Japanese law is a fledgling topic of comparative law in this country. The rapid growth of bilateral business and the integration of the United States and Japanese economies in recent years suggest the need for increased attention to this area. This Article first examines the prewar antecedents and the postwar developments of Japanese law in English in this country. It then reviews the present law school environment for the study of Japanese law as a comparative law subject. Finally, it briefly addresses three key issues basic to the development of this subject
The development of a legal system under globalization has impacted the legal practice of cross-borde...
From the end of the Edo period to the beginning of the Meiji period, there was almost no knowledge o...
The relationships between case law and statue law in Japan are quite different from that in Anglo-Ca...
Over the past fifteen years there has been a remarkable growth in the study of Japanese law in the U...
Trade between the United States and Japan is growing at such a rapid pace that it is incumbent on th...
The use and study of comparative law has grown in scope and in importance—and no more so than in the...
Over the past fifteen years there has been a remarkable growth in the study of Japanese law in the U...
This translation of an original Japanese language work by Michida Shinichirō contrasts the differenc...
I. Introduction II. Legal Education III. The National Judicial Examination IV. The Judicial Research...
This article first defines the scope of enquiry, then surveys some of the existing literature, and f...
The purpose of this paper is to explain a crucial difference between the Japanese civil code and its...
An overly brief and misleadingly simple history of the evolution of Japanese legal institutions woul...
The issues raised in connection with delivery of legal services in Japan are complex and best unders...
The developments of law in Japan since the beginning of the Occupation have been marked by an increa...
The shift in 1947 from a political to a legal (or justiciable) constitution of Anglo-American design...
The development of a legal system under globalization has impacted the legal practice of cross-borde...
From the end of the Edo period to the beginning of the Meiji period, there was almost no knowledge o...
The relationships between case law and statue law in Japan are quite different from that in Anglo-Ca...
Over the past fifteen years there has been a remarkable growth in the study of Japanese law in the U...
Trade between the United States and Japan is growing at such a rapid pace that it is incumbent on th...
The use and study of comparative law has grown in scope and in importance—and no more so than in the...
Over the past fifteen years there has been a remarkable growth in the study of Japanese law in the U...
This translation of an original Japanese language work by Michida Shinichirō contrasts the differenc...
I. Introduction II. Legal Education III. The National Judicial Examination IV. The Judicial Research...
This article first defines the scope of enquiry, then surveys some of the existing literature, and f...
The purpose of this paper is to explain a crucial difference between the Japanese civil code and its...
An overly brief and misleadingly simple history of the evolution of Japanese legal institutions woul...
The issues raised in connection with delivery of legal services in Japan are complex and best unders...
The developments of law in Japan since the beginning of the Occupation have been marked by an increa...
The shift in 1947 from a political to a legal (or justiciable) constitution of Anglo-American design...
The development of a legal system under globalization has impacted the legal practice of cross-borde...
From the end of the Edo period to the beginning of the Meiji period, there was almost no knowledge o...
The relationships between case law and statue law in Japan are quite different from that in Anglo-Ca...