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Chang Wen-chen

Taiwanese legal scholar From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chang Wen-chen
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Chang Wen-chen (Chinese: 張文貞; born 31 August 1970) is a Taiwanese legal scholar who is a distinguished professor at National Taiwan University.[1] She has also served as a law professor at National Chiao Tung University, where she was dean of its law faculty.

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Education

Chang graduated from National Taiwan University with a Bachelor of Laws (LL.B.) and then a Master of Laws (LL.M.) degree.[2] She then earned a second Master of Laws and then a Doctor of Juridical Science (J.S.D.) in 2001 from Yale Law School, where her doctoral supervisor was law professor Bruce Ackerman.[1] Her doctoral dissertation was titled, "Transition to Democracy, Constitutionalism and Judicial Activism: Taiwan in Comparative Constitutional Perspective."

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Academic career

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Perspective

As a legal academic, she has commented on China's Anti-Secession Law,[3] the Legislative Yuan's inaction causing vacancies in the presidency and vice presidency of the Control Yuan between 2005 and 2008,[4] limitations on the Control Yuan's powers,[5] and supported amendments to laws regarding protests and demonstrations.[6] Chen was one of 36 co-signers of a statement opining that Ma Ying-jeou had overstepped his presidential authority during the September 2013 power struggle.[7]

Chang is a founding member of the Asian Human Rights Court Simulation, established in 2018,[8] and in 2019, was named its vice president.[9] In 2022 and 2024, Chang served on the selection committee for the Tang Prize in Rule of Law.[10] She has also chaired the Restoration of Victim's Rights Infringed by Illegal Acts of the State During the Period of Authoritarian Rule Foundation.[11]

In 2024, Chang testified as an expert witness to the Constitutional Court in cases that led to protests.[12] In August of that year, William Lai nominated Chang to serve as president of the Judicial Yuan.[13][14] However, legislative confirmation hearings for seven Judicial Yuan positions, including replacements for president Hsu Tzong-li and vice president Tsai Jeong-duen were delayed, necessitating the appointment of Shieh Ming-yuan as acting president of the Judicial Yuan.[15] Hearings eventually began on 2 December, but left the Judicial Yuan with the lowest number of justices since the introduction of judicial interpretation in 1947.[16] During legislative questioning on 10 December, Chang observed that the Judicial Yuan had imposed stricter conditions on capital punishment earlier that year, but maintained that the death penalty was constitutional.[17] The Legislative Yuan voted to reject Chang's nomination, and that of six others to the Judicial Yuan, on 24 December 2024.[18] Days before deciding on Lai's nominees, legislators had voted to require the Judicial Yuan have ten active judges before hearing a case.[19]

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References

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