Prof. Dr. Eva Pils
Prof. Dr. Eva Pils
Prof. Dr. Eva Pils ist Inhaberin des Alexander-von-Humboldt Lehrstuhls an der FAU. Außerdem ist sie Mitglied und Teil des Direktoriums des Center for Human Rights Erlangen Nürnberg (FAU CHREN).
Sie studierte Rechtswissenschaften, Philosophie und Sinologie in Heidelberg, London und Peking und promovierte in Rechtswissenschaften am University College London. Bevor sie 2024 an die FAU kam, war sie an der juristischen Fakultät der Chinese University of Hong Kong (2007-2014) und am King’s College London (2014-2024) tätig, wo sie 2018 zur Professorin für Rechtswissenschaften ernannt wurde.
Außerdem ist sie assoziierte Wissenschaftlerin am US-Asia Law Institute der New York University Law School (seit 2012), assoziierte Wissenschaftlerin am King’s College London Lau China Institute und Transnational Law Institute (seit 2014) sowie Gastprofessorin an der Queen Mary University of London School of Law (seit 2024). Sie war Gastwissenschaftlerin am Institut d’Études Avanceées de Paris und am European Institute for Chinese Studies (EURICS)/IEAP, Gastprofessorin für Rechtswissenschaften an der Columbia Law School, External Fellow am Bingham Centre for the Rule of Law und Directrice d’études an der École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris.
Professor Pils‘ Forschung befasst sich mit autokratischen Konzepten und Praktiken der Staatsführung, rechtlichem und politischem Widerstand, transnationaler Unterdrückung und Formen der Beihilfe zu autokratischem Unrecht. Zuvor hat sie sich mit der Verteidigung der Menschenrechte in China in einer Vielzahl von Kontexten befasst, darunter Strafjustiz, Land- und Wohnungsrechte, Meinungs- und Vereinigungsfreiheit sowie Fragen des Zugangs zur Justiz.
Im Rahmen ihrer AvH-Professur wird sie Projekte leiten, die die Auswirkungen der globalen Autokratisierung auf den Schutz und die Verteidigung der Menschenrechte sowie die Rolle der Menschenrechte für die demokratische Resilienz und den Widerstand untersuchen und sich dabei auf die Methoden und Erkenntnisse verschiedener akademischer Disziplinen und rechtspolitischer Bereiche stützen.
Im Wintersemester 2024/25 (co-) doziert Eva Pils in den Fächern Human Rights Law und Foundations of Human Rights sowie in einem Hauptseminar über Autokratisierung und das Recht an der Rechtswissenschaftlichen Fakultät der FAU und im interdisziplinären M.A. Human Rights Programm der FAU.
Im Sommersemester 2025 wird sie an der Rechtswissenschaftlichen Fakultät der FAU und im Rahmen des interdisziplinären M.A.-Studiengangs Human Rights die Lehrveranstaltungen Non-Discrimination Rights und Defending democracy in times of global autocratisation sowie ein Hauptseminar zu Freedom of Expression in the Digital Age anbieten.
Ausgewählte Publikationen
Monographien
Human rights in China: a social practice in the shadows of authoritarianism, Polity, Cambridge, 2018.
China’s Human Rights Lawyers: Advocacy and Resistance, Routledge, Abingdon, 2014.
Mitherausgegebene Bücher
Comparative Perspectives on Criminal Justice in China, herausgegeben mit Mike McConville, Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham, 2013.
Liu Xiaobo, Charter 08 and the Challenges of Political Reform in China, herausgegeben mit Fu Hualing and Jean-Philippe Béja, Hong Kong University Press, Hong Kong, 2012.
Zeitschriftenartikel
Mit Ralph Weber. 2024. ‘Die Debatte Über Deutschlands Umgang Mit China: Versuch Einer Einordnung / The Debate about Germany’s Interactions with China: an Attempt at Systematic Assessment,’ Berliner Zeitschrift für Sozialwissenschaft 52(3):327-350. DOI:10.5771/0340-0425-2024-3-327
Mit Christelle Genoud. 2023. ‘Universities’ responsibilities to respect and protect human rights transnationally: A critical discussion of UK universities’ collaboration and exchange with China.’ Global Campus Human Rights Journal 7 (2), 1-18. http://doi.org/10.25330/2666
Autocracies’ challenge to international human rights law: a Chinese case study,’ Current Legal Problems Vol. XX (2022) 1–48.
‘China’s Dual State revival under Xi Jinping,’ Fordham International Law Journal Vol. 46:3 (2022), 339-376.
