Preston Jordan Lim, JD

Assistant Professor, Law Villanova University

  • Villanova PA

Professor Lim focuses on contemporary challenges to the international legal system, with an emphasis on Chinese foreign policy.

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3 min

Upcoming Meeting Between Joe Biden and Xi Jinping Shows Willingness to Engage, but Probably Nothing More

President Joe Biden is set to meet Chinese president Xi Jinping during this week’s APEC Summit in California, marking the first in-person communication between the two leaders since they spoke in Bali almost exactly a year ago. While this meeting is not expected to produce notable changes to the United States’ policy toward China, or new initiatives between the countries, the hope is that it will at least keep the doors cracked on such conversations moving forward. “The purpose of this summit—for both the U.S. and China—is to show that each country is willing to talk to the other,” said Preston Jordan Lim, an assistant professor of international law at Villanova University and expert in Chinese foreign policy. “The fact that both leaders are willing to meet face to face and restart their conversation could well lead to more regularized bilateral communication and, down the road, to some small, bite-sized agreements.” However, that does not mean the upcoming meeting – and the careful language from both countries during the leadup – are just for show. Lim says that it is very likely the two heads of state will discuss “topics of real concern,” noting that President Biden indicated following their talk in November 2022 that they had “been very blunt with one another.” There is even more at stake now. Tensions have been soaring over the last 12 months between the U.S. and China, figuratively and literally. The incident with the Chinese balloon flying over the U.S, along with aggressive maneuvers from Chinese fighter jets near American military planes have earned harsh condemnation from U.S. officials. Separately, China believes the U.S. is trying to “economically cripple” them through a “mix of measures,” according to Lim. Those are not the only factors fueling tensions. “The U.S. continues to express significant concerns about aggressive Chinese actions in the South China Sea,” Lim said. “U.S. officials also continue to criticize China’s ongoing genocide of the Uyghur people. “On top of that, the geopolitical situation is even more tempestuous than it was in November 2022. In addition to the Russia-Ukraine war, both countries are now dealing with the effects of the Israel-Hamas War.” These are all topics Lim thinks could be discussed this week, in a meeting he says President Xi has more incentive to go through with than President Biden. “The Chinese economy entered a prolonged economic slowdown in April and there is mounting domestic dissatisfaction with how the Party-state has handled the economy,” Lim explained. “Xi has, on several recent occasions, indicated that the two countries should cooperate more closely. After Governor of California Gavin Newsom’s recent meeting with Xi, the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs emphasized that China’s U.S. policy ‘remains one of mutual respect, peaceful coexistence and win-win cooperation.’ “Clearly, Xi and the Chinese government want to give off the impression that they are willing to have cooperative conversations with the U.S. government, even if they are unlikely to respond in good faith to U.S. concerns.” That unlikeliness to respond in good faith underscores the true nature of the meeting between the two powers, despite the largely positive messaging from both parties in advance. Does simply meeting at the table mean they will break bread? “U.S.-China relations are at a nadir right now and may well decline further, even if Xi and Biden meet,” Lim said. “There are serious roadblocks standing in the way of more harmonious bilateral relations, even though cooperation between the two countries has never been so necessary. It remains to be seen whether the U.S. and China will be able to work together on areas of mutual concern given the many stressors in the relationship.”

Preston Jordan Lim, JD

Media

Areas of Expertise

Uyghur Forced Labor
Chinese Foreign Policy
Canadian Foreign Policy
China's Relationship with International Law
Canada's Relationship with International Law
Canadian Domestic Politics
Prosecution of War Crimes

Biography

Professor Lim is currently an Assistant Professor of International Law at Villanova University's Charles Widger School of Law. His primary area of study is Chinese foreign policy, which includes China’s relationship with international law and entities, specific countries’ relationship with China and issues related to Taiwan, Hong Kong and the Uyghur population in Xianjing. A native Canadian, Preston is also well-versed in Canadian domestic politics and foreign policy, both in study and practice. He holds an A.B. (summa cum laude) from Princeton University, a Master of Global Affairs from Tsinghua University--where he studied as a Schwarzman Scholar--and a J.D. from Yale Law School. He has served as a Policy Advisor to the Shadow Minister of Foreign Affairs in Canada's Parliament and as a Judicial Law Clerk at the Court of Appeal for Ontario and at the Supreme Court of Canada.

Affiliations

  • National Institute of Military Justice : International Fellow
  • UBC Centre for Constitutional Law and Legal Studies : Centre Associate

Select Media Appearances

Condemnation for China: The CBC's Andrew Nichols talks with Preston Lim of Villanova University

CBC  tv

2025-03-19

Global Affairs Canada confirmed news that an unspecified number of Canadian citizens (later determined to be four) had been executed in China for drug crimes.

Villanova University's Preston Lim, a scholar of both Chinese and Canadian foreign policy, says "There are significant concerns here when it comes to the transparency and the fundamental justice of the Chinese legal system and these are worries that aren't going away any time soon."

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How is China Promoting Peace?

National Committee on US-China Relations  online

2024-05-11

Preston Lim overviews China’s role as a peace broker, while discussing China’s position on the Russia-Ukraine and Israel-Hamas wars.

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­How Canada can Better Combat Uyghur Forced Labour

The Globe and Mail  online

2024-04-18

How can Canada better combat Uyghur forced labour? It must embrace a dual-track strategy that combines increased pressure on China at international institutions with the deployment of two domestic legal tools in the service of international law: a Xinjiang-specific forced labour import ban, and mandatory due-diligence legislation.

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Select Academic Articles

The Somalia Affair and the Transformation of Canadian Military Justice

UBC Law Review

2023

Despite the richness of the extant literature, few scholars have paid the requisite attention to the Somalia Affairs impact on Canadas military justice system. Such a gap is a significant one, since almost all of the investigations and commissions established by the government agreed that the Somalia Affair highlighted serious deficiencies in the military justice system and consequently called for revolutionary reform. The government and CF responded effectively to those calls for reform. Ultimately, the Somalia Affair and the reforms it sparked inaugurated the modern era of Canadian military justice. Many aspects of the modern military justice system find their origin in the extraordinary period of intellectual ferment and reform that commenced in 1995 and continued into the current millennium.

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The COVID-19 Pandemic and International Law

Cornell International Law Journal

2022

How does the COVID-19 pandemic affect States’ obligations under international law? This is a question of not just academic interest but real importance for people’s lives. After all, whether States abide by international law—and whether international law is fit for purpose—is vitally important for everyone from refugees exposed to the virus in unsanitary detention centers to national leaders fighting disinformation campaigns and safeguarding vaccine supply chains. International law has been central to the world’s response to the pandemic from the start—even if the participants did not always realize it.

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Applying International Law Solutions to the Xinjiang Crisis

Asian-Pacific Law & Policy

2020

Examines the extent of Chinese government repression of ethnic minorities in Xinjiang province.

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