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Acknowledgements | ||
Series Preface | ||
Introduction | ||
1 | Privatizing Regulation: The Implementation of the Large-Scale Retail Stores Law | |
2 | The Man Who Would Import: A Cautionary Tale about Bucking the System in Japan | |
3 | Evaluating Administrative Guidance and Cartels in Japan (1957-1988) | |
4 | Policies for Small Business in Japan | |
5 | The Appearance of Power: Legislators, Bureaucrats, and the Budget Process in the United States and Japan | |
6 | As a Matter of Factions: The Budgetary Implications of Shifting Factional Control in Japan's LDP | |
7 | The Puzzling (In)dependence of Courts: A Comparative Approach | |
8 | Administrative Control of Japanese Judges | |
9 | Judicial Independence in Japan Revisited | |
10 | Judicial Independence in a Civil Law Regime: The Evidence from Japan | |
11 | Why the Japanese Taxpayer Always Loses | |
12 | Japanese Administrative Law: Introduction | |
13 | Rethinking Administrative Guidance | |
14 | Manufacturer-Supplier Relationships in Japan and the Concept of Relation-Specific Skill | |
15 | Legal Rules and Social Norms in Japan's Secret World of Sumo | |
16 | Top Executive Rewards and Firm Performance: A Comparison of Japan and the United States | |
17 | The Market of Innovation in the United States and Japan: Venture Capital and the Comparative Corporate Governance Debate | |
18 | The Development of Japanese Legal Studies in American Law Schools | |
Name Index
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