Register Court Presiding Judge of the Supreme People's Court Zhang Weibing Was Invited to Our University for Giving Lectures
2016-11-23
On the evening of September 26, register court presiding judge of the Supreme People's Court Zhang Weibing was invited by our university to give a theme lecture about "function and construction of monitoring program for criminal justice" at the F101 moot court of Lezhi Building, and this lecture was presided over by professor Hu Yanxiang of School of Law and Public Management with over 200 students listening to it..
Firstly, doctor Zhang Weibing pointed out that the monitoring program for criminal justice had functions of finding out misjudged case, correcting misjudged case and persuasion. And then he expounded the current situation of criminal justice monitoring in China, deeply revealed the importance of accurate positioning of criminal tribunal and improving adjudicatory personnel's business-handling ability by combining practical cases and detailedly presented modesty or attached principle, accusation and argument balance principle and principle of forbidding adverse alteration based on taking how to build the mechanism of finding out and correcting misjudged case.
Doctor Zhang Weibing emphasized that it's necessary to pay attention to the integration of manpower resource and matching of personnel duty in the process of mechanism construction of finding out and correcting misjudged case; resolving criminal justice and appeal cases based on classification and confirming the distribution of function and power; perfecting related mechanism. Meanwhile, he appealed that related contents of other department laws should be flexibly used for judgment of criminal case with observing problem based on different visual angles.
In the end, teachers and students more deeply communicated with doctor Zhang Weibing. Professor Liu Qixiang of School of Law and Public Management made a conclusion for the lecture and encouraged students to lay emphasis on interdisciplinary learning and participate in social practice a lot. (Liu Min)