Mit Katrin Kinzelbach ‘Wehrhafte Wissenschaft? Zum akademischen Umgang mit dem autoritären China [‚Militant Academia? on academic interaction with autocratic China],’ in Heiner Bielefeldt, Stefanie Ens and Nicole Saam, Die Idee der Freiheit und ihre Semantik, pp. 321-334.
Mit Christelle Genoud, ‚Confronting China, looking in the mirror: reflections on human rights and the rule of law in EU-China relations,‘ in Andreas Kellerhals and Tobias Baumgartner, European Integration perspectives in times of global crises, 13th Network Europe Conference, EIZ Publishing EIZ Publishing, Zurich 2023, 147-170.
Mit Heathershaw, John, John Chalcraft, Andrew Chubb, Andreas Fulda, Chris Hughes, Katarzyna Kaczmarska, Terence Karran, Corinne Lennox,Tena Prelec, Kelli Rudolph, Sophia Woodman, and Yeşim Yaprak Yıldız. ‘Model Code of Conduct: Protection of Academic Freedom and the Academic Community in the Context of the Internationalisation of the UK HE Sector’. The International Journal of Human Rights 0, no. 0 (25 November 2022): 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1080/13642987.2022.2148977.
Mit Matthieu Burnay,‘The Implications of China’s Rise for Cosmopolitan Academic Citizenship,’ The International Journal Of Human Rights 2022 vol. 26 no.10, 1761–178, https://doi.org/10.1080/13642987.2022.2041602.
Mit Surabhi Chopra, ‘The Hong Kong National Security Law and the Struggle over Rule of Law and Democracy in Hong Kong,’ 50 Federal Law Review (2022), 292-313.
‘Chinas Einfluss auf die Menschenrechte in transnationaler Perspektive,‘ Zeitschrift für Menschenrechte, 2021.
‘Complicity in democratic engagement with autocratic systems,’14 Ethics & Global Politics (August 2021), 1-22.
Mit Ralph Weber (50%), ‘Chinas alternative Weltordnung: Neue Entwicklungen und alte Fragestellungen zum politischen Wesen der Menschenrechte [China’s Alternative World Order: New Developments and Old Questions on the Political Nature of Human Rights],’ 23 Zeitschrift für Europarecht (2021), 182-95.
‘China’s Human Rights Lawyers: Rifts and Schisms in an Era of Global Human Rights Backlash,’ Made in China, July 2021.
‘Hope without evidence: reading Sikkink’s Evidence for Hope in China,’ King’s Law Journal, 5 November 2020.
‘From authoritarian development to totalist urban reordering: the Daxing forced evictions case,’ China Information 34 (2020) 270–290.
Co-authored (50%) mit Matthieu Burnay (QMUL): ‘Weaponising Citizenship in China: Domestic Exclusion and Transnational Expansion’, State Crime Journal 9:1 (2020), 4-28, https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.13169/statecrime.9.issue-1.
‘China’s turn to public repression: the case of the 709 Crackdown on human rights lawyers,’ China Law and Society Review 3 (2018) 1-47.
‘In whose service? The transnational legal profession’s interaction with China and the threat to lawyers’ autonomy and professional integrity,’ Fordham International Law Journal 41 (2018) 1263-1292.
‘From Independent Lawyer Groups to Civic Opposition: the Case of China’s New Citizen Movement, ’ Asian-Pacific Law & Policy Journal, volume 19 issue 1 (2017) 110-152.
‘Resisting Dignity Takings in China,’ Law & Social Inquiry, vol. 41 issue 3 (2016) 888-916.
‘Assessing evictions and expropriations in China: efficiency, credibility and rights,’ Land Use Policy 58 (2016) 437-444.
Mit Jane Henderson, ‘The Impact of Brexit on Relations with Russia and China,’ King’s Law Journal vol. 27 no. 3 (2016) 473-488.
‘China, the rule of law, and the question of obedience – a comment on Professor Peerenboom’s analysis of the CCP 4thPlenary Decision on Law Reform’ and ‘Further Reply,’ in The Hague Journal of the Rule of Law, 2015 (1).
‘Introduction: Discussing „civil society“ and „liberal communities“ in China,’ in Locating civil society: communities defending basic liberties, a special issue of China Perspectives 2012 vol.3, guest-edited by Eva Pils, pp. 2-7 / ‘Introduction: “Société civile” et “communautés libérales” en Chine,’ A la recherche de la société civile: des groupes défendant les libertés fondamentales, Perspectives Chinoises 2012 vol.3, Septembre 2012), pp. 2-8.
