Hsu Yu-hsiu | |
---|---|
Member of theCouncil of Grand Justices | |
In office 3 October 2003 – 30 September 2011 | |
Nominated by | Chen Shui-bian |
Personal details | |
Born | 1956 (age 68–69) |
Education | National Chengchi University (LLB,LLM) University of Freiburg (PhD) |
Hsu Yu-hsiu (Chinese:許玉秀;pinyin:Xǔ Yùxiù; born 1956) is a Taiwanese judge who served on theCouncil of Grand Justices from 2003 to 2011.
Hsu completed her bachelor's and master's degrees, both in law, atNational Chengchi University. She then earned her doctorate in law in Germany at theUniversity of Freiburg. Upon her return to Taiwan, Hsu began teaching law atTunghai University, then joined the faculty of National Chengchi University.[1] In 2003, PresidentChen Shui-bian nominated Hsu to theCouncil of Grand Justices.[2] She was confirmed by theLegislative Yuan and took office on 3 October 2003.[3] Hsu authored Constitutional Interpretation No. 666, issued by the court on 6 November 2009 regarding the penalization of prosecution, which opined in part that selling sexual services was a matter of free choice of profession, which is a right protected by theConstitution.[4] Hsu left the position at the end of her eight-year term on 30 September 2011, as did three other justices:Hsu Pi-hu [zh],Hsu Tzong-li, andLin Tzu-yu.[5][6] They were replaced byChen Be-yue,Huang Hsi-chun,Lo Chang-fa, andTang Teh-chung.[7][8]
After leaving the Judicial Yuan, Hsu taught law atNational Taiwan University.[9] Concurrently, Hsu began developing the Constitutional Court Stimulation, teaching its first courses at the Taipei Bar Association in 2013. The Constitutional Court Stimulation was formalized as a class atNational Chiao Tung University in 2014. In its first iteration, the Constitutional Court Stimulation arguedsame-sex marriage in Taiwan.[10] By its third meeting in 2016, the Constitutional Court Stimulation had attracted the participation of legal scholars from Australia, Chile, Colombia, Kazakhstan, and South Africa, as it focused on cases from Taiwan'sWhite Terror era.[11] In June 2016, Hsu presented theTang Prize in rule of law toLouise Arbour.[12] Later that year, theAwakening Foundation proposed that Hsu be renominated to the Judicial Yuan.[13] That November, Hsu was appointed to the Preparatory Committee for National Conference on Judicial Reform.[14][15][16] She was also a member of its successor, a national affairs conference on judicial reform that began operations in February 2017.[17] Within the conference, she served as subcommittee leader.[18] In 2017, Hsu opined that court rulings and related documents should be written in a more understandable manner.[19] She later argued against an effort to recall legislatorHuang Kuo-chang.[20] In July 2019, Hsu hosted the Asian Human Rights Court Simulation to urge the formation of a regional human rights court.[21] The Asian Human Rights Court Simulation has reconvened to hear cases relating to human rights in Taiwan, such as that ofChiou Ho-shun.[22]