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Contributors

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 December 2025

Matthew S. Erie
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
Ching-Fu Lin
Affiliation:
National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan

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Chapter
Information
Inter-Asian Law , pp. xi - xiv
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2026
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NC
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

Contributors

  • Wen-Chen Chang is a Professor at the National Taiwan University College of Law and the National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University School of Law. Her research interests lie in comparative constitutional law, international human rights, administrative laws, and law and society. She has published major scholarly works on comparative constitutional studies.

  • Deepa Das Acevedo is an Associate Professor at Emory Law and a Trustee of the Law and Society Association. She received her JD and PhD from the University of Chicago. Her monograph, The Battle for Sabarimala: Religion, Law, and Gender in Contemporary India, was published by Oxford University Press in 2024.

  • Jacques deLisle is the Stephen A. Cozen Professor of Law, Professor of Political Science, and Director of the Center for the Study of Contemporary China at the University of Pennsylvania, and Chair of the Asia Program at the Foreign Policy Research Institute. His research focuses on contemporary Chinese law and politics.

  • Matthew S. Erie (JD, PhD) is an Associate Professor of Law at the American University Washington College of Law. A comparativist and anthropologist by training, he teaches international law, transnational business, comparative law, and law and development, and has taught law in the United States, United Kingdom, Singapore, Cambodia, Pakistan, and China.

  • Gen Goto is Professor of Law at the University of Tokyo, Graduate Schools for Law and Politics. His main field of research is comparative corporate governance, with a recent focus on the role of shareholders and their interaction with environmental, social, and governance issues in the Japanese context.

  • Valerie P. Hans is the Charles F. Rechlin Professor of Law at Cornell Law School. She is the past president of the Law and Society Association and a member of the American Law Institute. She researches and writes about juries and other forms of lay legal decision-making around the globe.

  • Pasha L. Hsieh is Jean Monnet Chair Professor and Lee Kong Chian Fellow at the Singapore Management University Yong Pung How School of Law. Prior to academia, he served as a Legal Affairs Officer at the World Trade Organization (WTO) Appellate Body Secretariat and as an associate at Shearman & Sterling LLP.

  • Yi-Li Lee is an Associate Professor at the Institute of Law for Science and Technology, National Tsing Hua University. She holds a PhD from the National Taiwan University. Her academic areas include transitional justice, comparative constitutional law, international human rights law, international humanitarian law, and international criminal law.

  • Ching-Fu Lin is a Professor at the Institute of Law for Science and Technology, National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan. Trained as both a lawyer and an engineer, he teaches international law and global governance, law and technology, global health law, food law and policy, and artificial intelligence law and policy.

  • Tran Hoang Tu Linh is a Law Lecturer at the Faculty of Commercial Law, Ho Chi Minh City University of Law, Vietnam, and a listed commercial arbitrator with the Southern Trade Arbitration Centre and the Thailand Arbitration Center. Her research focuses on international commercial arbitration, mediation, and contract law.

  • Yoshiko Naiki joined Nagoya University in 2019 as Professor of International Law. Previously, she worked as an associate professor at Osaka University, where she received her doctorate in international public policy, and was deputy director at the WTO dispute settlement section in the Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry (Japan).

  • Trang (Mae) Nguyen is Associate Professor of Law at Temple University Beasley School of Law. She is also an affiliated scholar at the US-Asia Law Institute and a Stephen M. Kellen Term Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Professor Nguyen’s research focuses on business law, transnational law, and international law.

  • Gauri Pillai is a Lecturer at the University of Bristol Law School, before which she taught at the National Law School, India University, Bangalore. Her teaching centers around public law and family law. Her research positions reproductive rights as a site from which to reimagine the foundations of public law.

  • Dan W. Puchniak, Professor at Singapore Management University, is a leading Asian corporate law and governance expert. He directs the SMU Centre for Commercial Law in Asia and the Asian Corporate Law Forum. In 2023, Professor Puchniak became the first Asian-based academic to receive the ECGI Cleary Gottlieb Law Prize.

  • Theodora Putri is a Lecturer at the Faculty of Law, Universitas Indonesia. She has worked with the Attorney General’s Office, the Corruption Eradication Commission, and the Supreme Court of Indonesia on access to justice, criminal justice reform, and gender-based violence. She is completing a PhD at the Australian National University.

  • Veronica L. Taylor is Professor of Law and Regulation at the Australian National University. Her socio-legal work centers on the regulatory dimensions of law and justice norm-making, particularly rule of law assistance. She has worked with Indonesian colleagues designing and writing about legal reform in Indonesia for more than thirty years.

  • Yvonne Tew is Professor of Law and Anne Fleming Research Professor at Georgetown University. She has expertise in constitutional law – global and comparative – as well as law and religion. She authored Constitutional Statecraft in Asian Courts. Professor Tew holds a PhD from the University of Cambridge and a master’s from Harvard Law School.

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