This article describes the two-stage approach to criminal responsibility in Japan and compares it with the Australian approach. It argues that the Japanese approach manages to avoid many of the problems besetting the Australian one as well as being more closely aligned with the major aims of punishment. Specific instances of the superiority of the Japanese approach are presented and the call made for Australian lawmakers to learn more about Japanese criminal law
There is a worldwide declining trend in the number of countries that have retained capital punishmen...
This article develops a new approach to the defence of necessity. Although the discussion is primari...
Previous scholarship on trials of war criminals focused on the legal proceedings with only tacit ack...
Japan's crime rate, although still low by Western standards, has been rising every year since 1996. ...
Among industrialized nations, Japan has the lowest crime rate and is considered to have one of the b...
If increasing crime seems to be an unavoidable concomitant of rapidurbanisation, Japan might be an i...
This thesis identifies what Japan could do to implement effective crime prevention nationally. It an...
This chapter explores whether a Miranda-like warning and waiver regime could be successfully impleme...
In Japan, that has a western-style legal system, public sentencing guidelines do not exist. Official...
This Article focuses on the failure of abolition and of death penalty reform in Japan in order to il...
The Australian government was an enthusiastic participant in the postwar prosecution of Japanese cla...
The use of probation in Japan is similar in some respects to probation in England and Wales (E&W) an...
There is an article to reduce punishment by extenuating circumstances in the criminal law of Japan t...
An overly brief and misleadingly simple history of the evolution of Japanese legal institutions woul...
A single-offender system of complicity initially characterized the system of criminal participation ...
There is a worldwide declining trend in the number of countries that have retained capital punishmen...
This article develops a new approach to the defence of necessity. Although the discussion is primari...
Previous scholarship on trials of war criminals focused on the legal proceedings with only tacit ack...
Japan's crime rate, although still low by Western standards, has been rising every year since 1996. ...
Among industrialized nations, Japan has the lowest crime rate and is considered to have one of the b...
If increasing crime seems to be an unavoidable concomitant of rapidurbanisation, Japan might be an i...
This thesis identifies what Japan could do to implement effective crime prevention nationally. It an...
This chapter explores whether a Miranda-like warning and waiver regime could be successfully impleme...
In Japan, that has a western-style legal system, public sentencing guidelines do not exist. Official...
This Article focuses on the failure of abolition and of death penalty reform in Japan in order to il...
The Australian government was an enthusiastic participant in the postwar prosecution of Japanese cla...
The use of probation in Japan is similar in some respects to probation in England and Wales (E&W) an...
There is an article to reduce punishment by extenuating circumstances in the criminal law of Japan t...
An overly brief and misleadingly simple history of the evolution of Japanese legal institutions woul...
A single-offender system of complicity initially characterized the system of criminal participation ...
There is a worldwide declining trend in the number of countries that have retained capital punishmen...
This article develops a new approach to the defence of necessity. Although the discussion is primari...
Previous scholarship on trials of war criminals focused on the legal proceedings with only tacit ack...