International
Conference on
Global Regulatory
Governance
4–6 July 2019 | The Chinese University of Hong Kong
1
Wednesday
3 July 2019
Thursday
4 July 2019
Friday
5 July 2019
Saturday
6 July 2019
Registration
08:30–18:00
1/F Foyer, CYT Bldg
Registration
08:30–18:00
2/F Foyer, CYT Bldg
Registration
08:30–12:30
2/F Foyer, CYT Bldg
Opening Ceremony
09:00–09:30
LT1, CYT Bldg
Panel Section (S3)
09:00–10:30
CYT Bldg
Panel Section (S7)
09:00–10:30
CYT Bldg
Keynote Speech
09:30–10:10
LT1, CYT Bldg
Tea Break
10:10–10:30
1/F Foyer, CYT Bldg
Round Table:
Governance &
Think-tank in HK
10:30–12:30
LT1, CYT Bldg
Tea Break
10:30–11:00
2/F Foyer, CYT Bldg
Tea Break
10:30–11:00
2/F Foyer, CYT Bldg
Panel Section (S4)
11:00–12:30
CYT Bldg
Panel Section (S8)
11:00–12:30
CYT Bldg
Lunch Time
12:30–14:00
3/F, CYT Bldg
Lunch Time
12:30–14:00
3/F, CYT Bldg
Lunch Time
12:30–14:00
3/F, CYT Bldg
Panel Section (S1)
14:00–15:30
CYT Bldg
Panel Section (S5)
14:00–15:30
CYT Bldg
Editors’ Forum
14:00–15:30
LT1A, CYT Bldg
Tea Break
15:30–16:00
1/F Foyer, CYT Bldg
Tea Break
15:30–16:00
2/F Foyer, CYT Bldg
Closing Ceremony
15:30–16:00
LT1A, CYT Bldg
Panel Section (S2)
16:00–18:00
CYT Bldg
Panel Section (S6)
16:00–18:00
CYT Bldg
Welcome Gathering
18:00–19:30
1/F Foyer, CYT Bldg
Reception
18:00–19:00
1/F Foyer, CYT Bldg
Gala Dinner
*18:15–21:30
ClubONE Riviera
Farewell Reception
#17:40–21:30
Victoria Harbour Cruise
* Coaches will be arranged for pick up from CYT Building to ClubONE Riviera at 18:15
# Coaches will be arranged for pick up from CYT Building to Hung Hom Pier at 17:40
^ CYT Bldg = Cheng Yu Tung Building, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
2
1 OVERVIEW
3 WELCOME MESSAGES
3 ● Co-Chairs’ Welcome
4 ● Welcome from Prof. Scott
5 ABOUT US
5 ● Organisers
8 ● ICGRG 2019 Committees
10 WEDNESDAY ( 3 JULY)
10 ● Welcome Gathering
10 THURSDAY ( 4 JULY )
10 ● Opening Ceremony
10 ● Keynote Speech
11 ● Roundtable: Governance &
Think-tank in Hong Kong
12 ● Panel Section 1 (S1)
19 ● Panel Section 2 (S2)
26 ● Reception
27 FRIDAY ( 5 JULY )
27 ● Panel Section 3 (S3)
34 ● Panel Section 4 (S4)
41 ● Panel Section 5 (S5)
47 ● Panel Section 6 (S6)
54 ● Gala Dinner
56 SATURDAY ( 6 JULY )
56 ● Panel Section 7 (S7)
62 ● Panel Section 8 (S8)
68 ● Editors’ Forum
68 ● Closing Ceremony
69 ● Farewell Reception
(Harbour Cruise)
70 GENERAL INFO
70 ● Registration
72 ● Campus Map
73 PANEL OVERVIEW
3
Professor Fanny M. Cheung
Pro-Vice-Chancellor
Choh-Ming Li Professor of Psychology
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Professor Carlos W. H. Lo
Head & Professor
Department of Government and Public Administration
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Co-Chairs’ Welcome Message
We are pleased to announce that The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) will host the
International Conference on Global Regulatory Governance, jointly organised by its Department of
Government and Public Administration and the Hong Kong Institute of Asia-Pacific Studies on 4–
6 July 2019, with the support of the European Consortium of Political Research (ECPR) Standing
Group on the Regulatory Governance.
The theme of this conference is “Unpacking the Complexity of Regulatory Governance in a
Globalising World”. The conference will address best practice in designing policies, programs and
organisations on regulatory governance when facing the challenges of a globalising world. This event
is the inauguration of a regulatory conference series in Asia, which is an initial step to globalising
regulatory research with the objective of facilitating the gathering of regulation researchers from the
East and West to explore complex research on regulatory governance. Underpinning this event is the
vision of building a global network to meet the demands and challenges of globalising regulatory
governance research.
The Regulatory Governance Conferences organised by the Standing Group have been well attended
by world’s leading scholars in regulation and compliance research from top American, African, Asian,
UK, and European universities. For this 2019 inaugural event in Asia, we expect a larger attendance
from countries in the Asia-Pacific region, namely Australia, Greater China, India, Singapore and
South Korea. Hong Kong ranks among the top in the world in its regulatory quality. As a research-
intensive university that fosters research excellence and impact, CUHK initiates this conference in
Hong Kong to promote regulatory governance research and innovation in this part of the world.
We cordially invite you to take part in this milestone event, either as a panel chair or a paper presenter.
We look forward to providing you with a stimulating and amicable conference environment for you
to advance your research aspiration.
4
Professor Colin Scott
Convenor
European Consortium for Political Research (ECPR) Standing Group on Regulatory Governance
Welcome Message from Prof. Colin Scott
The ECPR Standing Group on Regulatory Governance is delighted to be supporting the initiative of
organising this conference on regulatory governance in Hong Kong. The Standing Group was
established in 2005 and, under the auspices of the European Consortium for Political Research, has
organised biennial conferences in Europe since 2006, the last having been held in Lausanne in July
2018. These conferences have been an important focal point for scholars from many disciplines and
from all over the world to meet and exchange research and ideas and have been a key part of the
process for further developing and embedding the important interdisciplinary field of regulatory
governance.
The Standing Group is very happy to support this conference in Hong Kong because it is drawing
in a yet wider range of scholars, many with a focus on the challenges and approaches to regulatory
governance in the Asia-Pacific region and thus it grows our family of researchers, our important
networks and thus our capacity to challenge and support each other in better understanding the
activities and processes with which we concern ourselves. It is particularly significant that we will
launch and develop a global network on regulatory governance at the conference.
On behalf of all associated with the Standing Group I thank and congratulate the organisers and
wish everyone a most rewarding conference experience in Hong Kong.
5
Department of Government and Public Administration
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Founded in 1970, the Department of Government and Public Administration has been committed
to excellence in teaching, research and community service. Our faculty members are experts in their
fields. In addition to their teaching duties, they participate in a wide range of scholarly, professional
and community activities. The department is able to provide not only a rich curriculum but also an
exciting place to learn and grow intellectually. It is one of the best of its kind in Hong Kong.
The Department offers degree programmes at both undergraduate and graduate levels. The
undergraduate programme provides a well-rounded training in political science and public
administration. It comprises a group of core courses which introduce the disciplines as well as a
series of elective courses dealing with a wide range of contemporary topics in politics and public
administration. The Department is strongly committed to fostering critical thinking in students, so
that our graduates are able to put their skills to work effectively in their future careers and lives. And
at the graduate level, the Department offers programmes focused on research that can lead to MPhil
and PhD degrees.
6
Hong Kong Institute of Asia-Pacific Studies
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Established in 1990, the Hong Kong Institute of Asia-Pacific Studies (HKIAPS) aims to promote
multi-disciplinary research on social, economic and political development. HKIAPS is devoted to
fostering academic exchange by organising regular public lectures, seminars and international
conferences. The Institute also disseminates research findings to the public through the publication
of research monographs and occasional papers.
The objectives of the HKIAPS are:
1. To develop the CUHK into a research and academic centre of excellence in the interrelated
study of Hong Kong, Mainland China, and the Asia-Pacific region;
2. To enable Hong Kong to better adjust to and make best use of the changes taking place
in China and the Asia-Pacific region;
3. To serve as a “think-tank” for the Hong Kong government, the Chinese government, and
policymakers in public and private sectors;
4. To broaden the intellectual horizon of the policymakers and to develop policy alternatives
for the community.
7
European Consortium of Political Research (ECPR)
Standing Group on the Regulatory Governance
The study of regulation and regulatory governance is attracting an increasing attention in the field
of political science. The Standing Group was founded in March 2005 by David Levi-Faur, Hebrew
University, and Jacint Jordana, Pompeu Fabra University. The Standing Group’s founding members
and those who joined it subsequently believe that the study of regulation and governance is
increasingly important topic in the social sciences.
The aim of the Standing Group is to provide a platform and infrastructure for encouraging studies
in this area and the creation of an institutional arena for mutual interaction and debate. We aim to
bring together a broad range of scholars working on (various aspects) of “Regulatory Governance”
in all parts of the world, including scholars from fields such as law, economics, sociology, criminology,
(social) psychology and history for a fruitful exchange of ideas and knowledge on regulatory
governance. However, as a Standing Group of the European Consortium for Political Research
(ECPR), the main focus of the group will be on the political aspects of regulation. We believe in
openness and pluralism and intend to open the group not only for different disciplines but to
different theoretical perspective and to a variety of methodological approaches.
