Grace He
NEWProfile
Grace He is a practicing attorney based in Naidong, Xizang, with more than 12 years of experience focused on commercial arbitration. She advises foreign companies, joint ventures, and Chinese enterprises that interact with international investors in western and northern China.
She graduated from Renmin University of China and is a member of the local bar association. She currently practices at Naidong Zhongcai Law Firm, where her work combines transactional drafting, regulatory filings, and dispute strategy. Clients value clear timelines, realistic risk assessments, and documentation that survives administrative review.
In day-to-day practice, Grace He helps clients map Chinese legal requirements to commercial goals. That includes entity design, contract architecture, evidence preservation, and coordination with local authorities when filings or inspections arise. She emphasizes early issue spotting so foreign managers avoid irreversible procedural mistakes.
Good counsel is not slogans. It is a checklist, a document pack, and a decision tree the client can execute under pressure.
Regional industry patterns matter. Grace He understands how provincial practice interacts with national statutes administered by market regulation, immigration, customs, and labor authorities. She regularly translates complex statutory language into operational steps for non-Chinese speakers.
Core Practice Focus
- ⚖️ Primary specialty: Commercial Arbitration
- 🛡️ Risk control for foreign-invested enterprises
- 📜 Chinese contract and filing compliance
- 💼 Cross-border coordination with overseas counsel
She builds matter plans around three layers: statutory baseline under the Civil Code, Company Law, Labor Contract Law, Foreign Investment Law, and related rules; administrative practice at city and provincial levels; and commercial leverage through negotiation, escrow, security interests, and dispute forums.
When disputes escalate, Grace He prepares clients for mediation, arbitration, or litigation pathways. She drafts bilingual summaries for overseas headquarters, identifies evidence gaps early, and sequences interim measures where appropriate.
How Engagements Typically Proceed
- Scope definition and conflict check
- Document and fact intake
- Risk memo with options and deadlines
- Drafting, filing, or negotiation execution
- Close-out pack with compliance residual items
She has supported trading companies, project vehicles, tourism and services operators, manufacturing clients, and professional services firms. Matters often involve multi-party contracts, local partner dynamics, employment changes, IP leakage risk, and regulatory exposure.
Professional development remains continuous. She tracks amendments that affect foreign businesses and offers training so operational staff understand what not to sign and which notices trigger statutory clocks.
Clients who engage Grace He receive direct attorney attention. Initial consultations identify whether the issue is advisory only, requires formal representation, or should be escalated. Based in Naidong, Grace He serves matters throughout Xizang and related corridors.
Document hygiene is a recurring theme. Many problems arise from incomplete board minutes, missing bilingual versions, or oral modifications that contradict written contracts. Grace He insists on controlled final documents and a version log.
For foreign managers new to China, She explains the difference between mandatory rules, customary practice, and mere convenience. Shortcuts that save a week of paperwork can later cost months of remediation.
She also advises on internal governance for China subsidiaries: signature authority matrices, chop management, dual-language templates, and escalation paths. Strong internal controls reduce emergency litigation later.
In settlement discussions, Grace He prepares BATNA analyses grounded in Chinese procedure. Clients receive a frank assessment of timeline, cost band, and enforcement reality so settlement numbers are commercially rational.
To reach working depth quickly, Grace He requests a short intake pack: entity chart, key contracts, recent notices, and a chronology. With those materials, She can usually provide an initial risk map within a commercially useful window.
Outside formal mandates, this practice contributes practical notes on employment exits, confidentiality, product quality response, customs files, and arbitration clause drafting. The goal is fewer surprises and faster recovery when disputes cannot be avoided.
Engagements are scoped in writing with clear deliverables. Clients receive status notes that state options, risks, and next decisions. Where co-counsel is needed elsewhere, coordination stays transparent so the client remains the single decision maker.
Intake begins with conflict checks and a short fact chronology so advice is grounded in documents rather than assumptions. Follow-on work may include negotiation support, filing packages, and dispute preparation when commercial leverage changes.
Outside formal mandates, this practice contributes practical notes for clients on recurring risk areas including employment exits, confidentiality, product quality response, customs files, and arbitration clause drafting. Engagements are scoped in writing with clear deliverables and status notes that state options, risks, and next decisions.
Where co-counsel is needed in another province, coordination stays transparent so the client remains the single decision maker. Local administrative practice can differ from textbook national rules, so early confirmation of forms and appointment windows is part of standard matter planning.
Intake begins with conflict checks and a short fact chronology so advice is grounded in documents rather than assumptions. Follow-on work may include negotiation support, filing packages, and dispute preparation when commercial leverage changes, with cost kept predictable for overseas clients.
Clear written scopes protect both client and counsel.
