Lo Hui-min (Chinese: 駱惠敏; pinyin: Luò huì mǐn; 1925-2006) was a Chinese and Australian historian of the late Qing and Republican periods, best-known for his work on George Ernest Morrison and Ku Hung-ming.
Born in Shanghai, he spent his childhood near Quanzhou and his adolescence in Singapore before attending Yenching University.
[2] He gave the George Ernest Morrison Lecture in Ethnology in 1976 and was elected a Fellow of The Australian Academy of the Humanities in 1981.
Geremie Barmé called him "a learned scholar with the best instincts of a journalist",[3] and Wang Gungwu wrote upon Lo's death, "For his work on modern Chinese history, he demanded the highest standards of accuracy.
"[3][1] He published in The China Quarterly, East Asian, and Journal of the Oriental Society of Australia.