8
ICGRG 2019 Committees
Co-Chairs
Prof. Fanny M. Cheung (The Chinese University of Hong Kong)
Prof. Carlos W. H. Lo (The Chinese University of Hong Kong)
Advisory Committee
Prof. Yury Blagov (St. Petersburg University, Russia)
Prof. John Braithwaite (The Australian National University)
Prof. Gerald Chan (The University of Auckland, New Zealand)
Prof. Neil Gunningham (The Australian National University)
Prof. Fiona Haines (The University of Melbourne, Australia)
Prof. Grame Hodge (Monash University, Australia)
Prof. Bridget Hutter (The London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom)
Prof. Wai-fung Lam (The University of Hong Kong)
Prof. Eungkyoon Lee (Korea University)
Prof. David Levi-Faur (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel)
Prof. Jolene Lin (National University of Singapore)
Prof. Peng Liu (Renmin University of China)
Prof. Tak Wing Ngo (The University of Macau)
Prof. Christine Parker (The University of Melbourne, Australia)
Prof. M Ramesh (National University of Singapore)
Dr Subhasis Ray (Xavier University, India)
Prof. Colin Scott (University College Dublin, Ireland)
Prof. Jodi Short (The University of California, Hastings College of the Law, United States)
Prof. Ching-Ping Tang (National Chengchi University, Taiwan)
Prof. Shui-yan Tang (The University of Southern California, United States)
Prof. Veronica Taylor (The Australian National University)
Prof. Benjamin van Rooij (University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
Prof. Richard Walker (The City University of Hong Kong)
Prof. Eric Windholz (Monash University, Australia)
Prof. Jiannan Wu (Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China)
Prof. Xun Wu (The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology)
Prof. Lan Xue (Tsinghua University, China)
Prof. Dali Yang (The University of Chicago, United States)
Prof. Kaifeng Yang (Renmin University of China)
Prof. Feihu Ying (Shenzhen University, China)
9
Organising Committee
Prof. David Donald (The Chinese University of Hong Kong)
Prof. Julien Chaisse (The Chinese University of Hong Kong)
Prof. Peter Fong (Hong Kong Public Administration Association)
Prof. Wei Li (The Chinese University of Hong Kong)
Dr Ning Liu (The City University of Hong Kong)
Prof. Michelle Miao (The Chinese University of Hong Kong)
Prof. William Smith (The Chinese University of Hong Kong)
Prof. Wilson Wong (The Chinese University of Hong Kong)
Dr Richard Wu (The University of Hong Kong)
Dr Henry Yee (The University of Hong Kong)
Dr Victor Zheng (The Chinese University of Hong Kong)
Dr Xueyong Zhan (The Hong Kong Polytechnic University)
Prof. Chao Xi (The Chinese University of Hong Kong)
Scientific Committee
Prof. Nancy Reichman (Chair) (University of Denver, United States)
Prof. David Levi-Faur (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel)
Prof. Bridget Hutter (The London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom)
Prof. Carlos W. H. Lo (The Chinese University of Hong Kong)
Prof. Salvador Parrado (Distance Learning University (UNED), Spain)
Prof. Benjamin van Rooij (University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
Prof. Shui-yan Tang (The University of Southern California, United States)
10
3 July
18:00–19:00 Welcome Gathering
Venue: Main Foyer, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
4 July
09:00–09:30 Opening Ceremony
Venue: LT1, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Welcome Speech
Prof. Rocky Tuan
Vice-Chancellor, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Opening Speech
Mr Matthew Cheung
Chief Secretary for Administration, The Government of the Hong Kong Special
Administrative Region
4 July
09:30–10:15 Keynote Speech
Venue: LT1, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Topic: Mega-Regulation, Meta-Regulation and the Autonomy of the
Globalized Higher Education Sector
Speaker:
Prof. Colin Scott
Convenor, European Consortium for Political Research (ECPR) Standing
Group on Regulatory Governance
11
10:15–10:30 Tea Break
Venue: Main Foyer, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
10:30–12:30 Round Table:
Governance and Think-tank in Hong Kong
Venue: LT1, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Moderator:
Mr Jasper Tsang
Convenor, Hong Kong Vision, Hong Kong
Speakers: Mrs Betty Fung
Head, Policy Innovation and Co-ordination Office, The Government of the Hong Kong
Special Administrative Region
Mr Ronny Tong
Convenor, Path of Democracy, Hong Kong
Mr Ming-wai Lau
Chairman, Bauhinia Foundation Research Centre, Hong Kong
Mr Stephen Wong
Deputy Executive Director and Head of Public Policy Institute, Our Hong Kong
Foundation, Hong Kong
12:30–14:00 Lunch
Venue: THE STAGE
3/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
12
14:00–15:30 Panel Section 1 (S1)
Panel: P04A –
Current and Future Directions of Compliance Research
Chair(s): Benjamin van Rooij, [email protected]
Faculty of Law, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Yuval Feldman, [email protected]
Faculty of Law, Bar-Ilan University, Israel
Venue: Room 214, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Measuring Compliance
van Rooij, Benjamin
Faculty of Law, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Behavioral Ethics and Compliance
Feldman, Yuval
Faculty of Law, Bar-Ilan University, Israel
Understanding Compliance
Hutter, Bridget
The London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom
Networked Compliance
Perez, Oren
Faculty of Law, Bar-Ilan University, Israel
13
14:00–15:30 Panel Section 1 (S1)
Panel: P12 –
Measuring Sectors’ Regulatory Governance: Quantitative
Approaches
Chair(s): Jacint Jordana, [email protected]
Institut Barcelona Estudis Internacionals (IBEI), Spain
Venue: Room 209A, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Comparing de jure and de facto Regulatory Arrangements: Measuring Regulatory
Governance in the Global South
Kumar, Shashwat
Institut Barcelona Estudis Internacionals, Spain
The Influence of Individual Values on Attitudes to Corruption: What Undermine Formal
Anti-corruption Effectiveness
Tu, Wenyan
Department of Public Policy, The City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Understanding the Formal Distribution of Decision-making Power in Multi-actor
Regulatory Arrangements: The Case of Telecommunications Markets in Europe, Latin
America, and South Asia
González, Camilo I.
Universidad de los Andes, Colombia
Mathieu, Emmanuelle
University of Lausanne, Switzerland
Verhoest, Koen
University of Antwerp, Belgium
14
14:00–15:30 Panel Section 1 (S1)
Panel: P32 –
The Quest for Sustainability: Promises and Challenges of
Participatory Governance
Chair(s): Wai-fung Lam, [email protected]
Department of Politics and Public Administration, The University of Hong Kong,
Hong Kong
Winnie W. Y. Law, [email protected]
Centre for Civil Society and Governance, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Venue: LT3, 1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
Trilogues and Civil Society Organisations: The European Parliament & CSOs in Trilogues
Greenwood, Justin
Aberdeen Business School, Robert Gordon University, United Kingdom
Roederer-Rynning, Christilla
University of Southern Denmark, Denmark
Research on the Level of Public Participation in Envi-social Governance and Its
Influencing Factors in China — Based on Residents’ Survey of Taiyuan and Kunming
Guo, Hongyan
Policy Research Center for Environment and Economy, Ministry of Ecology and Environment, China
Wu, Zhaoliang
School of Environmental & Natural Resources, Renmin University of China, China
Wang, Hua
School of Environmental & Natural Resources Renmin University of China, China
Reforming Environmental Service Organizations in Local China: A Comparative Study of
Chengdu, Guangzhou and Tianjin
Zhan, Xueyong
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong
Lo, Carlos W. H.
The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
15
14:00–15:30 Panel Section 1 (S1)
Panel: P38 –
Varieties of Regulatory Capitalism: The Role of Institutions of
Political Economy in Explaining Variance in Regulation between
States
Chair(s): Yair Osheroff, [email protected]
Department of Political Science, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Isarel
Venue: Room 215, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Varieties of Institutional Framework for Financial Stability: Macroprudential Regulators
in East-Central European (ECE) EU Member States
Mero, Katalin
Budapest Business School, University of Applied Sciences, Hungary
Capitalist Variations in ‘Say On Pay’: A Look at Regulatory Governance in Singapore and
Hong Kong
Ang, Lance
Centre for Asian Legal Studies, National University of Singapore, Singapore
From Developmental State to Regulatory State: The Changing Role of Public Service in
Southeast Asia
Haque, Shamsul
National University of Singapore, Singapore
Varieties of Regulatory Capitalism: Occupational Licensing in Germany, Sweden, UK and
Israel
Osheroff, Yair
Department of Political Science, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Isarel
16
14:00–15:30 Panel Section 1 (S1)
Panel: P40 –
Pro-social Regulatory Governance in Taiwan, with a Comparative
Perspective
Chair(s): Ching-Ping Tang, [email protected]
Department of Political Science, National Chengchi University, Taiwan
Venue: LT2, 1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
State-Community Partnership in Cultural Conservation: The Case of Conserving
Traditional Housing Settlement in Kinmen, Taiwan
Tang, Ching-Ping
Department of Political Science, National Chengchi University, Taiwan
Yu, Meng-Che
Department of Political Science, National Chengchi University, Taiwan
Resilient Governance and Acceptance of Climate Change Policy: An Investigation in a
Taiwan Sample
Lee, Changyen
Graduate Institute of National Policy and Public Affairs, National Chung-Hsin University, Taiwan
Cheng, Tiger K.
Department of Environmental and Cultural Resources, National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan
Chen, Yen-Hung
Department of Public Affairs, Fo Guang University, Taiwan
Cheng, Chun-Fa
Graduate Institute of Hakka Cultural Industry, National Pingtung University of Science and Technology, Taiwan
Big Data Development and Regulation for Social Policies in Taiwan
Liu, Helen K.
