Guokun Jin(金国坤)

发布者:喻泉腾发布时间:2026-02-25浏览次数:10

Position:Director and Professor of the Department of Law, Beijing Administration InstituteMaster's Supervisor at the School of Law, Tianjin Normal University

Experience:From September 1980 to July 1984, he studied as an undergraduate in the Department of Law at Peking University and obtained a Bachelor's degree in Law. From September 1986 to July 1989, he pursued graduate studies in the Department of Law at Peking University and earned a Master's degree in Law. From September 2005 to July 2008, he was a doctoral student at the Wuhan University School of Law, where he received a Doctor of Laws degree.  

From July 1989 to September 1997, he served as a Teaching Assistant and then a Lecturer in the Department of Law at Beijing Administration Institute. From September 1997 to September 2003, he was an Associate Professor in the same department. Since September 2003, he has been a Professor in the Department of Law at Beijing Administration Institute.  

From March 1985 to July 1985, he participated in a training program for Administrative Law faculty at China University of Political Science and Law, and is recognized as one of the pioneers of Administrative Law scholarship in China. Since September 2002, he has been serving as a Master's Supervisor at the School of Law, Tianjin Normal University.  

For over thirty years, his research has focused on Constitutional Law and Administrative Law, with primary research interests in law-based administration, administrative organization law, administrative procedure law, and administrative supervision law. His academic work has had a significant impact in areas such as the construction of a law-based government, theories of administrative subjects, coordination mechanisms for resolving conflicts of authority between administrative organs, comprehensive law enforcement, administrative procedure and government information disclosure, the innovation of law-based administration and social governance, and the establishment of mechanisms for supervising administrative power and restricting power.