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Department of Justice (Hong Kong)
Hong Kong government department
Hong Kong government department
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| agency_name | Department of Justice |
| nativename_a | 律政司 |
| logo | Department of Justice (Hong Kong) Logo.png |
| logo_width | 150 px |
| headquarters | G/F, Main Wing, |
| 6/F, Main and East Wing, | |
| Justice Place, 18 Lower Albert Road, Central, Hong Kong | |
| 5-7/F, High Block, Queensway Government Offices, 66 Queensway, Hong Kong | |
| motto | Rule of Law and Justice for All |
| employees | 1,512 |
| budget | $2.454 billion HKD (2025) |
| minister1_name | Paul Lam |
| minister1_pfo | Secretary for Justice |
| website | www.doj.gov.hk |
| formed | (as Attorney General's Department) |
| child1_agency | · Prosecutions Division |
| child2_agency | · Civil Division |
| child3_agency | · Legal Policy Division |
| child4_agency | · Law Drafting Division |
| child5_agency | · International Law Division |
| child6_agency | · Administration and Development Division |
6/F, Main and East Wing, Justice Place, 18 Lower Albert Road, Central, Hong Kong 5-7/F, High Block, Queensway Government Offices, 66 Queensway, Hong Kong
The Department of Justice (DoJ) is the department responsible for legal policy, the administration of justice, drafting legislation, and providing legal advice to the government in Hong Kong. It is headed by the Secretary for Justice, who reports to the Chief Executive directly. Paul Lam, a barrister, has served as Secretary for Justice since July 2022.
Before 1997, the names of the department and the position was the Legal Department () and Attorney General () respectively. The Department of Justice provides legal advice to other departments in the government system, “drafts government bills, makes prosecution decisions, and promotes the rule of law”.
History
Before 1997
Main article: Legal Department (Hong Kong)
The department has its roots in the Office of the Attorney General, which was created in 1844 upon the appointment of the first Attorney General of Hong Kong.
The department was established in 1950 as the Legal Department, also known as the Attorney General's Chambers, and was itself the product of a merger between the Attorney General's Office and the Crown Solicitor's Office.
Lawyers working in the government were known as Crown counsel, with the heads of the prosecutions and civil divisions known as the Crown Prosecutor and Crown Solicitor respectively.
After 1997
Protest and national security cases (2019-)
In March 2021, after 15 of 47 pro-democracy figures were granted bail by a court, the DoJ immediately filed an appeal, sending the 15 people back to their detention cells.
Also, in March 2021, Hong Kong Free Press reported that 3 defendants were acquitted of rioting because they were not physically present at the riot, with the DoJ later complaining to the Court of Final Appeal that the acquittal was erroneous and that people could still be participants in a crime even if not physically present, such as by using social media and pressing the "like" button.
In April 2021, a spokesman for the DoJ commented on US ambassador Hanscom Smith's criticism of Hong Kong's arrest of Jimmy Lai, claiming that "It is regrettable to note that the convictions have drawn unfair criticisms with political overtones. Any assertion to suggest that 'Beijing [is] eroding Hong Kong's freedoms' is totally baseless."
Separately, in April 2021, the DoJ asserted that in cases involving the national security police, the police would be exempt from laws that cover the search and seizure of journalists' material. In response, the Hong Kong Journalists Association said that the move would make it more difficult for journalists to protect their sources.
Also, in April 2021, after the sentencing of Jimmy Lai and other pro-democracy figures drew criticism from overseas politicians, the DoJ released a statement saying that though the government attaches great importance to rights and freedom, those freedoms are not absolute.
In December 2022, the DoJ said criticisms were "far from the truth" when the CEO of Maxwell Chambers said, "Hong Kong, in particular, was one place where some parties with very long-term contracts avoided putting it as the seat of arbitration, due to uncertainty about the legal environment after Hong Kong returned to China, even with assurances of 50 years of self-government and freedom of speech."
In August 2023, after the High Court blocked the DoJ from banning the song Glory to Hong Kong, the DoJ appealed and claimed that the Chief Executive should have more power than the courts, for national security matters.