Department of Political Science, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
17
14:00–15:30 Panel Section 1 (S1)
Panel: N02 –
Regulatory Governance on Finance
Chair(s): Jay Cao, [email protected]
Department of Finance, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Venue: Room 209B, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
How Does Regulation Approach Short-termism?
Marshall, Graham
Macquarie University, Australia
Institutional Investor Stewardship: A Myth?
Xi, Chao
Faculty of Law, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
18
14:00–15:30 Panel Section 1 (S1)
Panel: N04 –
Co-regulatory Governance
Chair(s): Colin Scott, [email protected]
University College Dublin, Ireland
Venue: Room 203, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
New Global Governance for Sustainable Global Energy Transformation: Democratic,
Participatory-Deliberative, Multilayered
Klinke, Andreas
Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada
Consumer and Public Participation in Converged Communications Industry Rule-making
Lee, Karen
University of New England, Australia
Wilding, Derek
University of Technology Sydney, Australia
Accountability and Its Limits: Designing Stakeholder Engagement in Rulemaking across
the European Union
Dunlop, Claire A.
University of Exeter, United Kingdom
14:00–15:30 Tea Break
Venue: Main Foyer, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
19
16:00–18:00 Panel Section 2 (S2)
Panel: P04B –
Innovative Empirical Approaches to Study Regulation and
Compliance
Chair(s): Benjamin van Rooij, [email protected]
University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Yuval Feldman, [email protected]
Faculty of Law, Bar-Ilan University, Israel
Venue: Room 214, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
The Complexity of Revolving Doors in Regulation: Evidence from the American States
Provost, Colin
School of Public Policy, University College London, United Kingdom
From Control to Collaboration: An Experimental Approach to Prototyping a ‘Learning
Model’ for Civic Compliance within Urban Regulatory ‘Grey Zones’
Treger, Chloe
Dark Matter Labs, United Kingdom
Kang, Eunji
Dark Matter Labs, United Kingdom
Academic Impact and Institutional Entrepreneurship: Improving Compliance through the
Power of Norms, Practice, and Technique
Bolanos, Jose A.
The London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom
20
16:00–18:00 Panel Section 2 (S2)
Panel: P05 –
Emerging Trends in the Environmental Regulatory Governance in
India and China
Chair(s): Xuehua Zhang, [email protected]
Lishui Institute of Ecology and Environment, Nanjing University, China
Deborah Seligsohn, [email protected]
Villanova University, United States
Venue: LT3, 1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
Blunt Force Regulation and Bureaucratic Control in Weak Institutional Environments
van der Kamp, Denise
The City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
A Policy Review of Environmental Governance in India
Kumar, Lavanya Suresh
Birla Institute of Technology & Science, Pilani, Hyderabad Campus, India
Decentralizing Waste Management in Bengaluru, India: Role of Judiciary and Civil Society
Zhang, Xuehua
Lishui Institute of Ecology and Environment, Nanjing University, China
Shenoy, Megha
Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment, India
Kashyap, Shwetmala
Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment, India
Wasdani, Kishinchand P.
Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment, India
Vijaygopal, Abhishek
Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment, India
Indian Power Sector Regulation: Opportunities to Learn from the Chinese Experience
Seligsohn, Deborah
Villanova University, United States
A Paper Tiger? Prosecutorial Regulators in China’s Civil Environmental Public Interest Litigations
Ding, Chunyan
School of Law, The City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Xiao, Huina
Centre for Chinese & Comparative Law, The City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
21
16:00–18:00 Panel Section 2 (S2)
Panel: P07 –
Transnational Regulatory Networks
Chair(s): Dini Sejko, [email protected]
The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong
Jędrzej Górski, [email protected]
The City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Julien Chaisse, [email protected]
The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Venue: Room 215, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Chinese State-owned Enterprises in Africa: Is There Always a Black or White Role?
Yin, Wei
Southwest University of Political Science and Law, China
Zhang, Anran
Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Planning “Beside” And “Beyond” The State: Corporations’ and Sovereign Wealth Funds’
Planning Strategies
Sabatino, Gianmatteo
University of Trento, Italy
Privatization Programmes of Over-indebted Eurozone Member States: The Limits of
Internal Market Law
Papadopoulos, Thomas
Department of Law, University of Cyprus, Cyprus
European Company Law (ECL) Journal (Kluwer), Cyprus
Solving the Regulatory Puzzle of State-owned Enterprises: Features of Asian Mega-
regional Agreements
Sejko, Dini
The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong
SOEs in the EU China CAI Negotiations: Issues and the Way Ahead
Spano, Alessandro
The Dickson Poon School of Law, King's College London, United Kingdom
22
16:00–18:00 Panel Section 2 (S2)
Panel: P13 –
“New Governance” Failures in Implementing Regulatory Policy
Chair(s): Wai-Hang Yee, [email protected]
The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Venue: Room 209A, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
The Norwegian Model in Nigeria: Failure of Regulatory Transposition in Petro-
Governance
Onyeabo, Ebele A.
Faculty of Law, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Implementation Failures in the Field of the German Immission Control Law
Dose, Nicolai
Institute of Political Science, University Duisburg-Essen, Germany
Strüngmann, Daniela
Institute of Political Science/Institute for Socio-Economics, University Duisburg-Essen, Germany
Delegation and Democratic Control: Can Independent Regulatory Agencies Become Too
Independent?
Mause, Karsten
University of Münster, Germany
Heine, Klaus
Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Regulating Digital Urban Mobility Platforms (DUMP) in Times of Uncertainty
Artigas, Alvaro G.
CEE (Sciences-Po Paris), France
Castellano, José M.
UPF Barcelona, Spain
23
16:00–18:00 Panel Section 2 (S2)
Panel: P28 –
Striking a Balance Between Regulations and Governance for Capital
Markets in Hong Kong
Chair(s): Chee-keong Low, [email protected]
The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Venue: LT1, 1/F, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Practitioner Oriented Session
Panellists:
Individual Responsibility – A Capital Market Trend
Datwani, Mohan
The Hong Kong Institute of Chartered Secretaries, Hong Kong
Issue of Sponsor Liability
Chan, Kalok
CUHK Business School, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Green Finance in Hong Kong: Competition, Regulation and Governance
Tracy, Alexandra
Hoi Ping Ventures, Hong Kong
24
16:00–18:00 Panel Section 2 (S2)
Panel: P36 –
Transnational Regulatory Networks
Chair(s): Oren Perez, [email protected]
Bar-Ilan Law School, Israel
Venue: LT2, 1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
Global Networked Authority
Perez, Oren
Bar-Ilan Law School, Israel
Varieties of Transnational Regulation: How Tasks Drive Structure in Global Regulatory
Organizations
Coen, David
University College London, United Kingdom
Maggetti, Martino
University of Lausanne, Switzerland
Saz-Carranza, Angel
ESADE Business School, Spain
Yesilkagit, Kutsal
Leiden University, The Netherlands
Convergences and Divergences: Comparing Contractual and Organizational Models in
International Regulatory Cooperation
Cafaggi, Fabrizio
Italian Council of State, Italy
Transnational Regulatory Networks: A Study in Compliance and Legitimacy in Counter-
Terrorist Financing
Goldbarsht, Doron
Macquarie Law School, Australia
25
16:00–18:00 Panel Section 2 (S2)
Panel: N07 –
Regulatory Issues in China and India
Chair(s): David Levi-Faur, [email protected]
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel
Venue: Room 209B, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Regulatory Governance of Higher Education: A Case Study on India
Lankapalli, Rachana
The Department of Higher Education, Government of Andhra Pradesh, India
A National Leap-forward for Waste Separation? Exploring the Local Variations of Waste
Policy Instruments in China with Content Analysis and QCA
He, Chenyang
Department of Public Policy, The City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Fu, Yang
Department of Public Management, Shenzhen University, China
Social Media Management Policy and Its Evolution in China (2010-2017)
Liu, Shuhua M.
Fudan University, China
Pan, Liting
Fudan University, China
Zhang, Hong
Fudan University, China
Chen, Zui
Fudan University, China
Love Well, Whip Well? The Influence of Political Trust on Attitude to Protest in China
Li, Yong
School of Public Affairs, Zhejiang University, China
26
18:00–19:00 Reception
Venue: Main Foyer, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
27
09:00–10:30 Panel Section 3 (S3)
Panel: P01A –
Algorithmic Regulation: What are Regulators Doing with Data and
Can They Make Better Use of It? (1/2)
Chair(s): David Demeritt, [email protected]
King's College London, United Kingdom
Henry Rothstein, [email protected]
King's College London, United Kingdom
Venue: Room 209A, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Algorithmic Regulation: Promises, Problems, and Prospects of Better Regulation through
‘Big Data’
Demeritt, David, King's College London, United Kingdom
Rothstein, Henry, King's College London, United Kingdom
Statistical Surveillance vs Wisdom of the Crowds: What Works for Quality Regulation?
Griffiths, Alex, Statica Research Ltd, The Netherlands
Beaussier, Anne-Laure, CSO/Sciences-Po Paris, France
Rothstein, Henry, King's College London, United Kingdom
Steering by Their Own Lights: How and Why European Regulators Use Different
Indicators to Measure Healthcare Quality
Beaussier, Anne-Laure, CSO/Sciences-Po Paris, France
Demeritt, David, King's College London, United Kingdom
Griffiths, Alex, Statica Research Ltd, The Netherlands
Rothstein, Henry, King's College London, United Kingdom
The Indicator Revolution in Healthcare Quality Regulation: An International Comparative
Analysis across the OECD
Balog-Way, Dominic, King's College London, United Kingdom
Demeritt, David, King's College London, United Kingdom
Rothstein, Henry, King's College London, United Kingdom
28
09:00–10:30 Panel Section 3 (S3)
Panel: P02A –
Beyond Corruption: How to Foster Human Rights’ Protection
through Anti-corruption Regulation in Developing Economies (1/3)
Chair(s): Eduardo Saad-Diniz, [email protected]
Ribeirão Preto Law School and Program for Latin American Integration, University of
São Paulo, Brazil
Julia Gracia, [email protected]
NOVA School of Law, NOVA University Lisbon, Portugal
Venue: Room 209B, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Systemic Corruption and Regulatory Irrationality as Obstacles to the Fruition of Human
Rights in Rio de Janeiro
de Araujo, Valter S.
