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Authority Without Power: Law and the Japanese Paradox Book

Authority Without Power: Law and the Japanese Paradox
Authority Without Power: Law and the Japanese Paradox, This book offers a comprehensive interpretive study of the role of law in contemporary Japan. Haley argues that the weakness of legal controls throughout Japanese history has assured the development and strength of informal community controls based on cus, Authority Without Power: Law and the Japanese Paradox has a rating of 4 stars
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Authority Without Power: Law and the Japanese Paradox, This book offers a comprehensive interpretive study of the role of law in contemporary Japan. Haley argues that the weakness of legal controls throughout Japanese history has assured the development and strength of informal community controls based on cus, Authority Without Power: Law and the Japanese Paradox
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  • Authority Without Power: Law and the Japanese Paradox
  • Written by author John Owen Haley
  • Published by Oxford University Press, USA, December 1994
  • This book offers a comprehensive interpretive study of the role of law in contemporary Japan. Haley argues that the weakness of legal controls throughout Japanese history has assured the development and strength of informal community controls based on cus
  • This book offers a comprehensive interpretive study of the role of law in contemporary Japan. Haley argues that the weakness of legal controls throughout Japanese history has assured the development and strength of informal community controls based on cus
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This book offers a comprehensive interpretive study of the role of law in contemporary Japan. Haley argues that the weakness of legal controls throughout Japanese history has assured the development and strength of informal community controls based on custom and consensus to maintain order—an order characterized by remarkable stability, with an equally significant degree of autonomy for individuals, communities, and businesses. Haley concludes by showing how Japan's weak legal system has reinforced preexisting patterns of extralegal social control, thus explaining many of the fundamental paradoxes of political and social life in contemporary Japan.


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Authority Without Power: Law and the Japanese Paradox, This book offers a comprehensive interpretive study of the role of law in contemporary Japan. Haley argues that the weakness of legal controls throughout Japanese history has assured the development and strength of informal community controls based on cus, Authority Without Power: Law and the Japanese Paradox

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Authority Without Power: Law and the Japanese Paradox, This book offers a comprehensive interpretive study of the role of law in contemporary Japan. Haley argues that the weakness of legal controls throughout Japanese history has assured the development and strength of informal community controls based on cus, Authority Without Power: Law and the Japanese Paradox

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Authority Without Power: Law and the Japanese Paradox, This book offers a comprehensive interpretive study of the role of law in contemporary Japan. Haley argues that the weakness of legal controls throughout Japanese history has assured the development and strength of informal community controls based on cus, Authority Without Power: Law and the Japanese Paradox

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