【内容提要】
【编者按】《亚洲法与社会杂志》(Asian Journal of Law and Society)是由上海交通大学中国法与社会研究院(CISLS)及其前身法社会学研究中心(LSC)为凯原法学院与剑桥大学出版社合作出版的全英文学术期刊。目前订购数超过8500户,其中超过6000是机构订户。仅在剑桥出版社的期刊平台,该期刊每年的全文下载数就达到60000次以上,如果将 ProQuest 等第三方平台计算在内,每年全文下载量可能接近 10 万次。据最近获得的权威信息,本刊在SCOPUS引文数据库排行榜已经上升到第二方阵,也已经被纳入ESCI (Emerging Scholars Citation Index)引文数据库,并有望在近期达到SSCI (Social Sciences Citation Index) 数据库的收录标准。
这里集中推送迄今为止已发行各期杂志的目录,以方便读者查阅和引用,也可方便研究者了解本刊录用稿件的方针和特色。欢迎大家积极参与全英文学术期刊Asian Journal of Law and Society的建设,在这个平台上构筑一个跨学科、跨国界的知识共同体!
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.1 No.1 (May 2014)
EDITORIAL
Weidong Ji, "Foreword", pp.1-4
COMPARATIVE AND EMPIRICAL APPROACHES OF SOCIO-LEGAL RESEARCH ON ASIA
Lawrence M. Friedman, “Ghosts, Machines, and Asian Law: Some Comments”, pp.5-16
Robert Jacob, “The Judge and the Sacred: Notes for a Comparative History of Western and Chinese Judicial Cultures”, pp.17-30
Masahiko Aoki, “Formal Rules in Institutional Transitions: An Examination Based on the Meiji Restoration and the Xinhai Revolution”, pp.31-54
Leah M. Trzcinski, Frank K. Upham, “Creating Law from the Ground Up: Land Law in Post-Conflict Cambodia”, pp.55-77
LEGAL PROFESSION AND SOCIAL CHANGE IN EAST ASIAN COUNTRIES
Sida Liu, Lily Liang, Terence C. Halliday, “The Trial of Li Zhuang: Chinese Lawyers’ Collective Action against Populism”, pp.79-97
Mayumi Nakamura, “Legal Reform, Law Firms, and Lawyer Stratification in Japan”, pp.99-123
Lucia Dalla Pellegrina, Laarni Escresa, Nuno Garoupa, “Measuring Judicial Ideal Points in New Democracies: The Case of the Philippines”, pp.125-164
Thomas H. Stanton, “Law and Economic Development: The Cautionary Tale of Colonial Burma”, pp.165-181
Raymond Siu Yeung Chan, Daniel Ho, Angus Young, “Rethinking the Relevance or Irrelevance of Directors’ Duties in China: The Intersection between Culture and Laws”, pp.183-203
Lynette J. Chua, “Rights Mobilization and the Campaign to Decriminalize Homosexuality in Singapore”, pp.205-228
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.1 No.2 (November 2014)
EDITORIAL
Setsuo Miyazawa, “Foreword”, pp.229-234
RESEARCH ARTICLE
Gunther Teubner, “Law and Social Theory: Three Problems”, pp.235-254
David Nelken, “Thinking About Legal Culture”, pp.255-274
Chulwoo Lee, “Hegemony, Contestation, and Empowerment: The Politics of Law and Society Studies in South Korea”, pp.275-304
Weidong Ji, “The Rule of Law in a Chinese Way: Social Diversification and Reconstructing the System of Authority”, pp.305-328
Guangdong Xu, “Is China an Anomaly for the “Law Matters” Hypothesis?”, pp.339-365
XIONG Hao, “Two Sides of Court Mediation in Today’s Southwest Grassroots China: an Empirical Study in T Court, Yunnan Province”, pp.367-394
Kevin Kwok-yin Cheng, “The Practice and Justifications of Plea Bargaining by Hong Kong Criminal Defence Lawyers”, pp.395-412
Richard Mitchell, Petra Mahy, Peter Gahan, “The Evolution of Labour Law in India: An Overview and Commentary on Regulatory Objectives and Development”, pp.413-453
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.2 No.1 (May 2015)
RESEARCH ARTICLE
Robert Moog, “The View from Inside India’s Consumer Fora: Empowering the Few”, pp.1-20
Dag-Erik Berg, “Structural Mechanism, Law, and the Dalit Question in India”, pp.21-33
Mostafa Mahmud Naser, “Climate Change And Migration: Law and Policy Perspectives in Bangladesh”, pp.35-53
