China’s legislature reviews eight draft laws; Hong Kong’s incoming leader announces his cabinet members; a Japanese court says the current ban on same-sex marriage is constitutional; South Korean prosecutors plan a crackdown on voice phishing scams; Taiwan’s Control Yuan says it will seek an extraordinary prosecutorial appeal to expunge the conviction of an indigenous man for illegal hunting.
This Week in Asian Law
China drafts its first law on compulsory enforcement of civil judgments; Hong Kong amends its occupational safety and health regulations; Japan’s Supreme Court finds the government not liable for the 2011 Fukushima nuclear accident; South Korean police apprehend more than 5,000 suspects in the five months since the enactment of an anti-stalking law; Taiwan’s CEDAW compliance review finds an increase in reports of domestic violence.
This Week in Asian Law
China offers rewards to citizens who report on national security threats; Japan revises its Child Welfare Law; South Korean legislators propose banning hate speech in an effort to stop protests outside the former president’s home; Hong Kong’s incoming chief executive asks a court to relieve him of punishment for violating election advertising regulations; Taiwan’s legislators raise national security concerns over the sale of a news outlet.
This Week in Asian Law
China takes steps to expunge and seal juvenile criminal records; Japan considers revising the criminal procedure law to allow arrest and search warrants to be issued online; South Korea’s Supreme Court says the government is not required to enact a law to compensate businesses that operated in North Korea; Hong Kong closes portions of Victoria Park to prevent gatherings for the anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen killings; Taiwan requires mediation of medical disputes before they go to court.
This Week in Asian Law
Michelle Bachelet begins her human rights visit to China; Japan’s top court rules unconstitutional the inability of Japanese expats to vote on justices; South Korea’s Supreme Court finds the lawyers’ code of conduct unconstitutional for banning lawyers from joining online legal counseling platforms; former Hong Kong University Law Professor Benny Tai is sentenced to ten months in prison; Taiwan’s Constitutional Court finds a Supreme Court ruling on child custody unconstitutional.
This Week in Asian Law
China’s ecology and environment ministry issues regulations on compensation for ecological and environmental damage; Japan passes a bill to provide more support for vulnerable women who are victims of sexual or domestic violence; a South Korean court posthumously exonerates 20 more persons who were imprisoned following the 1948 Jeju Uprising; Taiwan amends its mining law to require the approval of indigenous people and environmental impact assessments.
This Week in Asian Law
China launches an anti-trust investigation into the nation’s largest academic database; Tokyo municipality prepares to recognize same-sex partnerships; Hong Kong police arrest four prominent pro-democracy figures who were trustees of a fund that helped accused 2019 protesters; Taiwan’s legislature considers amending two laws to increase protection of businesses and key technologies from China.
This Week in Asian Law
China’s legislature releases its 2022 legislative plan; Japan’s Supreme Court plans to digitalize civil judicial procedures; South Korea’s departing president further strips prosecutors of investigation powers; Hong Kong’s global rank in press freedoms plummets; Taiwan announces its first national human rights action plan.
This Week in Asian Law
Chinese courts are ending the practice of “same life, different price”; the Hong Kong government acknowledges delays in handling cases related to the 2019 protests; an OECD working group expresses concern over the South Korean ruling party’s bid to strip prosecutors of investigatory powers; trade unions in Taiwan say employers should be held accountable for occupational injuries.
This Week in Asian Law
New Zealand’s Supreme Court greenlights the extradition of a permanent resident to China to face a murder charge; a Hong Kong veteran journalist is accused of conspiring to publish seditious materials; Japan expands the scope of rescue activities of its Self-Defense Forces; Taipei city councilors say the government gave recordings of residents’ hotline calls to a private software firm without their permission.
This Week in Asian Law
China increases judicial financial assistance to women in need and punishes local officials in Shaanxi for ignoring human trafficking; Hong Kong courts complete 80% of cases that have been brought to them in connection with the 2019 protest; Japan lowers the age of majority in the criminal justice system and promptly releases the name of a 19-year old suspect; Taiwan police prepare to enforce a new stalking law.
This Week in Asian Law
This Week in Asian Law
A retired Chinese Supreme People’s Court judge is under investigation; a Japanese court dismisses a lawsuit by ethnic Koreans and Japanese who say they were fraudulently lured to North Korea decades ago; Taiwan legislators approve lowering the voting age from 20 to 18, setting the stage for a public referendum.
This Week in Asian Law
China’s Supreme People’s Court releases typical cases involving the protection of minors; Hong Kong police warn the U.K. NGO Hong Kong Watch and its chief executive that they could be deemed in violation of the National Security Law; a senior economist at the OECD says it would be premature for South Korea’s president-elect to disband the Ministry of Gender Equality.
This Week in Asian Law
This week’s highlights include: China implements comprehensive revisions to its Administrative Penalties Law; Hong Kong police will be empowered to make arrests without warrants under a proposed new anti-doxxing law; Japanese prosecutors drop charges against 100 accused bribe recipients in a case involving the former justice minister; South Korea defends its Anti-Leafleting Law; Taiwan’s National Human Rights Commission releases its first report.
This Week in Asian Law
This week’s highlights include: Shenzhen promulgates China’s first comprehensive local-level data protection regulation; Hong Kong police arrest nine in alleged bomb plot; Japan’s #MeToo icon, journalist Shiori Ito, wins a defamation case against a former professor; South Korea’s government promises legal action against trade unionists who rallied for better work conditions despite pandemic restrictions; Taiwan lawmakers block efforts to allow absentee voting in referendums.
This Week in Asian Law
This week’s highlights include: China’s updated provisional sentencing guidelines take effect; a domestic worker in Hong Kong challenges the city’s response to human trafficking; France names a Japanese law professor a Knight of the French National Order of Merit; South Korea carries out a major reorganization of its police system; Taiwan legislators call for an absentee voting law.
This Week in Asian Law
This week’s highlights include: Shanghai’s Pudong New Area gains special legislative powers; a Hong Kong court opens the first trial under the National Security Law; Japan’s Supreme Court says that requiring married couples to register the same surname is constitutional; a South Korean court schedules a hearing date for the comfort women’s appeal; Taiwan denies that data from a COVID contact-tracing SMS service is being used in criminal investigations.
This Week in Asian Law
This week’s highlights include: China’s Supreme People’s Court issues Online Litigation Rules; Hong Kong police arrest five senior executives of a leading newspaper; two Americans plead guilty in Japan to helping Carlos Ghosn flee prosecution; South Korea’s governing party seeks to impose punitive damages for disinformation and misinformation; Taiwan tries to attract foreign professionals with tax breaks and other incentives.
This Week in Asian Law
This week’s highlights include: China passes an Anti-Foreign Sanctions Law; Hong Kong’s Court of Final Appeal will decide if the joint enterprise principle may be used to prosecute persons not present at a riot or unlawful assembly; a Japanese woman in a same-sex relationship sues to obtain spousal benefits; a South Korean court dismisses a lawsuit against Japanese companies over wartime forced labor; a Taiwanese student brings a claim against Norway at the European Court of Human Rights after Norway registered him as Chinese.