Law School, State University of Rio de Janeiro (UERJ), Brazil
CNMP (National Council of Prosecution Services), Brazil
Criminal Compliance and Corruption: A Cost-effectiveness Analysis (Brazilian
Perspective)
Puppe Magalhães, Matheus L.
Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany
The Dereliction of Human Rights in The Resource Curse: Criminalising Corruption
Regionally
Onyeabo, Ebele A.
Faculty of Law, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Disrespect for Equity and the Right to Life by the Implementation of Plea Bargain as a
Form of Anti-corruption Policy in Latin America
Rodriguez, Victor G.
Latin America Integration Program, University of Sao Paulo (USP), Brazil
29
09:00–10:30 Panel Section 3 (S3)
Panel: P06 –
Global Regulatory Governance of Goods and Standard-setting
Bodies: The Impact of Crisis Events
Chair(s): Stephanie Bijlmakers, [email protected]
Tilburg Law and Economics Center (TILEC), Tilburg University, The Netherlands
Venue: LT2, 1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
Automotive Reliability Engineering Mistakes: The Normativity of the Environment
Rosen, Robert E.
University of Miami School of Law, United States
Hearing above the Din in the Standards-Setting Space in the ICT Domain, and the Role
of Standard-Setting Bodies (SSBs)
Verghese, Zuno G.
Tilburg Law and Economics Center (TILEC), Tilburg University, The Netherlands
Lobbying in Face of Crises: The Case of Financial Standards
Borowicz, Konrad
Tilburg Law and Economics Center (TILEC), Tilburg University, The Netherlands
Resilience in the Face of Crisis: The Case of GlobalG.A.P., the Forest Stewardship Council
and Fairtrade International
Bijlmakers, Stephanie
Tilburg Law and Economics Center (TILEC), Tilburg University, The Netherlands
30
09:00–10:30 Panel Section 3 (S3)
Panel: P23A –
Regulatory Governance Reform in China Reconsidered:
Institutional Logic, Agency Empowerment, and Future Challenges
(1/3)
Chair(s): Peng Liu, [email protected]
School of Public Administration & Policy, Renmin University of China, China
Xueyong Zhan, [email protected]
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong
Venue: Room 215, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Principal Moral Hazard, Public Awareness, and Environmental Regulatory Biases:
Evidence from China
Chen, Tingjia
School of Government and Public Policy, The University of Arizona, United States
Schlager, Edella
School of Government and Public Policy, The University of Arizona, United States
The Selective Regulatory State-building in Developing Countries: A Case of Chinese VAT
Governance
Xiao, Huina
Centre for Chinese & Comparative Law, The City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Asymmetrical Embedded Regulation: A Triangular Model to Understand China’s
Regulatory Regime and Its Reform in Its Authoritarian Context
Liu, Peng
School of Public Administration & Policy, Renmin University of China, China
Politics of Appraisal Standard Setting of National Food Safety Cities in Authoritarian
China
Yang, Zhenjie
Zhongnan University of Economics and Law, China
Sheng, Yilong
Wuhan Institute of Technology, China
31
09:00–10:30 Panel Section 3 (S3)
Panel: P26A –
Resilience, Inequality and Environmental Governance
Chair(s): Bridget Hutter, [email protected]
The London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom
Venue: Room 203, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
New Environmental Governance: Adaptation, Resilience and Law
Holley, Cameron
University of New South Wales Sydney, Australia
Risk, Resilience and Inequality: Current Dilemmas in Environmental Regulation
Hutter, Bridget
The London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom
Dialogue Strategies for Social-ecological Resilience and Sustainability
Wang, Hua
Renmin University of China, China
An Evaluation of the Effectiveness of Environmental Roundtable Dialogue at the
Community Level in China Based upon Stakeholder Satisfactions
Su, Hongyan
School of Environment & Natural Resources, Renmin University of China, China
Wang, Hua
Renmin University of China, China
32
09:00–10:30 Panel Section 3 (S3)
Panel: N01 –
Global and Regional Regulatory Governance
Chair(s): Richard Walker, [email protected]
The City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Venue: Room 214, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Private Meta-regulation
Cafaggi, Fabrizio
Italian Council of State, Italy
Scott, Colin
University College Dublin, Ireland
Nanotechnology and the Politics of Regulation in Asia – Regional Divergence
Rodine-Hardy, Kirsten
Northeastern University, United States
Brij-Raj, Melissa
Northeastern University, United States
Nithya Pathalam
Northeastern University, United States
33
09:00–10:30 Panel Section 3 (S3)
Panel: N03 –
Regulatory Challenges for the Global South
Chair(s): Benjamin van Rooij, [email protected]
Faculty of Law, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Venue: LT3, 1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
Regulation as Contained Distributive Politics in the Global South
Chalmers, Damian
National University of Singapore, Singapore
Variegated Regulation and Relations: Competition Law and Policy in Indonesia and
Thailand
Loo, Gloria J. X.
Centre for International Law, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Navigating Uncertainty: The Oil and Gas Regulation in Mexico
Elizondo, Alejandra
CIDE, Mexico
Mejia, Luis E.
Hertie School of Governance, Germany
10:30–11:00 Tea Break
Venue: Main Foyer, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
2/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
34
11:00–12:30 Panel Section 4 (S4)
Panel: P01B –
Algorithmic Regulation: What are Regulators Doing with Data and
Can They Make Better Use of It? (2/2)
Chair(s): David Demeritt, [email protected]
Kings College London, United Kingdom
Henry Rothstein, [email protected]
Kings College London, United Kingdom
Venue: Room 209A, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Big Data and Bounded Ethicality
Feldman, Yuval
Faculty of Law, Bar-Ilan University, Israel
Kaplan, Yotam
Faculty of Law, Bar-Ilan University, Israel
Steering through Data-clouds: The Tension between Statistical Preferences and
Professional Decisions: A Study Comparing the ‘Governance by Numbers’ in German
Health and Higher Education Sectors
Huber, Michael
Department of Sociology, Bielefeld University, Germany
On the Interface between Metrics and Policy: A Case Study of Problems in the Use of
Statistical Data in the Monitoring of Mental Health Policy
Foreman, David M.
Royal College of Psychiatrists, United Kingdom
Kings College London, United Kingdom
35
11:00–12:30 Panel Section 4 (S4)
Panel: P02B –
Beyond Corruption: How to Foster Human Rights’ Protection
through Anti-corruption Regulation in Developing Economies (2/3)
Chair(s): Eduardo Saad-Diniz, [email protected]
Ribeirão Preto Law School and Program for Latin American Integration, University of
São Paulo, Brazil
Julia Gracia, [email protected]
NOVA School of Law, NOVA University Lisbon, Portugal
Venue: Room 209B, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Chinese Companies in Brazil as Risk Factors for Corruption and Threats to Human
Rights: Solutions to Comply with Bilateral Agreements on Incentives to Governance
Law, Thomas
PUC - Brazil Law School, Brazil
Corruption and Human Rights from the Argentine Regulatory Perspective
Sabadini, Patricio N.
Cuenca del Plata University, Argentina
Exploring a Public Interest Approach to Corruption in Authoritarian East Asia
Gillespie, John
Department of Business Law and Taxation, Monash University, Australia
Connecting Sustainable Development, Human Rights, and Corruption: A Collective
Action Approach
Gracia, Julia
NOVA School of Law, NOVA University Lisbon, Portugal
FCT Fellow, Portugal
CEDIS, Portugal
36
11:00–12:30 Panel Section 4 (S4)
Panel: P23B –
Regulatory Governance Reform in China Reconsidered:
Institutional Logic, Agency Empowerment, and Future Challenges
(2/3)
Chair(s): Peng Liu, [email protected]
School of Public Administration & Policy, Renmin University of China, China
Xueyong Zhan, [email protected]
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong
Venue: Room 215, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Regulating Air Pollution in China’s Industrial Parks
Ma, Jieqi
Department of Geography and Resource Management, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Xu, Yuan
Department of Geography and Resource Management, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
We Shall Tango in Techno Music: Institutional Outsourcing and Regulatory Innovation
on Digital Governance in China
Hai, Jiawei S.
Lau China Institute, King's College London, United Kingdom
Building Regulatory State with China’s Market-oriented Economic Reforms:
A Comparative Study of Competition Policy and Environmental Policy
Zhan, Xueyong
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong
37
11:00–12:30 Panel Section 4 (S4)
Panel: P26B –
Resilience and Environmental Governance
Chair(s): Bridget Hutter, [email protected]
The London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom
Venue: Room 203, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Establishing a Framework of Urban Resilience Indicators: A Case Study of Hsinchu City
in Taiwan
Chen, Yan-Rong
National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan
Cheng, Kuo-Tai
National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan
Lee, Chang-Yen
National Chung Hsing University, Taiwan
Governing the Green Climate Fund: Reconciling Global Norms with Local Needs
Francesch-Huidobro, Maria
Konrad Adenauer Stiftung, Hong Kong
The Development of Green Islamic Finance: A Success Case from Malaysia
Liu, Felicia H. M.
