Haiyan Lee, Walter A. Haas Professor of the Humanities, East Asian Languages and Cultures; and Comparative Literature, Stanford University
Coach House, Green College, UBC
Wednesday, March 27, 5-6:30pm with reception to follow
in the series
China Logics
This talk begins with two Chinese expressions that seem to endorse opposite justice principles: 相 (mutual shielding among kin) and 大 (placing justice above family loyalty). Should one shield one’s kin from the law, or turn them in if justice demands it? From this apparent contradiction, Haiyan Lee argues that judicial populism—privileging substantive goals over procedural fairness—is built into the Chinese justice tradition in which high justice always trumps low justice. She illustrates this argument with the 2014 film《黄克功案件》(The Case of Huang Kegong).
This event has been co-organized with the UBC Centre for Chinese Research.
This interdisciplinary series examines the future of global sustainability, economy and security through the many images and understandings of China, a compelling and sometimes puzzling place. If understanding China constitutes a rational, emotional or symbolic anchor from which one’s ideas, actions and strategies are derived, then there is a need to capitalize on the rich amount of evidence that allows us to examine “China Logics” across time, space and interactions.
Series Conveners: Timothy Cheek, History; Qiang Fu, Sociology; Julia Harten, Community and Regional Planning; Juliet Lu, Forest Resources Management | Public Policy and Global Affairs; Renren Yang, Asian Studies