The Japanese police detention system enables police and prosecutors to detain criminal suspects for up to twenty-three days without a formal charge, thus posing numerous human rights problems. This comment concentrates on the Covenant on Civil and Political Rights which provides a means for identifying the human rights abuses occurring under the Japanese police detention system, as well as a method for rectifying such abuses
The arrest and detention of suspects are the most severe criminal coercive measures. In order to pro...
In 1942 at the age of 23, Fred Korematsu intentionally defied Executive Order 9066 and refused to go...
Japanese courts have become increasingly open to the use of international human rights law in the pa...
Japan ratified International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights in 1979. The 7th amendment of th...
This chapter explores whether a Miranda-like warning and waiver regime could be successfully impleme...
Japan enacted the Law on Communications Interception During Criminal Investigations last year to hel...
The Carlos Ghosn case has focused the world’s attention on Japan’s criminal justice system. In parti...
The Juvenile Law in Japan turned fifty years old on January 1, 1999. Japan enjoys one of the lowest ...
In the past, reforms in Japanese criminal procedure would have been of little interest to most Ameri...
One of the darkest periods in modern United States history is reoccurring with mixed public approval...
In several highly-publicized recent cases in Japan, individuals convicted of murder and sentenced to...
Who Rules Japan? is a valuable addition to the literature on Japanese law. Seven substantive chapter...
This is a flyer for an event co-sponsored with William S. Richardson School of Law Pacific-Asian Leg...
Japan is well known as a society that has not only low crime rates but also for using incarceration ...
Among industrialized nations, Japan has the lowest crime rate and is considered to have one of the b...
The arrest and detention of suspects are the most severe criminal coercive measures. In order to pro...
In 1942 at the age of 23, Fred Korematsu intentionally defied Executive Order 9066 and refused to go...
Japanese courts have become increasingly open to the use of international human rights law in the pa...
Japan ratified International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights in 1979. The 7th amendment of th...
This chapter explores whether a Miranda-like warning and waiver regime could be successfully impleme...
Japan enacted the Law on Communications Interception During Criminal Investigations last year to hel...
The Carlos Ghosn case has focused the world’s attention on Japan’s criminal justice system. In parti...
The Juvenile Law in Japan turned fifty years old on January 1, 1999. Japan enjoys one of the lowest ...
In the past, reforms in Japanese criminal procedure would have been of little interest to most Ameri...
One of the darkest periods in modern United States history is reoccurring with mixed public approval...
In several highly-publicized recent cases in Japan, individuals convicted of murder and sentenced to...
Who Rules Japan? is a valuable addition to the literature on Japanese law. Seven substantive chapter...
This is a flyer for an event co-sponsored with William S. Richardson School of Law Pacific-Asian Leg...
Japan is well known as a society that has not only low crime rates but also for using incarceration ...
Among industrialized nations, Japan has the lowest crime rate and is considered to have one of the b...
The arrest and detention of suspects are the most severe criminal coercive measures. In order to pro...
In 1942 at the age of 23, Fred Korematsu intentionally defied Executive Order 9066 and refused to go...
Japanese courts have become increasingly open to the use of international human rights law in the pa...