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Asia Law Weekly: Alison W. Conner

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Alison W. Conner
Director of International and Graduate Programs, William S. Richardson School of Law, University of Hawai`i at Mānoa
Professor of Law, William S. Richardson School of Law, University of Hawai`i at Mānoa


Wednesday, March 28, 2018
12:15-2:00 pm
**Wilf Hall 5th Fl. Conference Room**
139 Macdougal Street
New York, NY 10012
RSVP Here

Alison Conner is Professor of Law and Director of the International and Graduate Programs at the Richardson School of Law.  She taught at the National University of Singapore Faculty of Law and the University of Hong Kong for eleven years before joining the University of Hawai`i in 1995.  She has also taught at Nanjing University and Tsinghua University as a Fulbright Professor and at Tongji University in Hawaii’s study abroad program.  In 2016 she was a visiting scholar at the National Taiwan University and then returned to HKU for a semester as a visiting fellow.
 
Professor Conner’s research interests include legal history and legal education, though more recently she has focused on the depiction of law in Chinese movies.  She has written about divorce in Chinese movies (“Don’t Change Your Husband”), critiques of the legal system in early movies (“Movie Justice”), a late 1940s lawyer-hero (“The Lawyer Who Haunts Us: Yin Zhaoshi and the Bright Day”), trials in Xie Jin’s movies (“Images of Justice and Injustice”), Raj Kapoor’s popular movie (“Trials and Justice in Awaara: A Postcolonial Movie on Post-Revolutionary Screens”), along with a 1980 example of scar cinema that stresses the importance of law (“Law and Justice in Evening Rain”).