‘Taking Yuan (冤) Seriously: Why the Chinese Government Should Stop Suppressing Citizen Protests against Injustice,’ 25 Temple International and Comparative Law Journal (2011) pp. 285-327.
‘ Chinese Property Law as an Image of PRC history,’ Hong Kong Law Journal (2010) pp. 595-611. Reprinted in Perry Keller (editor), Obligations and Property Rights in China, Ashgate, 2012.
‘Waste No Land: Property, Dignity and Growth in Urbanizing China,’ Asian-Pacific Law & Policy Journal Vol. 11, issue 2 (2010) pp. 1-48.
‘ The persistent memory of historic injustice in China: a discussion of recent demands for “reappraisal,”’ China Perspectives no 4/2007 99 / ‘Le souvenir tenace des injustices historiques en Chine: une analyse des demandes de “réévaluation”,’ Perspectives Chinoises no 4/2007 pages 104 -113).
‘Asking the Tiger for His Skin: Rights Activism in China,’ Vol XXX (2007) Fordham International Law Journal, 1209 -1287.
‘Land disputes, rights assertion and social unrest in China: a case from Sichuan,’ 19 Columbia Journal of Asian Law (2006) 365; reprinted as Hauser Global Law School Working Paper 07/05 and in Perry Keller (editor), Obligations and Property Rights in China (Ashgate, 2012).
‘Law’s Limited Promises,’ a critical book review of Thomas Morawetz’s Law’s Premises, Law’s Promise: Jurisprudence after Wittgenstein, 2 Legal Ethics (2002) 179.
‘Analytical theories of equality and freedom: why they are inadequate’ UCL Jurisprudence Review (2000) 212.
Book chapters
‘Contending ‚Illiberalisms in China,’ chapter in Marlène Laruelle, ‘The Oxford Handbook of Illiberalism,’ OUP. Pils, Eva (2024). ‘Contending Illiberalisms in China,’ The Oxford Handbook of Illiberalism. Laruelle, M. (ed.). Oxford University Press (OUP)
‘Transnational Advocacy against China’s Atrocities in Xinjiang’. In Barrow, Amy and Sara Fuller, Activism and Authoritarian Governance in Asia. Routledge, September 2022. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003243106-11.
‘China and the threat to global academic freedom,’ in Vanessa Frangville, Aude Merlin, Jihane Sfeir, Pierre-Etienne Vandamme, La liberté académique dans tous ses états : enjeux et menaces, Presses Universitaires de Bruxelles, 2021, 155-162.
‘Rule of law reform and the rise of rule by fear,’ chapter 3 in Fu Hualing, Chen Weitseng (editors), Authoritarian Legality in Asia, Cambridge University Press, 2020, 90-113.
‘Legal advocacy as liberal resistance,’ chapter 2 in Teresa Wright (editor), Handbook of Dissent and Protest in China, Edward Elgar Publishing, August 2019, 62-74.
‘Human rights and the political system’, chapter 3 in Sarah Biddulph and Joshua Rosenzweig (editors), Handbook on Human Rights in China, Edward Elgar Publishing, July 2019, 32-59.
‘The Party and the Law,’ in Willy Lam (editor), Handbook on the Chinese Communist Party (Routledge, Abingdon: 2018), 248-265.
‘Justice, wrongs and rights: understanding traditional and liberal conceptions of justice through the lens of contemporary Chinese advocacy initiatives,’ in Elisa Nesossi, Flora Sapio and Susan Trevaskes (editors), Justice: the China Experience, Cambridge University Press, 2017, pp. 229-256.
‘Voice, reflexivity and say: governing access to land in China,’ in Olivier De Schutter and Katharina Pistor, Governing Access to Essential Resources, Columbia University Press, December 2015, pp. 127-155, http://cupola.columbia.edu/governing-access-to-essential-resources/.
‘Contending conceptions of ownership in urbanizing China,’ in Fu Hualing and John Gillespie (eds.), Resolving Land Disputes in East Asia, Cambridge University Press, December 2014, pp. 115-172.
‘“Disappearing” China’s Human Rights Lawyers,’ in Mike McConville and Eva Pils (editors), Comparative Perspectives on Criminal Justice in China, Edward Elgar Publishing, 2013, pp. 411-438.
