Despite its significant influence on the actual enforcement of the law, the economic cost of court discretion has been ignored in the literature on employment protection. This paper exploits a distinctive feature of the Japanese judicial system, periodic judge transfers, to identify court discretion. Because judges move across local labor markets while a single national court system ensures that there are no legal boundaries between regions, it is possible to shut down any confounding relationships between current litigation outcomes and local labor market. A key finding is that an increase in the worker victory ratio in adjustment dismissal litigations in the last 10 years reduces rates of both job creation and destruction. Ignoring the un...
The theme of this symposium issue is ―Decision Making on the Japanese Supreme Court.‖ From that titl...
The author investigates whether judges deciding on unfair dismissal cases are sensitive to economic ...
In the discussion about employment protection, little attention has been given to judicial mistakes....
The goal of this paper is to detect the degree to which court decisions control the stringency of em...
This article compares the judicial regimes for resolving individual employment rights disputes in Ge...
Recent developments in the literature on employment protection legislation (EPL) have revealed that ...
This Article begins by examining the judiciary\u27s role in employment litigation. Part II then cons...
This article focuses on labour courts, most of which are ‘mixed’ in that a professional judge sits w...
Existing studies either overlook the importance of the juridical enforcement of employment protectio...
Economists have traditionally studied the relationships between labor markets and labor legislations...
grantor: University of TorontoThe relationship between economy and law is a central issue ...
This is one chapter from the book, Judicial Independence: Economic Theory and Japanese Empirics, tha...
About one in four workers challenges her dismissal in front of a labor court in France. Using a data...
Recent developments in the literature on employment protection legislation (EPL) have revealed that ...
The Article discusses various reports published within the issue including one by Shigenori Matsui o...
The theme of this symposium issue is ―Decision Making on the Japanese Supreme Court.‖ From that titl...
The author investigates whether judges deciding on unfair dismissal cases are sensitive to economic ...
In the discussion about employment protection, little attention has been given to judicial mistakes....
The goal of this paper is to detect the degree to which court decisions control the stringency of em...
This article compares the judicial regimes for resolving individual employment rights disputes in Ge...
Recent developments in the literature on employment protection legislation (EPL) have revealed that ...
This Article begins by examining the judiciary\u27s role in employment litigation. Part II then cons...
This article focuses on labour courts, most of which are ‘mixed’ in that a professional judge sits w...
Existing studies either overlook the importance of the juridical enforcement of employment protectio...
Economists have traditionally studied the relationships between labor markets and labor legislations...
grantor: University of TorontoThe relationship between economy and law is a central issue ...
This is one chapter from the book, Judicial Independence: Economic Theory and Japanese Empirics, tha...
About one in four workers challenges her dismissal in front of a labor court in France. Using a data...
Recent developments in the literature on employment protection legislation (EPL) have revealed that ...
The Article discusses various reports published within the issue including one by Shigenori Matsui o...
The theme of this symposium issue is ―Decision Making on the Japanese Supreme Court.‖ From that titl...
The author investigates whether judges deciding on unfair dismissal cases are sensitive to economic ...
In the discussion about employment protection, little attention has been given to judicial mistakes....