King's College London, United Kingdom
National University of Singapore, Singapore
38
11:00–12:30 Panel Section 4 (S4)
Panel: P29 –
Taming or Enabling Private Rule-makers? Assessing Resilience of
Transnational Standardsetters
Chair(s): Enrico Partiti, [email protected]
Tilburg Law and Economics Center (TILEC), Tilburg University, The Netherlands
Venue: LT2, 1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
The Performativity of Private Rule-making. Management System Standards as Source of
Power of Standardising Bodies
Partiti, Enrico
Tilburg Law and Economics Center (TILEC), Tilburg University, The Netherlands
The Interplay between EU Public Law and the Setting Up of Private Technical Standards
Which Grant Presumption of Conformity with EU Legislation
Gérardy, Marie
University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg
Regulatory Constraints in SSO’s Approach in Incorporating Open Source into
Standardization Work: A Comparative Study between ETSI, OASIS and IETF
Li, Jingze
Tilburg Institute for Law, Technology, and Society (TILT), Tilburg University, The Netherlands
Balancing Transparency and Intellectual Property Rights within Standard Setting Bodies
Jenart, Cedric
Faculty of Law, University of Antwerp, Belgium
39
11:00–12:30 Panel Section 4 (S4)
Panel: P39A –
Electricity Global South: The Diffusion and Role of IRAs
Chair(s): Emmanuelle Mathieu, [email protected]
University of Lausanne, Switzerland
Jacint Jordana, [email protected]
Institut Barcelona Estudis Internacionals (IBEI), Spain
Discussant: Camilo I. González, [email protected]
Universidad de los Andes, Colombia
Venue: Room 214, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Agencification in the Arab World: Insights from the Electricity Sector
Mathieu, Emmanuelle
University of Lausanne, Switzerland
Jordana, Jacint
Institut Barcelona Estudis Internacionals (IBEI), Spain
Electricity Regulation in India: Locating in the Spectrum between Rules and Deals
Kumar, Shashwat
Institut Barcelona Estudis Internacionals (IBEI), Spain
Patil, Ketan
ABPS Infrastructure Advisory Private Limited, India
Funding Infrastructure in Developing Countries: The Limited Role of Regulation
Mathieu, Emmanuelle
University of Lausanne, Switzerland
Developing a Hybrid Approach to Regulation in the Nigerian Electricity Industry
Osasu, Osamede
The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
40
11:00–12:30 Panel Section 4 (S4)
Panel: N05 –
Regulation of the Health Care Sector
Chair(s): Peter N. S. Lee, [email protected]
Department of Political Science, National Chung Cheng University, Taiwan
Venue: LT3, 1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
The Challenge of Medicinal Cannabis to Therapeutic Goods Regulation in Australia
Gleeson, Penny
Melbourne Law School, The University of Melbourne, Australia
Negative Lessons and Epistemic Communities in Policy Transfer. A Typology of Policy
Outcomes
Rusu, Alexandru
WHO Collaborating Centre for Pharmaceutical Policy and Regulation, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Löblová, Olga
University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
Regulatory Governance in Quasi-Market: The Case of Public Insurances of Medical Care
in China
Lee, Peter N. S.
Department of Political Science, National Chung Cheng University, Taiwan
12:30–14:00 Lunch
Venue: THE STAGE
3/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
41
14:00–15:30 Panel Section 5 (S5)
Panel: P02C –
Beyond Corruption: How to Foster Human Rights’ Protection
through Anti-corruption Regulation in Developing Economies (3/3)
Chair(s): Eduardo Saad-Diniz, [email protected]
Ribeirão Preto Law School and Program for Latin American Integration, University of
São Paulo, Brazil
Julia Gracia, [email protected]
NOVA School of Law, NOVA University Lisbon, Portugal
Venue: Room 209B, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
The Brumadinho Dam Collapse: How a Better Regulation Could Have Helped Prevent
the Disaster through Implementation of a Deterrent Effect
Torres, Henrique A.
Universidad de Sevilla, Spain | Unifenas, Brazil | IBHES/FACEMG, Brazil | PUC-MG, Brazil
Maletta, Giselle V.
Milton Campos Law School, Brazil
The Politics of Corporate Governance in Latin America: Authoritarian Roots v. Integrity
Saad-Diniz, Eduardo
Ribeirão Preto Law School and Program for Latin American Integration, University of São Paulo, Brazil
Electoral Corruption Revealed by Lava Jato and Political Rights in Brazil
Mohallem, Michael F.
FGV Law School in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Linking Corruption and Human Rights: A Comparative Analysis of Legal Approaches to
Foreign Bribery and Modern Slavery In Australia
Harris, Hannah
University of New South Wales Sydney, Australia
42
14:00–15:30 Panel Section 5 (S5)
Panel: P23C –
Regulatory Governance Reform in China Reconsidered:
Institutional Logic, Agency Empowerment, and Future Challenges
(3/3)
Chair(s): Peng Liu, [email protected]
School of Public Administration & Policy, Renmin University of China, China
Xueyong Zhan, [email protected]
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong
Venue: Room 215, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Capacity Deficits in China’s Frontline Food Safety Regulatory System
Yee, Wai-Hang
The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Liu, Peng
Renmin University of China, China
Environmental Public Interest Litigation in China under New Circumstances:
Understanding Court Decisions Using Fuzzy-set Qualitative Comparative Analysis
Ma, Rongzhen
The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Yee, Wai-Hang
The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Regime Type and Regulatory Agendas in Greater China: Food Safety in Beijing, Hong
Kong, and Taipei
Chan, Kwan-nok
The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Lam, Wai-fung
The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Li, Wei
Department of Government and Public Administration, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Tang, Ching-Ping
National Chengchi University, Taiwan
43
14:00–15:30 Panel Section 5 (S5)
Panel: P24A –
Regulatory Indicators and Measurement in Globalized Governance
(1/2)
Chair(s): Claire A. Dunlop, [email protected]
University of Exeter, United Kingdom
Wei Li, [email protected]
Department of Government and Public Administration, The Chinese University of
Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Venue: LT2, 1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
Cross-agency Meetings Matter: A Case Study on Local Government’s Comprehensive
Reform in China
Yan, Bo
School of Public Policy and Administration, Xi’an Jiaotong University, China
Wu, Jiannan
School of Public Relations and Affairs, Shanghai Jiaotong University, China
The Role of Collaborative Networks and Resource Mobilization in Social Service Delivery:
A Comparative Analysis of Contracting Performance in China
Yang, Bao
School of Public Affairs, Chongqing University, China
Li, Wei
Department of Government and Public Administration, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Media Reputation of Regulatory Agencies: Proposing and Measuring a New Regulatory
Indicator
Peci, Alketa
Brazilian School of Public and Business Administration, Brazil
Fernandes, Fabiola
Federal University of Uberlândia, Brazil
44
14:00–15:30 Panel Section 5 (S5)
Panel: P34 –
Transnational Private Regulation Panel #2 – Social / Environmental
/ Safety
Chair(s): Maria Francesch-Huidobro, [email protected]
Konrad Adenauer Stiftung, Hong Kong
Venue: Room 209A, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Regulating ‘Sustainable Minerals’ in Global Electronics Supply Chains: Local Power
Struggles and the Limits of Supply Chain Governance
Macdonald, Kate
School of Social and Political Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Australia
Diprose, Rachael
School of Social and Political Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Australia
Kurniawan, Nanang
Universitas Gadjah Mada, Indonesia
Winanti, Poppy
Universitas Gadjah Mada, Indonesia
Global Benchmarking Schemes and Local Adaptation by Japanese Certification Schemes
Sakaguchi, Isao
Gakushuin University, Japan
Watanabe, Tomoaki
Fukuoka Institute of Technology, Japan
Certification, Uncertainty, and Corporate Governance: Varieties of Certifications (in
Voluntary Carbon Markets)
Bolanos, Jose A.
The London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom
45
14:00–15:30 Panel Section 5 (S5)
Panel: P37A –
Trends and Contemporary Issues in Transnational Environmental
Governance (1/2)
Chair(s): Jolene Lin, [email protected]
National University of Singapore, Singapore
Venue: LT3, 1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
Climate Change Regulation, Shipping and the WTO: Conflicting Obligations?
Maggio, Amber R.
Centre for International Law, National University of Singapore, Singapore
All Hands On Deck: Addressing the Global Marine Plastics Pollution Crisis in Asia
Fang, Meng
Faculty of Law, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Garcia, Beatriz
Faculty of Law, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Lin, Jolene
Faculty of Law, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Meta-regulation of Voluntary Certification Schemes: What is the Role of Regional and
International Organizations?
Naiki, Yoshiko
Osaka University, Japan
46
14:00–15:30 Panel Section 5 (S5)
Panel: P39B –
Electricity Global South: Complexity and Multilevel Governance
Chair(s): Emmanuelle Mathieu, [email protected]
University of Lausanne, Switzerland
Jacint Jordana, [email protected]
Institut Barcelona Estudis Internacionals (IBEI), Spain
Discussant: Alejandra Elizondo, [email protected]
CIDE, Mexico
Venue: Room 214, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Beyond the Regulatory Authority: System Operator as a Regulatory Intermediary and the
Expansion of Clean Energy in Mexico
Valenzuela, Jose M.
Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
The Ambivalent Role of Regulatory Institutions in the Marketization and Decarbonization
of China’s Power Sector
Goron, Coraline
University of Oxford China Centre, United Kingdom
Electricity Regulation for Cities at Risk: Regulating the Grid’S Last-mile in Santiago
Artigas, Alvaro G.
