Ting Xu

Professor of Law at University of Essex

Biography

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Ting Xu joined the School of Law at the University of Essex in July 2020. She holds an LLB from Sun Yat-sen University and an LLM (with Distinction) and PhD from the London School of Economics. She was a Senior Lecturer at the School of Law, University of Sheffield (2015-2020), a Lecturer at the School of Law, Queen’s University, Belfast (2012–2015) and a Research Fellow at the London School of Economics (2009–2012) on an interdisciplinary and collaborative European Research Council funded project. She is the author and editor of three books: The Revival of Private Property and Its Limits in Post-Mao China (Wildy, Simmonds and Hill Publishing, 2014), Property and Human Rights in a Global Context (edited with Jean Allain, Hart Publishing, 2015) and Legal Strategies for the Development and Protection of Communal Property, Proceedings of the British Academy, vol. 216 (edited with Alison Clarke, Oxford University Press, 2018).

In 2013, Ting was awarded a British Academy Conference Grant (with Patrick O’Brien, approximately £20,000) for organising an international conference on knowledge formation and the history of books. In 2015 she completed a project on declining diversity and the global economy funded by the European Commission, Joint Research Centre (awarded in 2014, approximately € 15,000). In 2017 She completed a project 'Diversifying Ownership of Land?: Communal Property in the UK and China' funded by the British Academy International Mobility and Partnership Scheme 2014-17 (£29,971). She has established a 'communal property research network' including 41 scholars from 13 countries . In 2017 she also completed a project on the Land Rights Reform in Rural China funded by China's National Social Science Foundation (2015-2017, RMB 200,000) (as Co Investigator; PI, Professor Fengzhang Li, School of Law, Shanghai University). She was a British Academy Mid-Career Fellow (2019-2020) working on a project on 'Harold Laski and His Chinese Disciples: Using Biographical Methods to Study the Evolution of Rights in Republican China (1911-1949)' (£128,117).

Ting has been appointed as a visiting professor at the School of Law, Jilin University (2015-2020) and at the Graduate School, University of International Business and Economics in China (2014-).

Ting has provided consultancy to the Scottish Land Commission, Global Witness, Friends of the Earth Europe, and the European Commission.

Ting's research is interdisciplinary, focusing on socio-legal aspects of comparative property law. It engages the study of comparative property law with other areas of research including human rights, international law, sociology, economic history and theory, and political economy. Her research interests are situated in the fields of property law; comparative property law; Chinese law; law, governance and development; property and human rights; socio-legal studies; comparative law; political economy; and the travel of legal and political ideas across different contexts. Ting would welcome research proposals in these areas.

Qualifications

  • PhD London School of Economics, (2009)
  • LLM London School of Economics, (2005)
  • LLB Sun Yat-sen University, (2004)

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