Man Yee Karen Lee, “The Role of Law in Addressing the Good Samaritan’s Dilemma: A Chinese Model?”, pp.55-92
Ling Li, “ ‘Rule of Law’ in a Party-State: A Conceptual Interpretive Framework of the Constitutional Reality of China”, pp.93-113
Trinh Ly Khanh, “The Right to Strike in Vietnam’s Private Sector”, pp.115-135
Jaclyn L. Neo, “Riots and Rights: Law and Exclusion in Singapore’s Migrant Worker Regime”, pp.137-168
Jan Michiel Otto, “Indonesian Opposition in the Colonial Municipality: A Minahasser in Bandung”, pp.169-193
Nicola Colbran, “Sense and Simplicity in Legal and Human Rights Co-Operation: A Case Study of Indonesia”, pp.195-206
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.2 No.2 (November 2015)
STATE AND PERSONHOOD IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
Lynette J. Chua, “Preface to Special Issue State and Personhood in Southeast Asia”, pp.207-210
Lynette J. Chua, David M. Engel, “State and Personhood in Southeast Asia: The Promise and Potential for Law and Society Research”, pp.211-228
Jack Jin Gary Lee, “Plural Society and the Colonial State: English Law and the Making of Crown Colony Government in the Straits Settlements”, pp.229-249
Malavika Reddy, “Identity Paper/Work/s and the Unmaking of Legal Status in Mae Sot, Thailand”, pp.251-266
Charanpal S. Bal, “Dealing with Deportability: Deportation Laws and the Political Personhood of Temporary Migrant Workers in Singapore”, pp.267-284
Lilis Mulyani, “Gambling with the State: Land Titles and Personhood Rights among the Urban Poor in Indonesia”, pp.285-300
Frank Munger, “Thailand’s Cause Lawyers and Twenty-First-Century Military Coups: Nation, Identity, and Conflicting Visions of the Rule of Law”, pp.301-322
Keebet Von Benda-Beckmann, “Social Security, Personhood, and the State”, pp.323-338
RESEARCH ARTICLE
Constance Youngwon Lee, Jonathan Crowe, “The Deafening Silence of the Korean “Comfort Women”: A Response Based on Lyotard and Irigaray”, pp.339-356
Amrita Shodhan, “The East India Company’s Conquest of Assam, India, and “Community” Justice: Panchayats/Mels in Translation”, pp.357-377
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.3 No.1 (May 2016)
BUDDHISM AND LAW
Benjamin Schonthal, Tom Ginsburg, “Setting an Agenda for the Socio-Legal Study of Contemporary Buddhism”, pp.1-15
Tomas Larsson, “Keeping Monks in Their Place?”, pp.17-28
Benjamin Schonthal, “The Impossibility of a Buddhist State”, pp.29-48
Jolyon Baraka Thomas, “Varieties of Religious Freedom in Japanese Buddhist Responses to the 1899 Religions Bill”, pp.49-70
David M. Engel, “Blood Curse and Belonging in Thailand: Law, Buddhism, and Legal Consciousness”, pp.71-83
Melissa Crouch, “Promiscuity, Polygyny, and the Power of Revenge: The Past and Future of Burmese Buddhist Law in Myanmar”, pp.85-104
RESEARCH ARTICLE
Maartje De Visser, “We All Stand Together: The Role of the Association of Asian Constitutional Courts and Equivalent Institutions in Promoting Constitutionalism”, pp.105-134
Erik Herber, “Victim Participation in Japan: When Therapeutic Jurisprudence Meets Prosecutor Justice”, pp.137-157
Luke Marsh, “The Strategic Use of Human Rights Treaties in Hong Kong’s Cage-Home Crisis: No Way Out?”, pp.159-188
Albert H.Y. Chen, “The Law and Politics of the Struggle for Universal Suffrage in Hong Kong, 2013–15”, pp.189-207
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.3 No.2 (November 2016)
