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34 Sydney L. Rev. 1 (2012)

handle is hein.journals/sydney34 and id is 1 raw text is: Introduction: Asian Investment
and Finance Law
Vivienne Bath* and Luke Nottaget
This special issue marks the latest milestone in Sydney Law School's long and
strong tradition in engaging with Asian legal systems.
The late Professor Alice Erh-Soon Tay, former Head of the Department of
Jurisprudence, became the Director of the Centre for Asian and Pacific Law at the
University of Sydney (CAPLUS) upon its establishment in 1994. Professor Tay
had a deep commitment to the study of the development of law in the Asian region.
Her many publications included Greater China: Law, Society and Trade,' and the
breadth and depth of her scholarly engagement with Asian legal systems is
evidenced by a commemorative volume published soon after her untimely passing
in 2003.2 Under her leadership, the Law     School, through CAPLUS and in
conjunction with the East China University of Politics and Law, initiated one of the
first intensive programs in Chinese Law giving Australian students the opportunity
to study Chinese law in the People's Republic of China. The Shanghai Winter
School continues to be one of Sydney Law School's most popular programs, and
recently celebrated its 18t year of operation.
Associate Professor Klaus (Alex) Ziegert became CAPLUS Director in
1998, after Professor Tay was appointed President of Australia's Human Rights
and Equal Opportunity Commission. Drawing on his expertise in socialist law and
systems-theory based 'comparative jurisprudence', he established the 'Hanoi
Winter School' to encourage Australian student engagement with Vietnamese law.
Professor Luke Nottage, a specialist in Japanese law, joined Sydney Law
School in 2001 and, with support from       CAPLUS,3 established the cross-
institutional Australian Network for Japanese Law (ANJeL). Now centred on the
law schools at the University of Sydney, the Australian National University and
Bond University, ANJeL promotes teaching, research and community engagement
with the Japanese legal system, particularly in Australia. Activities include annual
Professor of Chinese and International Business Law and Director, Centre for Asian and Pacific
Law at the University of Sydney (CAPLUS), Sydney Law School.
Professor of Comparative and Transnational Business Law, Associate Dean (International
Students), and Co-Director, Australian Network for Japanese Law (ANJeL), Sydney Law School.
Alice E-S Tay and Conita S C Leung (eds), Greater China: Law, Society and Trade (Lawbook Co,
1995).
2  Gointher Doeker-Mach, Klaus A Ziegert and Daniel Atzbach (eds) Alice Erh-Soon Tay: Lawyer,
Scholar, Civil Servant (Franz Steiner Verlag, 2004). See also, Julia Home, 'The Cosmopolitan Life
of Alice Erh-Soon Tay' 21 Journal of World History 419 (2010).
See, eg, Tom Ginsburg, Luke Nottage and Hiroo Sono (eds) The Multiple Worlds ofJapanese Law:
Disjunctions and Conjunctions (published jointly with the University of Victoria's Centre for Asia-
Pacific Initiatives, 2001).

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