Generated by GPT-5-mini| Peking University School of Transnational Law | |
|---|---|
| Name | Peking University School of Transnational Law |
| Native name | 北京大学法学院(跨国法学院) |
| Established | 2008 |
| Type | Law school |
| Parent | Peking University |
| City | Shenzhen |
| Country | China |
Peking University School of Transnational Law is a law school located in Shenzhen affiliated with Peking University that offers transnational legal education in English and Chinese. The school integrates comparative common law and civil law perspectives drawing on models from Harvard Law School, Yale Law School, Columbia Law School, University of Oxford, and University of Cambridge. It operates within the administrative frameworks of Peking University while engaging with regional institutions such as the Shenzhen Municipal Government, Guangdong Province agencies, and international partners like New York University School of Law and University of California, Berkeley School of Law.
The school was founded in 2008 during the expansion of Peking University into southern China, responding to policy initiatives from the Ministry of Education (China), the Shenzhen Special Economic Zone, and economic reforms linked to the Belt and Road Initiative. Early collaborations included faculty exchanges with Stanford Law School, curriculum consultations referencing Civil Code of the People's Republic of China, and visiting professorships from scholars associated with the European Court of Human Rights and the International Court of Justice. Milestones include establishment of joint degree frameworks inspired by programs at National University of Singapore Faculty of Law and recognition in regional legal education forums such as the Asian Law Schools Association.
The school offers a range of programs including a bilingual Juris Master modeled on the Juris Doctor pathway, LLM degrees with tracks in Transnational Law, Intellectual Property, and Corporate Law, and research degrees comparable to the Doctor of Juridical Science. Joint and exchange programs have been developed with Georgetown University Law Center, University of Michigan Law School, Tsinghua University School of Law, and the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. Specialized certificates draw on comparative study of instruments like the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods and treaties administered by the World Intellectual Property Organization.
The curriculum blends case-method instruction modeled on Harvard Law School casebooks, statutory analysis informed by the Civil Procedure Law of the People's Republic of China, and experiential learning through clinics patterned after University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School clinical programs. Courses cover transnational litigation, comparative corporate governance referencing the Companies Ordinance (Hong Kong), international arbitration following rules of the International Chamber of Commerce, and cross-border finance linked to practices at the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. Pedagogical innovations include moot court competitions akin to the Philip C. Jessup International Law Moot Court Competition and internships with institutions such as the Supreme People's Court of the People's Republic of China and the International Criminal Court.
Faculty comprise scholars and practitioners drawn from institutions including Peking University School of Law, Fudan University Law School, University of California, Los Angeles School of Law, King's College London, and former judges from the Supreme People's Court of the People's Republic of China. Research centers focus on areas overlapping with the World Trade Organization jurisprudence, ASEAN regional integration, and comparative studies of the American Bar Association standards. Faculty publications appear in journals such as the China Law Review, Journal of International Economic Law, and the American Journal of Comparative Law; collaborative projects engage with agencies like the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law and the Asian Development Bank.
Admissions attract applicants from provinces including Beijing, Shanghai, Guangdong, and international candidates from jurisdictions such as the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, and Singapore. Selection criteria weigh academic records referencing degrees from universities such as Tsinghua University, Fudan University, Renmin University of China, and foreign credentials like the Bachelor of Laws (LLB), Juris Doctor (JD), or foreign LLMs. The student body participates in exchange terms with partner schools including University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law, National Taiwan University College of Law, and University of Toronto Faculty of Law.
Located on the Shenzhen campus of Peking University, facilities include lecture halls equipped for bilingual instruction, a law library with collections comparable to holdings at the Supreme Court of the United States library standards, and moot courtrooms modeled after those at the International Court of Justice. Clinical spaces support pro bono work coordinated with local bodies such as the Shenzhen Intermediate People's Court and international placements with firms like Baker McKenzie, Clifford Chance, and King & Wood Mallesons. The campus environment interfaces with the Shenzhen Stock Exchange, research parks like the Shenzhen High-Tech Industrial Park, and cultural sites such as Splendid China Folk Village.
Graduates have entered careers at multinational law firms, in-house corporate counsel roles at companies like Huawei, Tencent, and Alibaba Group, and public service positions in institutions such as the Ministry of Commerce (China) and the People's Procuratorate. Alumni have pursued further academia at institutions like Columbia Law School and Oxford University, participated in international arbitration panels under the Stockholm Chamber of Commerce, and held roles in non-governmental organizations including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch. Professional trajectories often include placements at global firms such as Allen & Overy and Linklaters as well as judicial clerkships at provincial high courts.