CEE (Sciences-Po Paris), France
15:30–16:00 Tea Break
Venue: Main Foyer, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
2/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
47
16:00–18:00 Panel Section 6 (S6)
Panel: P10 –
International Varieties of Risk Regulation
Chair(s): Henry Rothstein, [email protected]
King's College London, United Kingdom
David Demeritt, [email protected]
King's College London, United Kingdom
Venue: Room 203, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Explaining National Political Philosophies of Risk and Regulation
Rothstein, Henry
King's College London, United Kingdom
Demeritt, David
King's College London, United Kingdom
Why Regulators Assess Risk Differently: Regulatory Style, Corporatist Organisation and
the Varied Implementation of Risk-based Food Safety Inspection across Europe
Borraz, Olivier
CSO/Sciences-Po Paris, France
Beaussier, Anne-Laure
CSO/Sciences-Po Paris, France
Demeritt, David
King's College London, United Kingdom
Rothstein, Henry
King's College London, United Kingdom
Huber, Michael
Department of Sociology, Bielefeld University, Germany
Risk, Nudge and the Enlightened Consumer: Why Food Hygiene Barometers Show New
Regulatory Ideas Don’t Always Travel Well
Self, David
Food Standards Agency, United Kingdom
Rothstein, Henry
King's College London, United Kingdom
The Risk(Based) Regulation of Higher Education. Comparing Quality Regimes in France
England and the Netherlands
Huber, Michael
Department of Sociology, Bielefeld University, Germany
48
16:00–18:00 Panel Section 6 (S6)
Panel: P11 –
Latin American Regulatory State: Origins and Evolution
Chair(s): Camilo Ignacio González, [email protected]
Universidad de los Andes, Colombia
Discussant: Jacint Jordana, [email protected]
Institut Barcelona Estudis Internacionals (IBEI), Spain
Venue: Room 214, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Up in the Air: Regulating Methane Emissions in Mexico
Elizondo, Alejandra
CIDE, Mexico
Belausteguigoitia, Juan C.
ITAM, Mexico
Liedo, Pedro
ITAM, Mexico
The Effect of Regulatory Governance Arrangements on the Output of the
Telecommunication and Energy Sectors
González, Camilo Ignacio
Universidad de los Andes, Colombia
Dismantling the Mexican Regulatory State?
Dussauge-Laguna, Mauricio
CIDE, Mexico
Quo Vadis Regulator: Professional Careers of Brazilian Regulators
Peci, Alketa
Brazilian School of Public and Business Administration, Brazil
de Araujo, Bruno C. O.
Instituto de Pesquisa Aplicada (IPEA), Brazil
Santos, Aline
Brazilian School of Public and Business Administration, Brazil
New Theories of Law - Alternative Regulation and Alternative Dispute Resolution in a
View from the South
Pucci, Rafael D.
Universidade De Sao Paulo (USP), Brazil
49
16:00–18:00 Panel Section 6 (S6)
Panel: P14 –
On the Regulation of Corporate Social Responsibility
Chair(s): Carlos W. H. Lo, [email protected]
The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Venue: Room 209B, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Voluntary Regulation Regarding Ethical Codes and Criminal State Regulation: Searching
for a New Model for Regulating CSR
Litor, Lilach
The Open University of Israel, Israel
How Regulation Effects CSR: Corporate Environmental Responsibility in Different
Simulated Regulatory Scenarios
Karassin, Orr
Department of Sociology, Political Science and Communication, The Open University of Israel, Israel
Ba-Haim, Aviad
Department of Management and Economics, The Open University of Israel, Israel
Corporate Political Activities and Political Corporate Social Responsibilities in Dependent
Market Economies – The Case of Hungary
Szennay, Aron
Faculty of Finance and Accountancy, Budapest Business School, Hungary | Doctoral School of Regional-
and Economic Sciences, Széchenyi István University, Hungary | MTA-BGE Macroeconomic Sustainability
Research Group, Hungary
The Dialectic Development of the CSR Regulation in Russian Federation
Blagov, Yury
Graduate School of Management, St. Petersburg University, Russia
Petrova-Savchenko, Anastasia
Graduate School of Management, St. Petersburg University, Russia
50
16:00–18:00 Panel Section 6 (S6)
Panel: P21 –
Regulation of Legal Ethics, Legal Profession and Legal Education
Chair(s): Richard Wu, [email protected]
The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Venue: Room 215, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Reverse Engineering Legal Professional Privilege in a Globalising World:
The Australian Case
Goldbarsht, Doron
Macquarie Law School, Macquarie University, Australia
The Ethics of Law Practice and the Ethics of Compliance
Winn, Jane K.
University of Washington, United States
Corporate Counsel and the Challenge of Regulatory Governance
Godwin, Andrew
Melbourne Law School, The University of Melbourne, Australia
Lawyers in a Globalised World: The Challenges to Regulating Legal Ethics in Practice
Lee, John
The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Reforming and Regulating Legal Education and Admission to Practice in the Greater
China Region in an Age of Globalisation: A Comparative Study of China, Hong Kong and
Taiwan
Wu, Richard
The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
51
16:00–18:00 Panel Section 6 (S6)
Panel: P24B –
Regulatory Indicators and Measurement in Globalized Governance
(2/2)
Chair(s): Claire A. Dunlop, [email protected]
University of Exeter, United Kingdom
Wei Li, [email protected]
Department of Government and Public Administration, The Chinese University of
Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Venue: LT2, 1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
How Serious is China’s Work Safety Situation? An International Comparison
Gao, Jie
Department of Political Science, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Building Measurement for Trade in Services in APEC Region
Yu, Ching-Wen
National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan
Governing Data-Driven Innovation in Cyber-Physical Systems: Open Data for Integrated
Smart Cities through Regulatory Sandboxes
Yarime, Masaru
Division of Public Policy, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong | Department
of Science, Technology, Engineering and Public Policy, University College London, United Kingdom |
Graduate School of Public Policy, The University of Tokyo, Japan
Managing and Evaluating Collaborative Innovation Processes—A Comparative Analysis
of Two Elderly Service Networks in Shanghai
Li, Wei
Department of Government and Public Administration, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Lam, Wai-fung
The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
52
16:00–18:00 Panel Section 6 (S6)
Panel: P33 –
Transnational Private Regulation Panel #1 – Economic / Financial /
Trade
Chair(s): Chao Xi, [email protected]
Faculty of Law, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Venue: Room 209A, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) and the Ethical Use of Artificial Intelligence (AI)
Darbellay, Aline
University of Geneva, Switzerland
Guo, Rui
Renmin University of China, China
Evolving Regulatory Frameworks in Finance: The Case of Crypto-assets
Puglisi, Alfio A.
School of Politics and Economics, Kings College London, United Kingdom
A Tepid Engagement or an Earnest Initiative? The Asia Region Funds Passport & The
Indo-Pacific Financial Integration
Khosa, Sonia
Business School, The University of Sydney, Australia
Governing the Future: How Are Major Jurisdictions Tackling the Issue of Artificial
Intelligence, Law and Ethics?
Daly, Angela
The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
FATCA, CRS, and the Wrong Choice of Who to Regulate
Noked, Noam
Faculty of Law, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
53
16:00–18:00 Panel Section 6 (S6)
Panel: P37B –
Trends and Contemporary Issues in Transnational Environmental
Governance (2/2)
Chair(s): Jolene Lin, [email protected]
National University of Singapore, Singapore
Venue: LT3, 1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
Where Do Public and Private Regulations Meet? A Case of Delegation in the EU’s Forest
Regulation
Yamada, Takahiro
Nagoya University, Japan
Watanabe, Tomoaki
Fukuoka Institute of Technology, Japan
A Study on Transnational Regulatory Governance for Plastic Marine Debris: Trends,
Challenges, and Prospect
Wu, Hsing-Hao
Department of Finanacial and Economic Law, National University of Kaohsiung, Taiwan
Horizontal Integration and [Non-state] Regulatory Expansion: Voluntary Carbon Offset
Certifications and the Challenge of Jurisdictional Diversity
Bolanos, Jose A.
The London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom
54
18:15–21:30 Gala Dinner
Venue: 2/F, ClubOne Riviera
55–57 Tai Chung Kiu Road, Shatin
New Territories, Hong Kong
SHUTTLE BUS
CAMPUS VENUE
Departure Time: 18:15
Pick-up Point: Main Entrance, Cheng Yu Tung Building,
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
EVENTS
Welcome Speech Prof. Fanny M. Cheung
Pro-Vice-Chancellor, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Co-Chair, ICGRG 2019 Organising Committee
Ceremony Establishing an Asian-Pacific Network on Regulatory Governance Research
Best Paper Award Announce the Results of:
ICGRG Routledge Prize
CUHK Press Prize
Culture Event Lion Dance Performance
55
18:15–21:30 Gala Dinner
Venue: 2/F, ClubOne Riviera
55–57 Tai Chung Kiu Road, Shatin
New Territories, Hong Kong
SHUTTLE BUS
VENUE HOTELS CAMPUS
Departure Time: 21:30
Pick-up Point: Main Entrance, ClubOne Riviera,
55–57 Tai Chung Kiu Road, Shatin
New Territories, Hong Kong
ROUTE A (CAMPUS EXPRESS)
ClubOne Riviera Hyatt Regency Shatin (University Train Station)
ROUTE B
ClubOne Riviera Courtyard by Marriott Hong Kong Shatin
Regal Riverside Hotel United College, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
University Train Station
56
09:00–10:30 Panel Section 7 (S7)
Panel: P03 –
Campaign Style Enforcement and Regulatory Compliance
Chair(s): Ning Liu, [email protected]
Department of Public Policy, The City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Carlos W. H. Lo, [email protected]
The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Venue: Room 209B, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Reacting to Misbehaving Principal: A New Perspective for Understanding Environmental
Regulatory Competition
Chen, Tingjia
School of Government and Public Policy, The University of Arizona, United States
Schlager, Edella
School of Government and Public Policy, The University of Arizona, United States
Take a Stick to Sermon: How Campaign-style Policy Enforcement Failed
Xie, Mengxi
School of Public Policy and Management, Tsinghua University, China
Chen, Ling
School of Public Policy and Management, Tsinghua University, China
Coping under Adversity: Understanding Frontline Officials’ Strategies for Regulatory
Enforcement
Liu, Ning
Department of Public Policy, The City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Tang, Shui-yan
The University of Southern California, United States
Lo, Carlos W. H.
