Sunday, February 17, 2008

Raymond Wacks

RAYMOND WACKS BA, LLB, LLM, LLD, MLitt, PhD is Emeritus Professor of Law and Legal Theory at the University of Hong Kong where he was head of the department of law from 1986 to 1993. Educated at the University of the Witwatersrand, the London School of Economics, and University College, Oxford, his major areas of interest are legal theory, and human rights, in particular the protection of privacy (the subject of his PhD thesis) on which he is a leading international authority. In 1997 a higher doctorate in law (LLD) was conferred on him by the University of London for his publications on privacy and legal theory.

In addition to publishing articles and books on these subjects, he has edited a number of collections of essays on various aspects of Hong Kong law, including Civil Liberties in Hong Kong, The Future of the Law in Hong Kong' The Law in Hong Kong 1969-1989, and Human Rights in Hong Kong (all published by Oxford University Press), Hong Kong, China, and 1997: Essays in Legal Theory, and The New Legal Order in Hong Kong published by Hong Kong University Press. A collection of his writings, Law, Morality, and the Private Domain was published by Hong Kong University Press in 2000.

Professor Wacks’ major works in the field of privacy are The Protection of Privacy (the first book on the subject in England) published in 1980 by Sweet & Maxwell, Personal Information: Privacy and the Law, published in 1989 by Clarendon Press, Oxford, and Privacy, a two-volume collection of essays published in 1993 by Dartmouth, London and New York University Press, Privacy and Press Freedom published by Blackstone Press, London in 1995. He is co-author of Hong Kong Data Privacy Law: Territorial Regulation in a Borderless World published by Sweet & Maxwell. Professor Wacks is a former chairman of the committee of the Law Reform Commission of Hong Kong currently examining this subject, and was a member of the statutory Personal Data (Privacy) Advisory Committee.

His well-known book, Jurisprudence (now in its fifth edition) is used by students throughout the common law world. A new book, Understanding Jurisprudence: An Introduction to Legal Theory'was published by Oxford University Press in January 2005. A second edition is due in 2009. In 2006, Oxford University Press published his Philosophy of Law: A Very Short Introduction (currently being translated into a number of languages including Greek, Chinese, Japanese, and Giorgian), and in March 2008 his second book in this series, Law: A Very Short Introduction'will appear.

Professor Wacks has also written numerous articles on aspects of Hong Kong's future legal system, including questions raised by the Basic Law, especially the judicial function and the problems of legal continuity after 1997. He was for several years editor of the Hong Kong Law Journal and presented the RTHK television and radio programme, The Week in Politics.