U.S.-Asia Law Institute Adjunct Faculty Advisor Peter A. Dutton wrote a review for Foreign Policy of China’s Law of the Sea: The New Rules of Maritime Order, by Isaac B. Kardon (Yale University Press, March 2023).
Institute News: Japanese politician speaks to law students about women’s empowerment
Institute News: USALI affiliate publishes commentary on Pelosi in Taiwan
Institute News: Chinese LGBT rights activist speaks at USALI
USALI Affiliate News: Bruce Aronson appeared on BBC World News's Asia Business Report on March 23, 2022
Institute affiliated scholar Aaron Halegua testified on March 1, 2022 before the US Congressional-Executive Commission on China at a hearing on The Future of Women in China: #MeToo, Censorship, and Gender Inequality.
USALI Affiliate News: Aaron Halegua Testified Before Congressional-Executive Commission
Institute affiliated scholar Aaron Halegua testified on March 1, 2022 before the US Congressional-Executive Commission on China at a hearing on The Future of Women in China: #MeToo, Censorship, and Gender Inequality.
USALI Affiliate News: Aaron Halegua named litigator of the year
The Human Trafficking Legal Center has named USALI affiliated scholar Aaron Halegua the On My Side 2021 Litigator of the Year for his “enormously impactful civil trafficking case on behalf of Chinese construction workers trafficked to Saipan to build casinos.” Mr. Halegua assisted more than 2,400 Chinese construction workers trafficked to Saipan to recover $14 million in back pay through the U.S. Department of Labor, and in May 2021 obtained a $5.9 million judgment from the U.S. district court in Saipan for the forced labor claims of seven of those workers. The Center said: “The case is the largest construction worker civil trafficking case ever seen in the federal courts. Aaron is a skilled and courageous leader in the anti-trafficking civil litigation field.” Register here to attend the Sept. 22 award ceremony.
USALI Affiliate News: Michael Davis to Testify Before Congressional Commission
Institute affiliated scholar Michael C. Davis, a global fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, will give testimony before the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission on September 8, 2021 on the subject of “Beijing’s Assertion of ‘Complete Jurisdiction’ over Hong Kong. He will be part of an all-day hearing titled: “U.S.-China Relations in 2021: Emerging Risks.” Other topics to be discussed include markets, data, and export controls. A link to a livestream of the hearing is provided here. Mr. Davis’ written testimony can be found here.
Job Opportunity: Communications & Administration Manager
USALI is seeking a Communications & Administration Manager for an amazing opportunity to partner with the Executive Director in developing and executing a comprehensive communications strategy. The manager will maintain USALI social media accounts, expand USALI’s presence on social media platforms, enhance its website and external communications, coordinate online programs, promote activities across multiple platforms, and provide other critical administrative support to a small institute in a large university that is on the frontlines of US-Asia relations.
Jerome A. Cohen Honored with the Order of Brilliant Star with Grand Cordon from the Government of the Republic of China
July 2, 2020 — Jerome A. Cohen, NYU professor of law emeritus and faculty director emeritus of the U.S.-Asia Law Institute, was awarded the Order of Brilliant Star with Grand Cordon by the Government of the Republic of China. Ambassador Lily L. W. Hsu, director general of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in New York, bestowed the honor on Professor Cohen in a virtual ceremony with the ambassador, honoree, and guests linked via teleconference.
Ambassador Hsu praised Professor Cohen for his outstanding contributions to promoting Taiwan-U.S. legal exchanges and friendly cooperative relations. She also thanked him for his contributions to the development of human rights and the rule of law in Taiwan. “It is fair to say that Jerry has not only witnessed the entire transformation of Taiwan into the full-fledged democracy it is today, but also played no small role in the process,” the ambassador said.
Professor Cohen first visited Taiwan in 1961, when it was still under the martial law rule of Chiang Kai-shek. In his acceptance remarks, Professor Cohen recalled that economic conditions then were poor, “there was no freedom of speech and law professors were demoralized.” Over the next six decades, he visited many more times and witnessed Taiwan’s transformation to a vibrant democracy. In each of 2013 and 2017, Professor Cohen participated in a review by international human rights specialists of Taiwan’s progress in implementing the two major UN human rights covenants. In his remarks today, he congratulated the government for recently establishing a National Human Rights Commission.
Professor Cohen is a leading expert on Chinese law and government and pioneer in the field of Asian legal studies in the United States, having established the East Asian Legal Studies program at Harvard Law School in 1965. He joined the NYU School of Law in 1990 and founded the U.S.-Asia Law Institute at the law school in 2006. He retired from full-time teaching on June 30, one day before his 90th birthday. The NYU School of Law marked the occasion by announcing the establishment of an endowed chair in his name, the Jerome A. Cohen Professorship of Law.
Earlier this year, Professor Cohen received an honorary doctor of laws degree from Yale University, where he had earned his JD in 1955. The Government of Japan awarded him the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Neck Ribbon, in 2018.