Research Highlights

Featured Highlight

2021_LinLin_VentureCapitalLawInChina
Venture Capital Law in China

(Part of International Corporate Law and Financial Market Regulation )

By Associate Professor Lin Lin, NUS Law

China's venture capital market is not just the world's largest and fastest developing market, it also has the unique distinction of being engineered through heavy governmental intervention. This book breaks new ground by examining and testing established legal theories regarding the law of venture capital through the lens of the Chinese venture capital market. Using a hand-collected dataset of venture capital agreements, interviews with practitioners, and Chinese court judgements, it provides a comprehensive and insightful analysis of the Chinese venture capital market from the legal perspective. Topics covered include the roles of law and governmental intervention in developing the market, the state of investor protection, unique contractual developments and exits of venture capital investments. By providing an in-depth comparative analysis against the American venture capital market, it provides critical context and makes the Chinese venture market accessible. It is an invaluable resource for venture capital scholars, policymakers and practitioners.

Further details about the book, published by CUP, are available here.

2021_Simester_FundamentalCL
Fundamentals of Criminal Law: Responsibility, Culpability, and Wrongdoing

By Professor A.P. Simester, NUS Law

Written by a noted expert in criminal law, the book explores the philosophical underpinnings of the law's major doctrines concerning actus reus, mens rea, and defences, showing that they are not always driven by culpability. They are grounded also in principles of moral responsibility, ascriptive responsibility, and wrongdoing. As such, they engage wider debates about wrongdoing, and about the boundaries between liability and freedom.

This multi-textured analysis allows the book to take more nuanced positions about many important controversies in criminal law. It argues, for example, that liability for omissions and for negligence-and even some strict liability elements-can sometimes be legitimate yet, at the same time, should be relatively rare. It also explains why principles of causation can differ in the criminal law from other contexts; what is wrong with the 'voluntary act' requirement; and why luck can affect the wrongs we commit without changing our degree of blameworthiness for committing them. The book concludes with an account of the major types of defences, and of how they interact with an agent's wrong and her underlying motivations.

This volume presents a coherent and rich vision of the criminal law that, by its sheer breadth, makes a distinctive contribution to the literature, of interest to lawyers and philosophers alike.

Further details about the book, published by OUP, are available here.

2021 SimonC_WeTheRobots
We, the Robots? Regulating Artificial Intelligence and the Limits of the Law

by Professor Simon Chesterman, NUS Law

Should we regulate artificial intelligence? Can we? From self-driving cars and high-speed trading to algorithmic decision-making, the way we live, work, and play is increasingly dependent on AI systems that operate with diminishing human intervention. These fast, autonomous, and opaque machines offer great benefits – and pose significant risks. This book examines how our laws are dealing with AI, as well as what additional rules and institutions are needed – including the role that AI might play in regulating itself. Drawing on diverse technologies and examples from around the world, the book offers lessons on how to manage risk, draw red lines, and preserve the legitimacy of public authority. Though the prospect of AI pushing beyond the limits of the law may seem remote, these measures are useful now – and will be essential if it ever does.

Further details about the book, published by CUP, are available here.

Faculty Publications

For the month of July

Books & Edited Books

Teo Keang Sood and Yip Man (eds), Singapore Academy of Law Annual Review of Singapore Cases 2022 (23rd edn, Academy Publishing 2023)

Sam Sim and Justin Tan, Singapore Master Tax Guide 2023-2024, 42nd Edition (Wolters Kluwer 2023)

Books Chapters

Lynette J Chua, 'Rights Mobilization: A View from Southeast Asia' in Steven A. Boutcher, Corey S. Shdaimah and Michael W. Yarbrough (eds), Research Handbook on Law, Movements and Social Change (Edward Elgar 2023) 20

Journal Articles

Christian Hofmann, 'Which markets need Central Bank Digital Currency?' (2023) 18 (3) Capital Markets Law Journal 281

Tan Zhong Xing, 'The Enigma of Interpersonal Justice in Private Law Theory' (2023) 43 (4) Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 699

Tan Zhong Xing, 'Re-thinking Relational Architecture: Interpersonal Justice Beyond Private Law' (2023) 73 (3) University of Toronto Law Journal 293


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