LEGAL EDUCATION IN EAST ASIA
Setsuo Miyazawa, “Innovations in East Asian Law Schools and Collaborative Possibilities for US Law Schools”, pp.209-212
Nobuyuki Sato, “The State of Legal Education in Japan: Problems and “Re”-Renovations in JD Law Schools”, pp.213-225
Soogeun Oh, “A Reflection on Practical Training in Legal Education in South Korea”, pp.227-236
Weidong Ji, “Legal Education in China: Reforms and Requirements”, pp.237-246
Chih-Chieh Lin, Mong-Hwa Chin, Shang-Jyh Liu, “Legal Education in Taiwan: Evolution and Innovation”, pp.247-260
Carole Silver, “Opportunities for Collaboration among East Asian and US Law Schools”, pp.261-271
RESEARCH ARTICLE
Sida Liu, David M. Trubek, David B. Wilkins, “Mapping the Ecology of China’s Corporate Legal Sector: Globalization and Its Impact on Lawyers and Society”, pp.273-297
Chien-Chih Lin, “The Judicialization of Politics in Taiwan”, pp.299-326
Naboru Yanase, “Deliberative Democracy and the Japanese Saiban-in (Lay Judge) Trial System”, pp.327-349
Ryan Mitchell, “Manchukuo’s Contested Sovereignty: Legal Activism, Rights Consciousness, and Civil Resistance in a ‘Puppet State’”, pp.352-376
Yedan Li, “From ‘Access to Justice’ to ‘Barrier to Justice’? An Empirical Examination of Chinese Court-Annexed Mediation”, pp.377-397
Sepalika Welikala, “Community Mediation as a Hybrid Practice: The Case of Mediation Boards in Sri Lanka”, pp.399-422
BOOK REVIEW
Dan Rosen, “Setsuo Miyazawa, Weidong Ji, Hiroshi Fukurai, Kay-Wah Chan, and Matthias Vanhullebusch, eds., East Asia’s Renewed Respect for the Rule of Law in the 21st Century: The Future of Legal and Judicial Landscapes in East Asia (Leiden: Brill/Nijhoff, 2015) pp. 343.”, pp,423-424
Eric A. Feldman, “Yuka Kaneko, Katsumi Matsuoka, and Toshihisa Toyoda, eds., Disaster, Law, and Recovery: Asian Law in Disasters: Toward a Human-Centered Recovery (New York, NY: Routledge, 2016) pp. 348.”, pp.425-427
Nancy S. Marder, “Matthew J. Wilson, Hiroshi Fukurai, and Takashi Maruta, Japan and Civil Jury Trials: The Convergence of Forces (Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar, 2015) pp. 208.”, pp.427-428
Takeshi Akiba, “Chaihark Hahm and Sung Ho Kim, Democracy & Constitution in Japan and South Korea: Making We the People: Democratic Constitutional Founding in Postwar Japan and South Korea (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2015) pp. 330.”, pp.429-431
Matthew Wilson, “Richard Krooth, Morris Edelson, and Hiroshi Fukurai, Propaganda, Corporate Predation and the Fukushima Nuclear Disaster: Nuclear Tsunami: The Japanese Government and America’s Role in the Fukushima Disaster (Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2015) pp. 232.”, pp.431-433
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.4 No.1 (May 2017)
LAW AND FINANCE IN (SOUTH)EAST ASIA
Emilios Avgouleas, Duoqi Xu, “Overhauling China’s Financial Stability Regulation: Policy Riddles and Regulatory Dilemmas”, pp.1-57
Wei Shen, “Market-Based Regulatory Responses to Private Lending in China: Beyond a Law and Society Paradigm”, pp.59-79
Duoqi Xu, Mingyu Ge, “Equity-Based Crowdfunding in China: Beginning with the First Crowdfunding Financing Case”, pp.81-107
Chang-hsien Tsai, Kuan-Jung Peng, “The FinTech Revolution and Financial Regulation: The Case of Online Supply-Chain Financing”, pp.109-132
Vivien Chen, “Law and Society in the Evolution of Malaysia’s Islamic Capital Market Regulation”, pp.133-156