The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Zhan, Xueyong
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong
57
09:00–10:30 Panel Section 7 (S7)
Panel: P09 –
Innovation in the New Contexts Shaping Global Education. Joint-
venture Operations in China and the Quality Assurance Conundrum
Chair(s): Stuart Perrin, [email protected]
Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University, China
Venue: LT3, 1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
Methodology Workshop
Panellists:
Perrin, Stuart
Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University, China
Palisse, Alain-James
Sino-French School of Renmin Univeristy, China
Chen, Chao
Renmin University of China, Suzhou Campus, China
58
09:00–10:30 Panel Section 7 (S7)
Panel: P19A –
Regulation and Compliance in Developing Economies (1/2)
Chair(s): Huina Xiao, [email protected]
Centre for Chinese & Comparative Law, The City University of Hong Kong, Hong
Kong
Xin He, [email protected]
Faulty of Law, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Venue: Room 214, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Corporate Governance Regulation and Rational Choices: Evidence from a Developing
Economy
Nakpodia, Franklin
The University of Leeds, United Kingdom
Anti-corruption Compliance and Regulatory Model: Prescriptive Regulation and Risk of
Implementation of Sham Programs
Vieira, Vania L. R.
Federal Attorney General, Brazil
Law School at Universidade de Brasilia, Brazil
Aranha, Marcio I.
Law School, Universidade de Brasilia, Brazil
Center for Policies, Law, Economics and Communication Technologies. Universidade de Brasilia, Brazil
Nucleus of Sectoral and Regulatory Law, Law School, Universidade de Brasilia, Brazil
Pesticide Compliance Challenges: Lessons from Chinese Vegetable Farmers
Yan, Huiqi
School of Public Administration, Central South University, China
59
09:00–10:30 Panel Section 7 (S7)
Panel: P25A –
Reputation and Disclosure as Governance Mechanisms (1/2)
Chair(s): Judith van Erp, [email protected]
Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Yongkang An, [email protected]
Zhejiang University, China
Venue: Room 215, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Shaming by Association: Rediscovering Stigmatization Theory in Regulatory Governance
van Erp, Judith
Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Getting More Out of 140 Characters or Less: Media Reputation and Agencies’
Communication Strategies
Peci, Alketa
Brazilian School of Public and Business Administration, Brazil
Fernandes, Fabiola
Brazilian School of Public and Business Administration, Brazil
Promoting Compliance by Disclosing Regulatory Information in China: Illusion or
Reality?
An, Yongkang
Zhejiang University, China
60
09:00–10:30 Panel Section 7 (S7)
Panel: P27 –
Responsive Regulation in China: Challenges and Prospects
Chair(s): Binglin Yang, [email protected]
China University of Political Science and Law, China
Peng Liu, [email protected]
Renmin University of China, China
Venue: LT2, 1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
A Responsive Regulation Perspective on the Transition of the System of Dispatching
Residency Cadres to Villages in China —— Based on the Empirical Research of Village
A in Northeast China
Gong, Yurun
School of Humanities, Dalian Maritime University, China
Lai, Edward
School of Humanities, Dalian Maritime University, China
Wu, Yuhong
School of Humanities, Dalian Maritime University, China
Why the Application of Responsive Regulation Fails in Chinese Context: Evidences and
Lessons from Food Safety Regulation
Liu, Peng
Renmin University of China, China
The Growth of Responsive Regulation in China
Yang, Binglin
China University of Political Science and Law, China
61
09:00–10:30 Panel Section 7 (S7)
Panel: P30 –
The Authoritarian Logic of Regulating through the Judiciary
Chair(s): Michelle Miao, [email protected]
Faculty of Law, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Venue: Room 209A, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Reform-Facilitating Corruption Control in China
Zhan, Jing V.
The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Zhu, Jiangnan
The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Criminal Law as a Regulatory Tool: Governing the Platform Economy in China
Miao, Michelle
Faculty of Law, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
“Democratizing” Courts in an Authoritarian Polity? China’s Pilot Reform on Its People’s
Assessor System
Miao, Michelle
Faculty of Law, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Politico-Administrative Discretion and Corruption: The Cases of Ao Man Lung and Ho
Chio Meng in Macao
Lo, Sonny L. H.
HKU School of Professional and Continuing Education, Hong Kong
10:30–11:00 Tea Break
Venue: Main Foyer, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
2/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
62
11:00–12:30 Panel Section 8 (S8)
Panel: P17 –
Reforming Regulatory Governance Systems in Health and Long
Term Care
Chair(s): Peter P. Yuen, [email protected]
Professional and Continuing Education (CPCE), The Hong Kong Polytechnic
University, Hong Kong
Venue: LT3, 1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
Demand for Informal Long-term Care among Older People: A Case Study in China
Sun, Huajun
Tianjin University, China
How to Develop Combination of Medical Care and Pension Service from the
Embeddedness Theory Perspective——Based on Case Study of Three Medical / Pension
Institutions in Tianjin
Xie, Yu
Institute of Public Administration, Tianjin University, China
Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) Reporting by Healthcare Enterprises:
Responsible Investment Perspectives from the Global Financial Centre of China
Law, Vincent T.
School of Professional Education and Executive Development,
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong
63
11:00–12:30 Panel Section 8 (S8)
Panel: P18 –
RegTech: The Promise and Challenges of Automating Regulatory
Oversight
Chair(s): David C. Donald, [email protected]
The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Venue: Room 209B, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Agency in Autonomous Systems for Law
Donald, David C.
The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Donald, Aletheia A.
World Bank, United States
The Risk-Taking Channel of Monetary Policy: Evidence from Peer-to-peer Lending in
China
Zeng, Shixu
Duisburg-Essen University, Germany
A Regulatory Framework for Artificial Intelligence in the Financial Services Industry
Lee, Joseph
University of Exeter, United Kingdom
64
11:00–12:30 Panel Section 8 (S8)
Panel: P19B –
Regulation and Compliance in Developing Economies (2/2)
Chair(s): Huina Xiao, [email protected]
Centre for Chinese & Comparative Law, The City University of Hong Kong, Hong
Kong
Xin He, [email protected]
Faulty of Law, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Venue: Room 214, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Unpacking Emerging Regulatory Models: The Cayman Islands’ Public Procurement
Panades-Estruch, Laura
Cayman Islands Law School, University of Liverpool (UK), Cayman Islands
Typology of Tax Compliance in Developing Economies: Empirical Evidence from
China’s Shoe Industry
He, Xin
Faulty of Law, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Xiao, Huina
Centre for Chinese & Comparative Law, The City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Explaining Corrupt Non-Compliance with Public Procurement Law:
A Case Study of Ghana
David-Barrett, Elizabeth
University of Sussex, United Kingdom
Kale, Paschal Z.
Independent researcher, Ghana
65
11:00–12:30 Panel Section 8 (S8)
Panel: P25B –
Reputation and Disclosure as Governance Mechanisms (2/2)
Chair(s): Judith van Erp, [email protected]
Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Yongkang An, [email protected]
Zhejiang University, China
Venue: Room 215, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Testing the Effects of Information Disclosure in the UK Modern Slavery Act
Provost, Colin
School of Public Policy, University College London, United Kingdom
Capelos, Tererza
Institute for Conflict, Cooperation and Security, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom
Regulation of Public Information on Food Risk in China
Jin, Jian
Institute for Agricultural Law, University of Goettingen, Germany
Marshalling Reputation to Minimize Problematic Business Conduct
Hill, Claire A.
University of Minnesota Law School, United States
66
11:00–12:30 Panel Section 8 (S8)
Panel: N06 –
Innovations and Value Creation in Regulatory Governance
Chair(s): Nancy Reichman, [email protected]
University of Denver, United States
Venue: LT2, 1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
Reforming Regulatory Governance: How Aotearoa (New Zealand) Aims to Become a
World Leader in Regulatory Practice
van der Heijden, Jeroen
School of Government, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Trends in Regulation Scholarship (2008-2018): A Machine Learning Analysis
Tomic, Slobodan
University College Dublin, Ireland
Do Regulators Use Science in Policy Formulation? Evidence from Regulatory Impact
Statements in Australia, New Zealand and the European Union
Fritsch, Oliver
Murdoch University, Australia
67
11:00–12:30 Panel Section 8 (S8)
Panel: N08 –
Workshop: Special Issue of Public Administration and Policy (PAP)
Chair(s): Peter Fong, [email protected]
Hong Kong Public Administration Association, Hong Kong
Ning Liu, [email protected]
Department of Public Policy, The City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Carlos W. H. Lo, [email protected]
The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Venue: Room 209A, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
Briefing on the PAP Journal Published by Emerald
Fong, Peter, Editor-in-Chief
Briefing on the Special Issue on Regulatory Governance
Lo, Carlos W. H., Guest Editor
Paper Review and Publication Process of the Special Issue
Liu, Ning, Co-Guest Editor
Q & A on Paper Submission and Publication
PAP is a semi-annual refereed journal jointly sponsored by the Hong Kong Public Administration
Association and SPEED, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University. From 2018 onwards, PAP has
online publication and global dissemination on the Emerald Insight platform:
http://www.emeraldgrouppublishing.com/services/publishing/pap/editorial_team.htm
The Journal is published under a Platinum Open Access arrangement, in that all costs associated
with publishing an Open Access article in the Journal are funded by Hong Kong Public
Administration Association and SPEED, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University. This Journal
does not charge APCs or submission charges.
