Taiwanese legal scholar
Chang Wen-chen (Chinese : 張文貞 ; born 31 August 1970) is a Taiwanese legal scholar who is a distinguished professor at National Taiwan University .[ 1] She has also served as a law professor at National Chiao Tung University , where she was dean of its law faculty.
Education
Chang graduated from National Taiwan University with a Bachelor of Laws (LL.B.) and then a Master of Laws (LL.M.) degree.[ 2] She then earned a second Master of Laws and then a Doctor of Juridical Science (J.S.D.) in 2001 from Yale Law School , where her doctoral supervisor was law professor Bruce Ackerman .[ 1] Her doctoral dissertation was titled, "Transition to Democracy, Constitutionalism and Judicial Activism: Taiwan in Comparative Constitutional Perspective."
Academic career
As a legal academic, she has commented on China's Anti-Secession Law ,[ 3] the Legislative Yuan 's inaction causing vacancies in the presidency and vice presidency of the Control Yuan between 2005 and 2008,[ 4] limitations on the Control Yuan 's powers,[ 5] and supported amendments to laws regarding protests and demonstrations.[ 6] Chen was one of 36 co-signers of a statement opining that Ma Ying-jeou had overstepped his presidential authority during the September 2013 power struggle .[ 7]
Chang is a founding member of the Asian Human Rights Court Simulation, established in 2018,[ 8] and in 2019, was named its vice president.[ 9] In 2022 and 2024, Chang served on the selection committee for the Tang Prize in Rule of Law.[ 10] She has also chaired the Restoration of Victim's Rights Infringed by Illegal Acts of the State During the Period of Authoritarian Rule Foundation.[ 11]
In 2024, Chang testified as an expert witness to the Constitutional Court in cases that led to protests .[ 12] In August of that year, William Lai nominated Chang to serve as president of the Judicial Yuan .[ 13] [ 14] However, legislative confirmation hearings for seven Judicial Yuan positions, including replacements for president Hsu Tzong-li and vice president Tsai Jeong-duen were delayed, necessitating the appointment of Shieh Ming-yuan as acting president of the Judicial Yuan.[ 15] Hearings eventually began on 2 December, but left the Judicial Yuan with the lowest number of justices since the introduction of judicial interpretation in 1947.[ 16] During legislative questioning on 10 December, Chang observed that the Judicial Yuan had imposed stricter conditions on capital punishment earlier that year, but maintained that the death penalty was constitutional.[ 17] The Legislative Yuan voted to reject Chang's nomination, and that of six others to the Judicial Yuan, on 24 December 2024.[ 18] Days before deciding on Lai's nominees, legislators had voted to require the Judicial Yuan have ten active judges before hearing a case.[ 19]
References
^ a b "Wen-Chen Chang" . National Taiwan University College of Law. Retrieved 3 September 2024 .
^ "Welcome to Asian Law Institute" . law1a.nus.edu.sg . Retrieved 2024-12-24 .
^ Su, Joy (24 March 2005). " 'Anti-Secession' Law offers Taiwan a golden opportunity, legal experts say" . Taipei Times . Retrieved 3 September 2024 .
^ Shih, Hsiu-chuan (20 August 2007). "ANALYSIS: Academics laud constitutional interpretation" . Taipei Times . Retrieved 3 September 2024 .
^ Shih, Hsiu-chuan (25 February 2009). "ANALYSIS: Control Yuan's censure of prosecutors sparks debate" . Taipei Times . Retrieved 3 September 2024 .
^ Wang, Flora (29 November 2008). "Academic calls for dedicated protest zones" . Taipei Times . Retrieved 3 September 2024 .
^ Wang, Pei-lin; Hsu, Stacy (18 September 2013). "Ma overstepped boundaries: experts" . Retrieved 3 September 2024 .
^ Huang, Yu-zhe (28 February 2020). "Tsai should grant Chiou amnesty" . Taipei Times . Retrieved 3 September 2024 .
^ Pan, Jason (26 July 2019). "Taiwan taking lead on civil liberties: AHRCS" . Taipei Times . Retrieved 3 September 2024 .
^ see: "TANG PRIZE/Tang Prize in Rule of Law winner stresses global collaboration" . Central News Agency. 21 June 2022. Retrieved 3 September 2024 . Republished as: "Global collaboration is vital: Tang Prize winner" . Taipei Times . 22 June 2022. Retrieved 3 September 2024 . "TANG PRIZE/Law scholar Cheryl Saunders wins Tang Prize in Rule of Law" . Central News Agency. 21 June 2022. Retrieved 3 September 2024 . Teng, Pei-ju (21 June 2024). "TANG PRIZE/Ex-Ireland President Mary Robinson awarded Tang Prize in Rule of Law" . Central News Agency. Retrieved 3 September 2024 . Republished as: "Mary Robinson awarded the Tang Prize in Rule of Law" . Taipei Times . 22 June 2024. Retrieved 3 September 2024 .
^ Chen, Yu-fu; Hetherington, William (20 May 2024). "Political prisoners' properties returned" . Taipei Times . Retrieved 3 September 2024 .
^ see: Teng, Pei-ju (6 August 2024). "Constitutional Court hears arguments on government oversight law case" . Central News Agency. Retrieved 3 September 2024 . Republished as: "Experts give arguments in oversight law case" . Taipei Times . 7 August 2024. Retrieved 3 September 2024 . and Hsiao, Alison; Teng, Pei-ju (7 August 2024). "KMT says firms have right to privacy during Legislature investigations" . Retrieved 3 September 2024 . Republished as: "KMT seeks to assure court about firms' rights" . Taipei Times . 9 August 2024. Retrieved 3 September 2024 .
^ Teng, Pei-ju; Lin, Ching-yin; Fan, Cheng-hsiang; Kuo, Chien-shen (30 August 2024). "President nominates Judicial Yuan head, deputy; choices panned by opposition" . Central News Agency. Retrieved 3 September 2024 .
^ Lin, Hsin-han; Madjar, Kayleigh (3 September 2024). "KMT criticizes President Lai's judicial appointees" . Taipei Times . Retrieved 3 September 2024 .
^ Teng, Pei-ju (1 November 2024). "Justice Shieh Ming-yan named acting Judicial Yuan head" . Central News Agency. Retrieved 8 December 2024 .
^ Teng, Pei-ju (6 December 2024). "ANALYSIS/Legislative bill places cloud of uncertainty over Constitutional Court" . Central News Agency. Retrieved 8 December 2024 .
^ Younger, Hollie (10 December 2024). "Judicial Yuan president nominee vows to uphold death penalty as constitutional" . Taipei Times . Retrieved 10 December 2024 .
^ Teng, Pei-ju (24 December 2024). "Constitutional Court in a bind after justice nominees rejected" . Central News Agency. Retrieved 24 December 2024 . Republished as: Garcia, Sam; Khan, Fion (25 December 2024). "All 7 of Lai's judicial nominees rejected" . Taipei Times . Retrieved 25 December 2024 .
^ Wang, Yang-yu; Teng, Pei-ju; Lai, Sunny (20 December 2024). "Measures raising bar for Constitutional Court rulings clear Legislature" . Central News Agency. Retrieved 24 December 2024 . Republished as: "Court reform bill passes legislature" . Taipei Times . 22 December 2024. Retrieved 24 December 2024 .