LAW AND SOCIETY IN SOUTH ASIA
Surabhi Chopra, “Massacres, Majorities and Money: Reparation after Sectarian Violence in India”, pp.157-190
Sagnik Dutta, “From Accommodation to Substantive Equality: Muslim Personal Law, Secular Law, and the Indian Constitution 1985–2015”, pp.191-255
Farzana Akter, “Legal Aid for Ensuring Access to Justice in Bangladesh: A Paradox?”, pp.257-275
BOOK REVIEW
Hualing Fu, “Sida Liu and Terence C. Halliday, Defense Lawyers in China: Criminal Defense in China: The Politics of Lawyers at Work (New York, NY: Cambridge University Press, 2016) pp 220.”, pp.277-279
Ching-Fang Hsu, “Carol A.G. Jones, Lost in China? Law, Culture and Identity in Post-1997 Hong Kong (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015) pp 284.”, pp.279-281
INTRODUCTION
Weidong Ji, “China’s First Annual Conference on Socio-Legal Studies Held in Shanghai”, pp.283-285
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.4 No.2 (November 2017)
LAW AND ECONOMICS IN EAST ASIA
Daisuke Mori, “Law and Economics in Japan: 25 Years after the Hatching Stage”, pp.287-307
Hatsuru Morita, “Corporate Law Reform and the Political Environment: An Empirical Analysis Employing Public-Comment Procedure Data in Japan”, pp.309-328
Ruoying Chen, “Empirical Law and Economics Scholarship in China: Methodologies and Challenges”, pp.329-348
David C. Donald, Paul w. H. Cheuk, “Hong Kong’s Public Enforcement Model of Investor Protection”, pp.349-385
Say H. Gao, “An Economic Efficiency Approach to Reforming Corporate Governance: The Case of Multiple Stakeholder Boards”, pp.387-404
RESEARCH ARTICLE
Justine Guichard, “In the Name of the People: Disagreeing over Peoplehood in the North and South Korean Constitutions”, pp.405-445
Jacqueline Vel, Yando Zakaria, Andriaan Bender, “Law-Making as a Strategy for Change: Indonesia’s New Village Law”, pp.447-471
BOOK REVIEW
Kevin Kwok-yin Cheng, “David M. Engel, The Myth of the Litigious Society: Why We Don’t Sue (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2016) pp 232.”, pp.473-474
Melissa Crouch, “Benjamin Schonthal, Buddhism, Politics and the Limits of Law: The Pyrrhic Constitutionalism of Sri Lanka (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2016) pp 320.”, pp.475-476
Yvonne Kwan, “Human Rights in China - Sarah Biddulph, The Stability Imperative: Human Rights and Law in China (Vancouver, BC: UBC Press, 2015) pp 332.”, pp.476-479
Joe Phillips, “Celeste L. Arrington, Accidental Activists: Victim Movements and Government Accountability in Japan and South Korea (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2016) pp 234.”, pp.479-481
Yuka Kaneko, “Law and Disasters - Shahla F. Ali. Governing Disasters: Engaging Local Populations in Humanitarian Relief (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2017) pp 346.”, pp.481-482
Dimitri Vanoverbeke, “Joachim Zekoll, Moritz Bälz, and Iwo Amelung, eds., Dispute Resolution in Asia and Beyond: Formalization and Flexibilisation in Dispute Resolution (Leiden: Brill/Nijhoff, 2015) pp 401.”, pp.482-484
Takeshi Akiba, “Korea’s Constitutional Order - Justine Guichard. Regime Transition and the Judicial Politics of Enmity: Democratic Inclusion and Exclusion in South Korean Constitutional Justice (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016) pp 248.”, pp.484-486