Please send your paper to Guest Editor, Professor Carlos W. H. Lo at [email protected], Co-
Guest Editor, Dr. Ning Liu at [email protected] or Editor-in-Chief of PAP, Professor Peter
Fong at [email protected].
Articles should be 4,000 - 7,000 words in length. Please visit the journal website above to view the
recent issues and submission guide.
68
12:30–14:00 Lunch
Venue: THE STAGE
3/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
14:00–15:30 Editors’ Forum
Venue: LT1A, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Moderator
Prof. Carlos W. H. Lo
Co-Chair, ICGRG 2019 Organising Committee
Head, Department of Government and Public Administration, The Chinese University
of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Speakers: Prof. David Levi-Faur
Editor, Regulation & Governance
Prof. Salvado Parrado
Associate Editor, Public Administration
Prof. Nancy Reichman
Former Editor-in-Chief, Law & Policy
Prof. Claire A. Dunlop
Editor, Public Policy and Administration
15:30–16:00 Closing Ceremony
Venue: LT1A, Henry Cheng International Conference Centre
1/F, Cheng Yu Tung Building
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
69
17:40–21:30 Farewell Reception (Harbour Cruise Sightseeing)
Venue: Victoria Harbour (Embarked at Hung Hom Ferry Pier)
SHUTTLE BUS
CAMPUS HUNG HOM PIER
Departure Time: 17:40
Pick-up Point: Main Entrance, Cheng Yu Tung Building,
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
EMBARKATION
Time: 18:40–18:55
Pier: Hung Hom Ferry Pier, Kowloon
DISEMBARKATION
Time: 21:25–21:40
Pier: Hung Hom Ferry Pier, Kowloon
SHUTTLE BUS
HUNG HOM PIER HOTELS CAMPUS
ROUTE A (CAMPUS EXPRESS)
Hung Hom Ferry Pier Hyatt Regency Shatin (University Train Station)
ROUTE B
Hung Hom Ferry Pier Regal Riverside Hotel Courtyard by Marriott Shatin
United College, CUHK University Train Station
70
Conference Registration
Registration is required for our conference. Registered delegates please pickup your name badge and
conference bag at the Information Desk (Cheng Yu Tung Building, CUHK). Name badges are
necessary for admission to all sections and networking events. Please be sure to wear your conference
name badge always at the venues.
All panel sections and networking events are exclusive to conference delegates. For pre-registered
accompanying persons of conference delegates who will join Gala Dinner and Farewell Reception,
please obtain your name badges at the Information Desk.
Opening Hours of Information Desk
Time Location
3 July
(Wed) 17:00–20:00
1/F Foyer,
Cheng Yu Tung Bldg, CUHK
4 July
(Thu) 08:30–18:00
1/F Foyer,
Cheng Yu Tung Bldg, CUHK
5 July
(Fri) 08:30–18:00
2/F Foyer,
Cheng Yu Tung Bldg, CUHK
6 July
(Sat) 08:30–12:30
2/F Foyer,
Cheng Yu Tung Bldg, CUHK
Wi-Fi
Free Wi-Fi service is available for the delegates on the CUHK capmus. Wi-Fi guest account day-pass
information slips are attached in the conference kit. Please select the Wifi SSID of “CUguest” and
enter the user ID and password printed in the Wi-Fi slips. Limited Wi-Fi slips are also available for
delagates at the information desk.
Photocopy and Printing Service
There is NO complimentary photocopy or printing service at the conference venue. For any
photocopy and printing service, please go to the business centre of your resided hotel and arrange
at own cost.
71
Weather
3 July
Wednesday
4 July
Thursday
5 July
Friday
6 July
Saturday
25 ºC – 28 ºC 25 ºC – 29 ºC 27 ºC – 31 ºC 28 ºC – 32 ºC
Cloudy to overcast with
showers and a few squally
thunder-storms. Showers
will be heavy at times.
Cloudy with showers and a
few squally thunder-storms.
Showers will be heavy at
times at first.
Sunny intervals and a few
showers. Isolated thunder-
storms in the morning.
Sunny intervals and a few
showers. Isolated thunder-
storms in the morning.
Enquiries and Contact
For general matters during office hours, please send an email to [email protected] or
contact us by:
Ms Sammy KWAN +852 3943-7547
Ms Jasmine YIP +852 3943-5431
Mr Hugo LEONG +852 3943-3471
Ms Tiffany YU +852 3943-6738
For emergency, please contact our staff at +852 5446-6822.
72
Campus Map
An online version is available at https://www.cuhk.edu.hk/english/campus/cuhk-campus-map.html
73
Panel P. Title
Thursday
4 July
Friday
5 July
Saturday
6 July
S1
1400-1530
S2
1600-1800
S3
0900-1030
S4
1100-1230
S5
1400-1530
S6
1600-1830
S7
0900-1030
S8
1100-1230
P01A 27 Algorithmic Regulation: What are Regulators Doing
with Data and Can They Make Better Use of It?
209A
P01B 34
P02A 28 Beyond Corruption: How to Foster Human Rights’
Protection through Anti-corruption Regulation in
Developing Economies
209B
P02B 35
P02C 41
P03 56 Campaign Style Enforcement and Regulatory
Compliance 209B
P04A 12 Current and Future Directions of Compliance
Research
214
P04B 19 Innovative Empirical Approaches to Study
Regulation and Compliance
P05 20 Emerging Trends in the Environmental Regulatory
Governance in India and China LT3
P06 29
Global Regulatory Governance of Goods and
Standard-setting Bodies: The Impact of Crisis
Events
LT2
P07 21 Transnational Regulatory Networks 215
P09 57
Innovation in the New Contexts Shaping Global
Education. Joint-venture Operations in China and
the Quality Assurance Conundrum
LT3
P10 47 International Varieties of Risk Regulation 203
P11 48 Latin American Regulatory State: Origins and
Evolution 214
P12 13 Measuring Sectors’ Regulatory Governance:
Quantitative Approaches 209A
P13 22 “New Governance” Failures in Implementing
Regulatory Policy 209A
P14 49 On the Regulation of Corporate Social
Responsibility 209B
P17 62 Reforming Regulatory Governance Systems in
Health and Long Term Care LT3
74
Panel P. Title
Thursday
4 July
Friday
5 July
Saturday
6 July
S1
1400-1530
S2
1600-1800
S3
0900-
1030
S4
1100-
1230
S5
1400-1530
S6
1600-1830
S7
0900-1030
S8
1100-1230
P18 63 RegTech: The Promise and Challenges of
Automating Regulatory Oversight 209B
P19A 58 Regulation and Compliance in Developing
Economies
214
P19B 64
P21 50 Regulation of Legal Ethics, Legal Profession and
Legal Education 215
P23A 30 Regulatory Governance Reform in China
Reconsidered: Institutional Logic, Agency
Empowerment, and Future Challenges
215
P23B 36
P23C 42
P24A 43 Regulatory Indicators and Measurement in
Globalized Governance
LT2
P24B 51
P25A 59 Reputation and Disclosure as Governance
Mechanisms
215
P25B 65
P26A 31 Resilience, Inequality and Environmental
Governance
203
P26B 37 Resilience and Environmental Governance
P27 60 Responsive Regulation in China: Challenges and
Prospects LT2
P28 23 Striking a Balance Between Regulations and
Governance for Capital Markets in Hong Kong LT1
P29 38 Taming or Enabling Private Rule-makers? Assessing
Resilience of Transnational Standardsetters LT2
P30 61 The Authoritarian Logic of Regulating through the
Judiciary 209A
P32 14 The Quest for Sustainability: Promises and
Challenges of Participatory Governance LT3
P33 52 Transnational Private Regulation Panel #1 –
Economic / Financial / Trade 209A
P34 44 Transnational Private Regulation Panel #2 – Social
/ Environmental / Safety 209A
75
Panel P. Title
Thursday
4 July
Friday
5 July
Saturday
6 July
S1
1400-1530
S2
1600-1800
S3
0900-1030
S4
1100-1230
S5
1400-1530
S6
1600-1830
S7
0900-1030
S8
1100-1230
P36 24 Transnational Regulatory Networks LT2
P37A 45 Trends and Contemporary Issues in Transnational
Environmental Governance
LT3
P37B 53
P38 15
Varieties of Regulatory Capitalism: The Role of
Institutions of Political Economy in Explaining
Variance in Regulation between States
215
P39A 39 Electricity Global South: The Diffusion and Role of
IRAs
214
P39B 46 Electricity Global South: Complexity and Multilevel
Governance
P40 16 Pro-social Regulatory Governance in Taiwan, with
a Comparative Perspective LT2
N01 32 Global and Regional Regulatory Governance 214
N02 17 Regulatory Governance on Finance 209B
N03 33 Regulatory Challenges for the Global South LT3
N04 18 Co-regulatory Governance 203
N05 40 Regulation of the Health Care Sector LT3
N06 66 Innovations and Value Creation in Regulatory
Governance LT2
N07 25 Regulatory Issues in China and India 209B
N08 67 Workshop: Special Issue of Public Administration
and Policy (PAP) 209A
Top Related