‘The dislocation of the Chinese Human Rights Movement,’ in Stanley Lubman (editor), The Evolution of Law Reform in China, Edward Elgar Publishing, 2012; originally published in Stacy Mosher and Patrick Poon (editors) A Sword and a Shield: China’s Human Rights Lawyers; (China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group: Hong Kong, 2009), pp. 141-159.
‘Charter 08 and Violent Resistance: the Dark Side of the Chinese Weiquan Movement,’ in Jean-Philippe Béja, Fu Hualing and Eva Pils (editors), Liu Xiaobo, Charter 08 and the Challenges of Political Reform in China, Hong Kong University Press, 2012, pp. 229-250.
‘The practice of law as conscientious resistance: Chinese Weiquan Lawyers’ Experience’, in Jean-Philippe Béja (editor), The Impact of China’s 1989 Tiananmen Massacre, Routledge, 2011, pp. 109-124.
‘Rights Activism in China: the Case of Lawyer Gao Zhisheng,’ in Stephanie Balme and Michael C. Dowdle (eds.), Building Constitutionalism in China (New York: 2009), Routledge, pp. 243-260.
‘Peasants’ Struggle for Land in China’, in Yash Ghai and Jill Cottrell (eds.), Marginalized Communities and Access to Justice, Routledge, 2009, pp. 136-160.
‘Citizens? The Legal and Political Status of Peasants and Peasant Migrant Workers in China,’ in Liu Xiangmin (editor), Zhidu, fazhan yu hexie / 制度,发展与和谐 [System, Development, and Harmony] (Ming Pao Press, Hong Kong: 2007), 173-243; draft available at http://ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1563724.
Übersetzte Buchkapitel
Teng Biao, ‘The Political Meaning of the Crime of “Subverting State Power”,’ translated from the Chinese by Pinky Choy and Eva Pils, in Jean-Philippe Béja, Fu Hualing and Eva Pils, Charter 08 and Challenges to Constitutionalism in China, Hong Kong University Press.
Cui Weiping, ‘Breaking Through a Wall of Political Isolation and Discrimination,’ translated from the Chinese by Pinky Choy and Eva Pils, in Jean-Philippe Béja, Fu Hualing and Eva Pils, Charter 08 and Challenges to Constitutionalism in China, Hong Kong University Press.
(Mit-)Herausgegebene Zeitschriftenausgaben
Mit Marina Svensson, ‘Yu Jianrong: From Concerned Scholar to Advocate for the Marginalized,’ Contemporary Chinese Thought, vol. 46, no. 1, Fall 2014, 90 pages, with editors’ ‘Introduction’ (pp. 1-16).
Mit Marina Svensson, ‘From Nonperson to Public Intellectual: the Life and Works of Yu Jianrong,’ Contemporary Chinese Thought, vol. 45, no. 4, Summer 2014, published October 2014, 88 pages, with editors’ ‘Introduction’ (pp. 1-17).
Locating civil society: communities that defend basic liberties, a special issue of China Perspectives, guest-edited with French Centre for Research on Contemporary China, 2012 vol.3, September 2012.
Nicht-zitierfähige Publikationen (seit 2010)
mit Zeng Jinyan (艾华 / 曾金燕). 2023. 抗议的伦理:从非暴力运动、非文明抗争到#MeToo运动 [The Ethics of Protest: From Nonviolent Movement, Uncivil Resistance to #MeToo Movement]. 中国民主季刊 / China Journal of Democracy, 44-55. Available at https://chinademocrats.org/?p=1953.
‚The New Tyranny of Rule by Virtue: Normalising alternatives to law as the legitimate basis of power,‘ EURICS Briefs (June 2022)
Stellungnahme zur völkerrechtlichen Bewertung der Menschenrechtsverletzungen an den Uiguren für die Sitzung des Menschenrechtsausschusses des Bundestags am 17 Mai 2021 https://www.bundestag.de/resource/blob/842378/552215d57ef48b6a66db4710ae054202/Stellungnahme-SV-Pils-data.pdf
‘The Hong Kong National Security Law: Challenging Constitutionalism in Hong Kong and Abroad,’ Int’l J. Const. Blog, Feb. 23, 2021, at: http://www.iconnectblog.com/2021/02/the-hong-kong-national-security-law-challenging-constitutionalism-in-hong-kong-and-abroad/.
Mit Matthieu Burnay, ‘Human Rights, China and the UN: a UPR Mid-Term Assessment,’ Amicus Curiae 2 (2021), 199-209, https://journals.sas.ac.uk/amicus/issue/view/587.