Yukyong Choe, “History of Korean Law - Marie Seong-Hak Kim, ed., The Spirit of Korean Law: Korean Legal History in Context (Leiden: Brill, 2015) pp 272.”, pp.486-488
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.5 No.1 (May 2018)
LEGAL CONSCIOUSNESS IN ASIA
Lynette J. Chua, David M. Engel, “Legal Consciousness in Asia—Editors’ Note to Special Issue”, pp.1-4
Yoshitaka Wada, “Foreword”, pp.5-6
Qian Liu, “Legal Consciousness of the Leftover Woman: Law and Qing in Chinese Family Relations”, pp.7-27
Tu Phuong Nguyen, “Labour Law and (In)justice in Workers’ Letters in Vietnam”, pp.29-47
Arm Tungnirun, “Practising on the Moon: Globalization and Legal Consciousness of Foreign Corporate Lawyers in Myanmar”, pp.49-67
Lillian Hsiao-Ling Su, “Resistance, Evasion, and Inequality: Legal Consciousness of Intellectual Property Laws in Two Chinese Markets”, pp. 69-89
Kitpatchara Somanawat, “Constructing the Identity of the Thai Judge: Virtue, Status, and Power”, pp.91-110
Rahela Khorakiwala, “Legal Consciousness as Viewed through the Judicial Iconography of the Madras High Court”, pp.111-133
RESEARCH ARTICLE
Daniel H. Foote, “The Advent of Lawyers in Japanese Government”, pp.135-173
Patricia Goedde, “Human Rights Diffusion in North Korea: The Impact of Transnational Legal Mobilization”, pp.175-203
BOOK REVIEW
Daniel H. Foote, “Legal Scholarship in Japan - Keiichi Ageishi, Hiroshi Ōtsuka, Katsuhiro Musashi, & Mari Hirayama, eds., The Legal Process in Contemporary Japan: A Festschrift in Honor of Professor Setsuo Miyazawa’s 70th Birthday (Tokyo: Shinzansha, 2017) pp 832.”, pp.205-208
Paul Gewirtz, “Rule of Law in China - Ji Weidong, Building the Rule of Law in China: Procedure, Discourse and Hermeneutic Community, Vol. I (Abingdon/New York: Routledge, 2017) pp 202. Hardcover: £130.00. - Ji Weidong Building the Rule of Law in China: Ideas, Praxis and Institutional Design, Vol. II (Abingdon/New York: Routledge, 2017) pp 207.”, pp.208-213
Mark Fathi Massoud, “Legal Development in China - Jedidiah J. Kroncke, The Futility of Law and Development: China and the Dangers of Exporting American Law Oxford (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016) pp 358.”, pp.213-215
Shun-Nan Chiang, Yi-Chen Liu, “Social Movement in Taiwan and Hong Kong - Brian Christopher Jones, ed., Law and Politics of the Taiwan Sunflower and Hong Kong Umbrella Movements (New York, NY: Routledge, 2017) pp 242.”, pp.215-217
Noboru Yanase, “Constitutionalism in Southeast Asia - Marco Bünte and Björn Dressel , eds., Politics and Constitutions in Southeast Asia (London: Routledge, 2018) pp 374.”, pp. 217-219
2017 ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF THE ASIAN LAW AND SOCIETY ASSOCIATION
Hiroshi Fukurai, “Fourth World Approaches to International Law (FWAIL) and Asia's Indigenous Struggles and Quests for Recognition under International Law”, pp.221-231
KEYNOTE SPEECH AT 2017 ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF THE ASIAN LAW AND SOCIETY ASSOCIATION (ALSA)
Terence C. Halliday, “Legal Freedoms: Struggle in the Theory of Legal Change in Asia”, pp.233-246
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.5 No.2 (November 2018)
LAW AND DEVELOPMENT IN ASIA
Jan Michiel Otto, “Law and Development in Asia—Editor’s Note to Special Issue”, pp.249-250
Andrew Harding, “Multi-Level, Recursive Law and Development: Singapore’s Legal Role in ASEAN”, pp.251-269
