Scholars have, at times, resorted to the concept of generic constitutional law to describe commonalities emerging across jurisdictions with regard to the way in which constitutional law protects rights and prescribes how they can be limited. Comparative law studies on fundamental rights underline how courts, operating in diverse legal cultures all influenced by the Western Legal Tradition, tend to resort to some adjudication techniques such as the reasonableness test and the proportionality test. Those comparative studies, nonetheless, concede that constitutional adjudication techniques may be differently articulated and applied according to diverse degrees of strictness. However, those differences do not receive much attention when it come...
Although the power of judicial review is granted in unmistakable terms, Japanese courts have proceed...
Professor Beatty's book, The Ultimate Rule of Law is a timely contribution to a number of important ...
The Article focuses on the author\u27s comments to the article of Professor Shigenori Matsui which s...
The Constitution of Japan, enacted on November 3, 1946, and effective as of May 3, 1947, gave the ju...
It would be appropriate to apply a strict scrutiny test that takes into consideration the importance...
Constitutionalism and constitutional justice are inseparable. Constitutional norms in a country embe...
Japan is a civil law country, and the precedent of the Supreme Court is not binding on either the Su...
The Article focuses on the author\u27s views about the judicial decision making of the Japanese Supr...
In September of 2013 the Supreme Court of Japan issued two judgments dealing with the constitutional...
As Justice Breyer has observed, '[j]udges in different countries increasingly apply somewhat similar...
It is sometimes suggested that one or another constitutional or supreme court (for example, the U.S....
The shift in 1947 from a political to a legal (or justiciable) constitution of Anglo-American design...
The Article explores the development of a conservative constitutional jurisprudence by the Japanese ...
To what extent is the language of judicial opinions responsive to the political and social context i...
This examination of Japan\u27s constitutional style is based on the manner in which the following fa...
Although the power of judicial review is granted in unmistakable terms, Japanese courts have proceed...
Professor Beatty's book, The Ultimate Rule of Law is a timely contribution to a number of important ...
The Article focuses on the author\u27s comments to the article of Professor Shigenori Matsui which s...
The Constitution of Japan, enacted on November 3, 1946, and effective as of May 3, 1947, gave the ju...
It would be appropriate to apply a strict scrutiny test that takes into consideration the importance...
Constitutionalism and constitutional justice are inseparable. Constitutional norms in a country embe...
Japan is a civil law country, and the precedent of the Supreme Court is not binding on either the Su...
The Article focuses on the author\u27s views about the judicial decision making of the Japanese Supr...
In September of 2013 the Supreme Court of Japan issued two judgments dealing with the constitutional...
As Justice Breyer has observed, '[j]udges in different countries increasingly apply somewhat similar...
It is sometimes suggested that one or another constitutional or supreme court (for example, the U.S....
The shift in 1947 from a political to a legal (or justiciable) constitution of Anglo-American design...
The Article explores the development of a conservative constitutional jurisprudence by the Japanese ...
To what extent is the language of judicial opinions responsive to the political and social context i...
This examination of Japan\u27s constitutional style is based on the manner in which the following fa...
Although the power of judicial review is granted in unmistakable terms, Japanese courts have proceed...
Professor Beatty's book, The Ultimate Rule of Law is a timely contribution to a number of important ...
The Article focuses on the author\u27s comments to the article of Professor Shigenori Matsui which s...