‘Stellungnahme zur Lage der Menschenrechte [Opinion on the state of human rights in China]‘, Bundestagsausschuss für Menschenrechte und humanitäre Zusammenarbeit, Ausschussdrucksache 19/17/125, 18 November 2020, https://www.bundestag.de/resource/blob/807646/832eff3b4c1701f58e0449ef888445a7/stellungnahme_eva_pils-data.pdf.
Mit John Heathershaw, ‘Protecting academic freedom in international partnerships,’ University World News, 15 October 2020, https://www.universityworldnews.com/post.php?story=20201015062104681.
‘Hope without evidence: reading Sikkink’s Evidence for Hope in China,’ King’s Law Journal, 5 November 2020.
‘From the rule of law to rule by fear: Hong Kong’s National Security Law,’ Right Now, 3 August 2020, http://rightnow.org.au/analysis/hong-kong-national-security-law/.
‘China’s Response to the Coronavirus Pandemic: Fighting Two Enemies,’ Verfassungsblog, 25 May 2020, https://verfassungsblog.de/chinas-response-to-the-coronavirus-pandemic-fighting-two-enemies/.
Mit Jerome A. Cohen, ‘A decade after Chinese human rights lawyers Tang Jitian and Liu Wei were disbarred, much has changed – for the worse,’ South China Morning Post, 28 April 2020,.
Mit Katrin Kinzelbach, ‘Fighting for rights in the streets—not just the courts—of Hong Kong,’ Open Global Rights, 5 March 2020.
‘Countering transnational repression: what governments and civil society organizations working on human rights and rule of law promotion in China need to consider,’ In David Ismangil, Karen van der Schaaf & Stijn Deklerck (eds), Shifting Power and Human Rights Diplomacy, Amnesty International, 14 February 2020.
‘What action should the EU take to defend academic freedom in external relations?,’ EUPLANT Blog, 13 February 2020.
Mit Katrin Kinzelbach, ‘Hong Kong: What’s Next and How Should Europe Respond?,’ GPPi, 21 November 2019; German version: ‘Was Angela Merkel jetzt für Hong Kong tun muss,‘ Die Welt, 19 November 2019, https://www.welt.de/debatte/kommentare/plus203641438/Unruhen-Was-Angela-Merkel-jetzt-fuer-Hongkong-tun-muss.html.
Mit Marina Svensson, ‘Academic Freedom Is Under Threat Around the World – Here’s How To Defend It,’ The Conversation, 7 October 2019,; republished e.g. at Rightsinfo Human Rights News, Views and Info, 11 October 2019, https://rightsinfo.org/academic-freedom-under-threat/.
Mit Marina Svensson, ‘Academic Freedom: universities must take a stance or risk becoming complicit with Chinese government interference,’ The Conversation, 14 June 2019.
‘A new torture in China,’ CPI Analysis guest blog, 10 August 2017, https://cpianalysis.org/2017/08/10/a-new-torture-in-china/.
Capsule review of Xu Zhiyong, To Build A Free China: A Citizen’s Journey (translated and edited by Yaxue Cao and Joshua Rosenzweig) Foreign Affairs, 1 May 2017, https://www.foreignaffairs.com/authors/eva-pils.
The 7-09 Incident: Some Testimony from the Human Rights Lawyer Community,‘ China Change, 8 July 2016.
Preface for Zeng Jinyan (曾金燕), 性、’社會性別與中國公民知識分子的誕生, [Sexuality, Gender and the Birth of Citizen Intellectuals in China],’ City University of Hong Kong Press, Hong Kong, 2016.
ChinaFile / Foreign Policy contribution to ‘Rule by Fear?’, 17 February 2016; piece originally published as ‘The rise of rule by fear’, University of Nottingham China Policy Institute Blog, 15 February 2016, republished also by Hong Kong Free Press, 20 February 2016.
‘If Anything Happens…:’ Meeting the Now-detained Human Rights Lawyers / “要是将来有什么事的话…:”与现仍被羁押的人权律师见面, ChinaChange, 10 January 2016, http://chinachange.org/2016/01/10/if-anything-happens-meeting-the-now-detained-human-rights-lawyers/.
‘What’s up with Hong Kong legal academia?’ Hong Kong Free Press, 29 September 2015, https://www.hongkongfp.com/2015/09/29/whats-up-with-hong-kong-legal-academia/.
‘Crackdown on Chinese rights lawyers signals trouble for the wider legal system,’ Law Com, 20 August 2015, http://www.law.com/sites/lawcomteam/2015/08/20/crackdown-on-chinese-rights-lawyers-signals-trouble-for-wider-legal-system/?slreturn=20150722124738.
