchal Kai eds., Lexington Books, 2017).

B.     in Chinese

1.      Equality, Empathy, and Imagining Others: The Moral-Sentimental Foundation of Universal Human Rights, 11 Tsinghua Univ. L. J. 164 (2017).

2.      DNS, Cyber-Sovereignty, and Internet Governance, 26 Peking Univ. L. J. 3 (2016).

3.      National Unity in Regional Democratization of Hong Kong: Comparative Studies on States in Democratic Transition, 6 Global L. Rev. 56 (2015).

4.      The Chinese Path of Constitutional Law, 3 China L. Rev. 196 (2015).

5.      Globalization of Constitutional Law: Origins, Trends, and Problems, 2 China L. Sci. 108 (2015).

6.      American Constitutional Exceptionalism: Institutions, Doctrines, and Culture, 2 J. Comp. L. 20 (2014).

7.      Judicial Review of Presidential Power and Executive Actions: Rereading Marbury v. Madison, 26 Peking Univ. L. J. 3 (2014).

8.      An Exception to Globalization of Law: The Foreign Law Debate in America, 8 Tsinghua Univ. L. J. 164 (2014).

9.      Privacy, Freedom of Speech, and Chinese Internet Culture: The Predicament of Human Flesh Search Engine Regulation, 23 Peking Univ. L. J. 4 (2011).

10.    Republican Regime and National Unity: The Northern Secessionist Movement in Early American Constitutionalism, 6 Global L. Rev. 110(2011).

11.    The Lincolnian Moment: Constitution, Secession, and the Basis of American National Unity, 12 Peking Univ. L. Rev. 2 (2011).

12.    The Second Revolution, Perpetual Revolution, and the Imagination of the American Constitutional Stability,” 1 Pol. & L. Rev. 127 (2010).

C.    Translations

1.      Jules Coleman, Law and Philosophy, in Extraordinary Times, Peking University Press, 2016.

2.      Paul Kahn, Putting Liberalism in its Place, Beijing: China University of Political Science and Law Press, 2015, with Tian Li.

3.      Lord Hope of Craighead, Mixed Legal Systems in the Common Law World, in Tsinghua Univ. L. J., 2012/6.