Organisation
Leadership offices
- Secretary for Justice's Office
- Law Reform Commission Secretariat
- Legal Enhancement and Development Office
- Public Relations & Information Unit
Divisions
| Division | Head of Division | Responsibility |
|---|---|---|
| Civil Division | Law Officer (Civil Law) | Provides legal advice on civil law to all Government bureaux and departments and represents the Government both as solicitors and as barristers in all civil litigation, including arbitrations |
| Constitutional and Policy Affairs Division | Solicitor General | In charge of legal policy, constitutional development and elections, the Basic Law, human rights, and China law |
| International Law Division | Law Officer (International Law) | Provides advice on public international law to the Government and negotiates, or provides legal advisers on negotiations, for bilateral agreements. Also handles mutual judicial assistance matters. Previously advised on the Sino-British Joint Declaration and the Joint Liaison Group. |
| Law Drafting Division | Law Draftsman | Drafting all Government legislation, vetting private bills, and maintaining the Hong Kong e-Legislation database |
| National Security Prosecutions Division | Law Officer (National Security) | Prosecution of offences endangering national security and other related legal work. The NS Prosecutions Division budget is drawn from the National Security Special Fund, and not from the DoJ budget. |
| Prosecutions Division | Director of Public Prosecutions | Handles prosecutions and appeals in the majority of criminal cases, and advises the government on criminal law aspects of proposed legislation |
| Administration and Development Division | Director of Administration and Development | Responsible for general administration, personnel and staff management, finance, and training |
Boards and committees
- The Law Reform Commission of Hong Kong
- Standing Committee on Legal Education and Training
- Advisory Body on Third Party Funding of Arbitration and Mediation
- Advisory Body on Outcome Related Fee Structures for Arbitration
- Steering Committee on Rule of Law Education
- Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area Task Force
- Expert Advisory Group on Legal and Dispute Resolution Services
Ministers
The department has four political appointees, with principal officials in bold:
| Minister | Portrait | Office | Took office | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Hon. Paul Lam | [[File:Paul Lam 2023.jpg | alt= | 113x113px]] | Secretary for Justice | 1 July 2022 |
| The Hon. Horace Cheung | [[File:Horace Cheung.jpg | alt= | 113x113px]] | Deputy Secretary for Justice | 1 July 2022 |
| Denise Hung Hiu-king | Political Assistant to the Secretary for Justice | 1 September 2022 | |||
| Nicole Chan Sin Man | Political Assistant to the Deputy Secretary for Justice | 22 July 2022 |
Headquarters

Main article: Former Central Government Offices
The department is headquartered in the former Central Government Offices, which is a Grade I historic building. Now known as Justice Place, the Justice Department relocated to the premises in phases in 2015 and 2018, as part of a plan to preserve the buildings, which were originally slated for demolition and redevelopment in the early 2010s.
Before the relocation, the department's offices were scattered across the Queensway Government Offices and other buildings.
References
References
- "budget.gov.hk".
- "Executive Council - Membership of Executive Council - Secretary for Justice, Mr Paul Lam Ting-kwok".
- "Department of Justice".
- "15 granted bail out of 47 democrats but all go back into detention after prosecutors appeal | Apple Daily".
- Hamlett, Tim. (2021-03-29). "Hong Kong and the terrifying legal gamble of pressing a digital button".
- (2021-04-02). "Foreign ministry accuses US envoy to Hong Kong of 'smearing' electoral overhaul".
- "Hong Kong national security police can seize journalistic files without court approval: prosecutors | Apple Daily".
- (17 April 2021). "HKSAR Government respects rights and freedoms protected under the Basic Law".
- (2022-12-25). "Lawyers downplay fracas between Hong Kong, Singapore over arbitration capabilities".
- "Govt: law journal's criticisms 'far from truth' - RTHK".
- "Department of Justice's response to media enquiries".
- Leung, Hillary. (2023-08-10). "Hong Kong leader should outweigh courts in national security matters, gov't says after protest song ban rejected".
- "Department of Justice - About Us - Organisation".
- "Legal system in Hong Kong".
- (17 July 2024). "Report to the Legislative Council on the Control and Management of the Special Fund to Meet the Expenditure for Safeguarding National Security".
- "Appointment of Under Secretaries and Political Assistants (with photos)".
- "Department of Justice - DOJ2015 - Administration & Development Division - Relocation to the former Central Government Offices".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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