Teilee Kuong, “Legal Assistance in the Japanese ODA: The Spark of a New Era”, pp.271-287
Siavash Rahbari, “From Normative Pluralism to a Unified Legal System in Afghanistan?”, pp.289-314
Mimi Zou, “Economic Development and the “Social Rights Hypothesis”: Regulating Labour Standards in China”, pp.315-331
Zhong Zhang, “Law and Economic Growth in China: A Case-Study of the Stock Market”, pp.333-357
RESEARCH ARTICLE
David T. Johnson, Jon Fernquest, “Governing through Killing: The War on Drugs in the Philippines”, pp.359-390
Won Kyung Chang, “Old Wine in New Wineskins? A Trial of Restorative Justice in a Korean Criminal Court”, pp.391-411
Wayne Palmer, Antje Missbach, “Judicial Discretion and the Minimum Statutory Sentence for Migrant Smuggling through Indonesia”, pp.413-431
Benjamin L. Read, Ethan Michelson, “Village Dispute Mediation in China, 2002–10: An Enduring Institution amid Rural Change”, pp.433-452
Mies Grijns, Hoko Horii, “Child Marriage in a Village in West Java (Indonesia): Compromises between Legal Obligations and Religious Concerns”, pp.453-466
BOOK REVIEW
Sida Liu, “Property Law and Property Rights in China - Shitong Qiao, Chinese Small Property: The Co-Evolution of Law and Social Norms (New York/Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017) pp 230.”, pp.467-468
Eric Feldman, “Court Mediation - Shahla Ali, Court Mediation Reform: Efficiency, Confidence, and Perceptions of Justice (Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2018) pp 298.”, pp.468-471
Hiroshi Fukurai, “Oxymoronic Applications of Neo-Institutional Economic Models - Frank K. Upham, The Great Property Fallacy: Theory, Reality, and Growth in Developing Countries (New York/Cambridge University Press, 2017) pp 160.”, pp. 471-474
Nelly Stratieva, “Capitalist Economic Development - Sung-Hee Jwa, A General Theory of Economic Development: Towards a Capitalist Manifesto (Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2017) pp 232.”, pp.474-477
Nur Atiqah Tang Abdullah, “Islam in China - Matthew S. Erie, China and Islam: The Prophet, the Party, and Law (New York/Cambridge University Press, 2016) pp 472.”, pp.477-479
Laura Harrison, “Comparisons of the Rule of Law of China with the West - Katrin Blasek, Rule of Law in China: A Comparative Approach (New York: Springer, 2015) pp 89.”, pp.480-482
Min Lin, “Oxymora, Cognition, and Synaesthesia of Legal Language - Rostam J. Neuwirth, Law in the Time of Oxymora: A Synaesthesia of Language, Logic and Law (New York: Routledge, 2018) pp 268.”, pp.482-484
BOOK DISCUSSION
"Book Discussion - Nick Cheesman, Opposing the Rule of Law: How Myanmar’s Courts Make Law and Order(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015) pp 338.", pp.485-498
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.6 No.1 (May 2019)
THE IDEOLOGY AND INSTITUTIONS OF CHINA'S POLITICAL-LEGAL SYSTEM
Juan Wang, Sida Liu, “Ordering Power under the Party: A Relational Approach to Law and Politics in China”, pp.1-18
Ling Li, “Political-Legal Order and the Curious Double Character of China’s Courts”, pp.19-39
Delia Lin, Susan Trevaskes, “Creating a Virtuous Leviathan: The Party, Law, and Socialist Core Values”, pp.41-66
RESEARCH ARTICLE
Simon Butt, “Judicial Reasoning and Review in the Indonesian Supreme Court”, pp.67-97
S M Atia Maznin, Shawkat Alam, “Judicial Remedies for Forced Slum Evictions in Bangladesh: An Analysis of the Structural Injunction” pp.99-129