Contribution to Conversation on ‘China’s Rule of Law Takes an Ugly Turn,’ ChinaFile / Foreign Policy, 14 July 2015, https://foreignpolicy.com/2015/07/14/chinas-rule-by-law-takes-an-ugly-turn-rights-lawyers-crackdown-xi-jinping/.
‘We cannot go back – debating the Human Rights Act at King’s College London,’ guest contribution to UK Human Rights Blog, 15 May 2015, http://ukhumanrightsblog.com/2015/05/15/we-cannot-go-back-debating-the-human-rights-act-eva-pils/.
‘“Where the Emperor can’t enter:” Rethinking the case for property and housing rights in China,’ Laboratory for advanced research on the global economy, Open Democracy, June 2014.
‘Promoting democracy from within: the role of civil society in taking on authoritarian government in China,’ guest blog comment on article by Jedidiah Kroncke, Opinio Juris, 13 May 2014 at http://opiniojuris.org/2014/05/13/nyu-jilp-symposium-promoting-democracy-within-role-rising-civil-society-taking-authoritarian-government-china/.
‘China schafft Arbeitslager ab – oder doch nicht? [China abolishes labour camps – or does it?],’ Heinrich Böll Foundation website, 6 March 2014 https://www.boell.de/de/2014/03/06/china-schafft-arbeitslager-ab-oder-doch-nicht.
Mit Joshua Rosenzweig, ‘Beijing Confronts a New Kind of Dissident,’ Wall Street Journal, 28 January 2014, http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702303553204579344160684807586.
‘“What has happened to our country?” Violence against the Women of Masanjia Labour Camp,’ Gender Studies: News and Views no. 24 (June 2013) pp. 6-7, http://www.cuhk.edu.hk/hkiaps/grc/pdf/GRC_Enewsletter-no.24.pdf.
Mit Joshua Rosenzweig, Flora Sapio, Jiang Jue, and Teng Biao ‘The 2012 Revision of the Chinese Criminal Procedure Law: (Mostly) Old Wine in New Bottles (17 May 2012),’ CRJ Occasional Papers Series (May 2012), published in a shortened version in Mike McConville and Eva Pils (editors), Comparative Perspectives on Criminal Justice in China, Elgar Publishing (2013).
‘China must be held to account over “disappeared” lawyers,’ The Guardian, 31 March 2011 at http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/mar/31/china-disappeared-lawyers.
China Can’t Arrest the Momentum of Charter ’08,’ The Wall Street Journal Asia, 26 June 2009, at http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124595229680255141.html
Mit Jerome A. Cohen, ‘Hu Jia in China’s Legal Labyrinth’, Far Eastern Economic Review (April 2008) pages 52-54. (Participation: 50%.) Awarded Citation of Merit, Human Rights Press Awards 2009 (see http://www.feer.com/politics/2009/march53/human-rights-awards-2008).
Mit Jerome A. Cohen, ‚Empty Chairs in Oslo Speak Volumes‘, Wall Street Journal Asia, 10 November 2010 at http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703805004575607352440807256.html(in Chinese: ‘柯恩专栏-奧斯陸空蕩的座位 孔傑榮,’ 中国时报 (China Times), 22 November 2010 at http://www.usasialaw.org/?p=4599#chinese. (Participation: 50%.)
Mit Yves Cabannes, ‘How People Face Evictions: Nongkou Village, Hangzhou, China’ in Yves Cabannes, Silvia Guimarães Yafai and Cassidy Johnson, How People Face Evictions, draft (June 2010), available online at http://www.ucl.ac.uk/dpu/k_s/publications/how_ppl_face_evictions; pages 60-73. (Participation: 60%.)
Mit Jerome A. Cohen, ‘Rules and Reality. New guidelines to ban coerced confessions will be tested in a case before China’s top court,’ South China Morning Post, 2 September 2010 (in Chinese: ‘柯恩专栏-刑事司法存在两个中国,’ 中国时报 (China Times), 2 September 2010 at http://www.usasialaw.org/?p=4102). (Participation: 50%.)
‘China: New Tort Law Could Raise Pressure for Change,’ Oxford Analytica, 29 July 2010.
‘China: Reform tests CCP’s rule of law,’ Oxford Analytica, 1 April 2010.‘China: Rule of law erodes with politics,’ Oxford Analytica, 10 February 2010.
https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/portal/en/persons/eva.pils
Die Liste als Dokument ist hier abrufbar.