Dr Zhong Zhang
School of East Asian Studies
Lecturer in Chinese Studies
Full contact details
School of East Asian Studies
Jessop West
1 Upper Hanover Street
91̽»¨
S3 7RA
- Profile
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Dr. Zhang joined the School of East Asian Studies in September 2007, first as a Post-Doctoral Fellow and then an Academic Research Fellow at the White Rose East Asia Centre, after completing his PhD in law at the University of Manchester. Dr. Zhang Studied law in China and passed the national bar examination. After practicing law in a city government in China for 7 years, he came to the UK in 2002 to study a LLM before undertaking his PhD research.
- Research interests
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Dr. Zhang’s research focuses on Chinese corporate governance from a legal perspective. Related to this, his research interests lie in two broader areas: Chinese (business) law and Chinese business and management. He is also interested in the subjects of law and development, and law and finance.
- Publications
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Books
- The Derivative Action and Good Corporate Governance in China: Economic Theories and Legal Rules. Lambert Academic Publishing.
Edited books
Journal articles
- . Sustainability, 16(15).
- . Asian Journal of Law and Society, 5(2), 333-357.
- Law and Finance: The Case of Stock Market Development in China. Boston College International and Comparative Law Review, 39(2), 282-360.
- Law and Finance: The Case of Stock Market Development in China.
- The Shareholder Derivative Action and Good Corporate Governance in China: Why the Excitement is Actually for Nothing. Pacific Basin Law Journal, 28(2).
- Making Shareholder Derivative Actions Happen in China: How Should Lawsuits Be Funded?. Hong Kong Law Journal, 38(2), 523.
- Legal Deterrence: The Foundation of Corporate Governance Evidence from China. Corporate Governance: An International Review, 15(5), 741-767.
- Improving Corporate Governance in State-Owned Corporations in China: Which Way Forward. Journal of Corporate Law Studies.
- . Asian Journal of Comparative Law, 1-24.
Preprints
- Research group
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SEAS Research Cluster
Movement(s), Economy and Development in East Asia
Associated research groups, collaborators and projects
- Associate Fellow
- Teaching interests
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Teaching Philosophy
I believe learning is most effective when students are highly motivated and interested in a subject. Students in higher education should be in the driving seat and take ownership of their own learning. Teachers are a facilitator in the process of student learning. Like a tour guide, one important job of teachers is to show and explain the beauty of a teaching topic. To achieve this, teachers have responsibility to ask stimulating questions, challenge conventional wisdom and expose theories. Teachers shall also make a teaching topic relevant to students’ personal experience and relate it to events and debates in the real world.
I believe knowledge acquisition is not the whole of higher education learning and development of skills is imperative. Critical thinking, logical reasoning and clear articulating are important skills; being innovative and able to contrive solutions are invaluable. Research skill is not just reserved for academics; being able to identify core questions and find enough information efficiently to reach an answer are critical to success in all professions. Essay and thesis writing is beneficial for developing these skills and a good essay or thesis is an embodiment of these skills. Lastly, I believe higher education is a process of development for students as a person, a person that is sociable, mature in character, intellectually sophisticated and with established values but open-minded.
- Teaching activities
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EAS2021 Chinese Business and Management
EAS680 State and Economy in Contemporary China
EAS6447 Contemporary Chinese Business and Management
Links