Yanrong Zhao, “The Way to Understand the Nature and Extent of Judicial Independence in China”, pp.131-157
Thi Quang Hong Tran, “The Choice of Norms in Courtroom Adjudication in Vietnam: In Search of Legitimacy in a Socialist Regulatory Context”, pp.159-179
Mong-Hwa Chin, “Lay Participation in Taiwan: Observations from Mock Trials”, pp.181-207
BOOK REVIEW
Pieko Kage, “Lay Participation in Japan - Masahiro Fujita, Japanese Society and Lay Participation in Criminal Justice (Singapore: Springer, 2018) pp 282.”, pp.209-211
Luke Nottage, “Lay Participation in Japan, Korea, Taiwan, and Spain - Rieko Kage, Who Judges? Designing Jury Systems in Japan, East Asia and Europe (Cambridge: University Press, 2017) pp 264.”, pp.211-216
Kyle Galindez, “Social Movements and Civil Governance in Hong Kong - Michael H. K. Ng & John D. Wong, Civil Unrest and Governance in Hong Kong: Law and Order from Historical and Cultural Perspectives (New York, NY: Routledge, 2017) pp 230.”, pp.216-218
Xiaoyu Yuan, “Community Sanctions and Disciplinary Governance in China - Qi Chen, Governance, Social Control and Legal Reform in China: Community Sanctions and Measures (Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018) pp 269.”, pp.219-220
Peter Grabosky, “Crime and Criminal Justice in Japan - Jianhong Liu & Setsuo Miyazawa, eds., Crime and Justice in Contemporary Japan (Cham: Springer, 2018) pp 352 .”, pp.221-223
Sang Yop Kang, “Corporate Governance in Asia - Dan W. Puchniak, Harald Baum, & Luke Nottage, eds., Independent Directors in Asia: A Historical, Contextual and Comparative Approach (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017) pp 634.”, pp.223-225
Amy Huey-Ling Shee, “Theory on the Relational Normativity of International Law (TORNIL) - Matthias Vanhullebusch, Global Governance, Conflict and China (Boston: Brill Nijhoff, 2018) pp 476 .”, pp.226-228
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.7 No.1 (February 2020)
The Decoupling of the Nation and the State
Hiroshi. FUKURAI, “The Decoupling of the Nation and the State: Constitutionalizing Transnational Nationhood, Cross-Border Connectivity, Diaspora, and ‘National’ Identity-Affiliation in Asia and Beyond” , pp. 1–4
Chulwoo. LEE, “Nation v. State: Constitutionalizing Transnational Nationhood, Creating Ethnizens, and Engaging with Kin-Foreigners in Europe and Asia”, pp. 5–38
Hiroshi. FUKURAI, “The State Constitution v. the National Constitution: Original Nations’ ‘Sovereignty-Building’ Projects in Asia, North America, and Beyond” , pp. 39–60
Hee-Moon JO, “Constitutionalizing Trans-Border Nationhood: From Latin American Perspectives” , pp. 61–84
Research Article
Gitanjali Nain GILL, “Mapping the Power Struggles of the National Green Tribunal of India: The Rise and Fall?”, pp. 85–126
Li KEGE, “Do Birds of a Feather Flock Together? Rights Protection (Weiquan) Lawyering in China” , pp. 127–157
Stacey STEELE, Carol LAWSON, Mari HIRAYAMA, David T. JOHNSON, “Lay Participation in Japanese Criminal Justice: Prosecution Review Commissions, the Lay-Judge System, and Penal Institution Visiting Committees” , pp. 159–189
Book Review
Jonathan LILJEBLAD, “Recognizing the Value of Constitutional Origins - Kevin Y. L. Tan and Ngoc Son Bui, eds., Constitutional Foundings in Southeast Asia (New York: Hart Publishing, 2019) pp 352.”, pp. 191–196
