From August 16th, 2019 to September 7th, 2019, Associate Professor Dai Qingkang was invited by the University of Florida Levin College of Law as the school's Jack and Tiffany Billy International Law. Jack and Tifi Bierley International Legal Visiting Professor at the University of Florida visited the law school to teach international business arbitration courses for the Juris Doctor in the second and third year of law school - International Commercial Arbitration In China with a Comparison between PRC Law and UNCITRAL Model Law (China International Commercial Arbitration – from the perspective of the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law Arbitration Model Law and Chinese Law).
The course focuses on the relevant laws and practices of Chinese arbitration, judicial review and judicial assistance practice, and through comparative study of comparative law, deepens students' understanding of arbitration theory and improves students' practical skills related to arbitration. At the same time, through the course content, students can not only deepen their understanding of the nature of arbitration and personality characteristics compared with other dispute resolution mechanisms, understand China's major arbitration legislation and related judicial interpretations and important judicial precedents, and understand Chinese arbitration. Relevant laws and regulations and judicial interpretations are mainly different from the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law Arbitration Model Law. They understand the practice of Chinese arbitration and the status of judicial review and judicial assistance, judicial relief, and understand the conflicts of law and the application of law in international commercial arbitration. It can provide basic legal advice related to Chinese arbitration for enterprises that need to sign contracts with Chinese enterprises, such as the formulation of effective arbitration clauses in the context of Chinese law, the revocation of arbitral awards, and the recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral awards in China. The students showed a strong interest in the course, actively participated in the class discussion of the course, and gave high praise to the teaching of the course.
Through the teaching of the above courses, Associate Professor Dai Qingkang deeply understood the course teaching requirements, teaching management system and evaluation system for students of the University of Florida Levine Law School, and made in-depth exchanges with relevant teaching management personnel and professors for their future development. The course teaching reform has accumulated experience.
In addition to the above-mentioned courses, Associate Professor Dai Qingkang also conducted in-depth exchanges and shared practical experiences in the teaching and research of relevant courses with the law school's arbitration law, private international law, international commercial law, civil procedure law, medical and health law. He also met with Laura Rosenbury, Dean of the University of Florida's Levine Law School, and Jason Nancy, Associate Dean of Teaching, to discuss possible areas and ways to strengthen cooperation between the two houses.