21st-Century Connections, Complete with GrabBikes and AI
鈥淚 chose 麻豆社区 for its Asian Law Center,鈥 says second-year law student Elena Hubbell. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important for U.S.-based lawyers to understand Asian law because our economies are so interwoven.鈥
She spent the summer at the international law firm Hogan Lovells in Hanoi, Vietnam, after hearing about the from Xuan-Thao Nguyen, one of her professors and the director of the Asian Law Center.
鈥淧rofessor Nguyen is why I have this internship,鈥 says Hubbell. 鈥淪he鈥檚 been a great mentor. Her motto is, 鈥楧on鈥檛 be afraid,鈥 and she is fearless.鈥
Joining the 麻豆社区 law school faculty in 2022, Nguyen brings her international expertise and reputation as a senior consultant for the World Bank and International Finance Corporation. She also brings her scholarship, teaching and influence in financing, tax, bankruptcy, data protection and intellectual property.
鈥淪ince the 1990s, Professor Nguyen has mentored a whole generation of academics,鈥 says 麻豆社区 School of Law Professor Elizabeth Porter, who, along with Nguyen and Associate Teaching Professor Mireille Butler, taught accelerated American law seminars at Hanoi Law University this summer.
Professor Butler wondered what it would be like to teach a style of analysis and writing unfamiliar to students. 鈥淚 was impressed with their enthusiasm and the high quality of their work,鈥 she says. The experience also made her feel better equipped back home where she teaches an increasing number of international students who will be practicing in an ever-more connected world.
Nguyen describes how these kinds of experiences fit into her 21st-century vision for the Asian Law Center. 鈥淔ifty years ago, we were in a very different place politically and socially,鈥 she says. 鈥淐hina is the world鈥檚 second largest economic power while places like Vietnam and Cambodia have emerging economies that are growing rapidly. How can we learn from them and they from us as we create space for and train a new generation of leaders?鈥
Personal Growth and Shared Experiences
Exchanges like this open pathways for critiques and dialogues that Asian law scholars, American faculty, and students might not otherwise have. Beyond the global impact, there鈥檚 also personal joy and growth. Porter describes seeing Hubbell on her first day, arriving at school on a 鈥淕rabBike鈥 (like taking a cab but on the back of a motorcycle) and thinking she was in the right place. 鈥淭he driving in Vietnam is next level,鈥 says Porter.
鈥淎t first, I thought it was dangerous, but now I love it,鈥 says Hubbell. She also loves how kind people have been, like her co-workers helping her find an apartment, a stranger on the street bidding her 鈥渨elcome鈥 or when she stood up in the office and let everyone know she needed a suit coat for an interview. Everyone jumped to her aid, with even the head of council offering his jacket. Afterward, they all wanted to know how it went.
In the fall, the Asian Law Center will host with speakers from India to Japan to Vietnam to the U.S. The Asian Law Center will then host the Asian IP Scholars Roundtable in October 2023. Porter plans to host a group for dinner. 鈥淚t鈥檚 high pressure,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he food in Vietnam is extraordinary 鈥 I have to do my part.鈥
The Potential for Global Impact
Coming together is what it鈥檚 all about. 鈥淥ur economies are interdependent whether we like it or not,鈥 says Nguyen. 鈥淲hen we view it through the human-legal experience, we can see that what is going on in India is the same as Japan as Vietnam, and there are common lessons we can learn from each other.鈥
With Nguyen鈥檚 connections, there are many opportunities for doing just that. 鈥淗anoi Law University has 14,000 students 鈥 law schools in the U.S. are tiny by comparison,鈥 says Nguyen. 鈥淭hese are our next group of emerging scholars.鈥
鈥淴uan-Thao has reinvigorated our intellectual and academic ties, not just with Vietnam but also many Asian partners,鈥 says Porter, who jumped at the opportunity to return to Vietnam after teaching a course on women in the law a year ago. This year she led a two-week intensive course on foundational concepts of torts and product liability. 鈥淚 taught them as if I were teaching a course in the U.S., but condensed,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he approach was question and answer, which is unusual in Vietnam, and the students enjoyed a slightly different way of learning, all in English, with no interpreter. I also learned a lot from them.鈥澛
While there, Porter also lectured on Zoom to a large audience about Vietnam鈥檚 transition to an adversarial civil legal system. 鈥淭his allowed legal scholars in Vietnam to hear about the complexities we face in our adversarial system,鈥 she says. Back home, she鈥檚 co-authoring an article on the same topic for a U.S. audience.
Similarly, Nguyen gave Zoom and hybrid presentations on 鈥淓merging Legal Issues Related to Artificial Intelligence鈥 in Vietnam to audiences of more than 500 people. 鈥淭he audiences asked the same questions as a U.S. audience,鈥 Nguyen says. 鈥淲ith social media, news spreading so fast, and experiences bringing us closer, there鈥檚 no such thing as borders. AI is the perfect example of our shared human experiences as we figure things out.鈥