Wu Jingxiong, Between Natural Law and Geopolitics: The Insights and Dilemmas of a Catholic Chinese Law Professor in Cold War America
February 5, 2026
12:20 pm - 1:20 pm
WCC 3018
East Asian Legal Studies Talk:
Jedidiah Kroncke
Associate Professor of Law, The University of Hong Kong
The life of Chinese legal scholar Wu Jingxiong has long attracted attention for his diverse intellectual interests and high profile in Chinese judicial politics and constitutional reform during the 1930s and 1940s. Yet, Wu’s life after the end of the Chinese Civil War in 1949 has received less attention. During this period, Wu spent fifteen years in the United States, primarily teaching law at Seton Hall University. While the least studied time of his life, this era was a critical juncture in his ongoing quest to reconcile his Confucian sympathies with his Catholic faith. Wu’s ultimate return to Taiwan was impacted by the complications of these debates crosscut by Cold War geopolitical tensions. Wu’s life is revealing not only as an example of the challenges that diasporic Chinese intellectuals faced during this era, but also of how his relatively unique intellectual commitments shed light on global tensions in Catholicism and American Cold War geopolitics. Today, amidst rising contemporary Sino-American frictions and renewed debates over the role of Catholic legal thinking in US politics, Wu’s complex American experience as a transnational intellectual is newly provocative and probative…(read more).
Dr. Jedidiah Kroncke is an associate professor of law at the University of Hong Kong, where he teaches trust law and the law of cooperative enterprises. His research centers on international legal history and the comparative study of alternative labor and property institutions.
A light lunch will be provided. Please register here.
*Location note: In past years, EALS talks were generally in Morgan Courtroom (Austin 308), but due to the construction project currently underway next to Austin Hall, we will hold most EALS talks in Wasserstein Hall during the 2025-2026 academic year.