This piece is based upon a talk given at the Harvard Law Association of Japan meeting on December 4, 1985, by Daniel H. Foote. Published in Japanese - English original draft provided
This article seeks: to explain features of the previous system of legal education in Japan; to prese...
In April 2004, more than sixty law schools began operation in Japan. Legal education, previously tre...
How should a law school approach the task of deciding which students to admit? It depends on a schoo...
The one hundredth anniversary of the Kyoto University Faculty of Law is the kind of splendid occasio...
A sense of momentum accompanied the start of Japan\u27s new legal education system in the spring of ...
Law faculties in Japan are asking whether and how they should remake themselves to become law school...
Prospective lawyers need to learn three things: First, legal doctrine, or what the law says; second,...
I prepared this paper for a symposium entitled, Academics and Practitioners in Japan and the United...
Introduction Legal education in Japan has been fundamentally reconstituted in the first decade of th...
An American law professor in Japan has much more to learn than to teach. A foreigner like me - who c...
a. The Rule of Law is at the heart of the present legal reform. b. There is an international consen...
Japan is about to change its system of legal education. In April 2004 Japan will introduce law schoo...
The Law School and the Japan Federation of Bar Associations joined hands this year to see how the ex...
Over the past two years I have become so heavily involved in the justice system reform discussions -...
In 1992, in an address at the American Society of Comparative Law annual meeting, Professor Mary Ann...
This article seeks: to explain features of the previous system of legal education in Japan; to prese...
In April 2004, more than sixty law schools began operation in Japan. Legal education, previously tre...
How should a law school approach the task of deciding which students to admit? It depends on a schoo...
The one hundredth anniversary of the Kyoto University Faculty of Law is the kind of splendid occasio...
A sense of momentum accompanied the start of Japan\u27s new legal education system in the spring of ...
Law faculties in Japan are asking whether and how they should remake themselves to become law school...
Prospective lawyers need to learn three things: First, legal doctrine, or what the law says; second,...
I prepared this paper for a symposium entitled, Academics and Practitioners in Japan and the United...
Introduction Legal education in Japan has been fundamentally reconstituted in the first decade of th...
An American law professor in Japan has much more to learn than to teach. A foreigner like me - who c...
a. The Rule of Law is at the heart of the present legal reform. b. There is an international consen...
Japan is about to change its system of legal education. In April 2004 Japan will introduce law schoo...
The Law School and the Japan Federation of Bar Associations joined hands this year to see how the ex...
Over the past two years I have become so heavily involved in the justice system reform discussions -...
In 1992, in an address at the American Society of Comparative Law annual meeting, Professor Mary Ann...
This article seeks: to explain features of the previous system of legal education in Japan; to prese...
In April 2004, more than sixty law schools began operation in Japan. Legal education, previously tre...
How should a law school approach the task of deciding which students to admit? It depends on a schoo...