Nick CHEESMAN, “Historical Conditions, Constitutionalism, and Popular Support for Democracy in Myanmar - Roman David and Ian Holliday, Liberalism and Democracy in Myanmar (New York: Oxford University Press, 2018) pp 250. ”, pp. 196–199
Ric POWELL, “Sociopolitical Origins and Legal Outcomes of Official Multilingualism - Janny H. C. Leung, Shallow Equality and Symbolic Jurisprudence in Multilingual Legal Orders (New York: Oxford University Press: Oxford Studies in Language and Law, 2019) pp 320. ”, pp. 199–203
Correction
Aya YAMAGUCHI, “How Do Japanese Elderly People Access Legal Services? An Analysis of Advice-seeking Behaviour – CORRIGENDUM” , pp. 205–205
Link:https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/asian-journal-of-law-and-society/issue/8B1D2694C1353159FE15B605B09DDB6B
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.7 No.2 (June 2020)
Sex Work in Asia
Lynette J. CHUA, “Foreword” , pp. 207–208
Aki KUROSAWA, “Beyond ‘Sex Work’: Japanese Night Work and ‘Shakai-Keiken’” , pp. 209–230
Chilh-Chieh (Carol) LIN, Fand-Yi SU, and Ping.-Hsuan CHUNG, “Policing and Regulating Commercial Sex in Taiwan: A Review from Gender, Culture and Legal Perspectives” , pp. 231–263
Masako TANAKA, “Advocating Sex Workers’ Rights by Identity-Based Associations in Nepal” , pp. 265–274
Legal Risk Society in East Asia
Kang YUAN and Duoqi XU, “Legal Governance on Fintech Risks: Effects and Lessons from China” , pp. 275–304
Donggen XU and Dawei XU, “Concealed Risks of FinTech and Goal-Oriented Responsive Regulation: China’s Background and Global Perspective” , pp. 305–324
Robin Hui HUANG, Cynthia Sze Wai CHEUNG, and Christine Meng Lu WANG, “The Risks of Mobile Payment and Regulatory Responses: A Hong Kong Perspective” , pp. 325–343
Jie (Jeanne) HUANG, “Internet (Un)Immunity: Where Does China Stand?” , pp. 345–368
Qiaoling HE, “The Limits to Law: How Intellectual Properties Are Used and Protected in Chinese Industries” , pp. 369–402
Link:https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/asian-journal-of-law-and-society/issue/A72C2A4C7A549C7D23FF7B59BA95139E
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.7 No.3 (October 2020)
Law and Artificial Intelligence in Asia
Weidong JI, “Editorial”, pp. 403–408
Håkan HYDÉN, “AI, Norms, Big Data, and the Law”, pp. 409–436
Stefan LARSSON, “On the Governance of Artificial Intelligence through Ethics Guidelines” ,pp. 437–451
Pedro RUBIM BORGES FORTES, “Paths to Digital Justice: Judicial Robots, Algorithmic Decision-Making, and Due Process”, pp. 453–469
Katsumi NITTA and Ken SATOH, “AI Applications to the Law Domain in Japan” , pp. 471–494
Weimin ZUO and Chanyuan WANG, “Judicial Big Data and Big-Data-Based Legal Research in China” ,pp. 495–514
Weidong JI, “The Change of Judicial Power in China in the Era of Artificial Intelligence”, pp. 515–530
Yaohui JIN and Hao HE, “An Artificial-Intelligence-Based Semantic Assist Framework for Judicial Trials”, pp. 531–540
Li YANG, Junlin YI, and Hui PENG, “Big-Data Measurement-Model Research about Judges’ Actual Workload in China”, pp. 541–560
George G. ZHENG, “China’s Grand Design of People’s Smart Courts”, pp. 561–582
Book Review
Xiaochen LIANG, “Orphan Relief in China - Anna High, Non-Governmental Orphan Relief in China: Law, Policy, and Practice (New York: Routledge, 2019) pp 174.”, pp. 583–585
Yuichiro TSUJI, “Japan’s Legal Landscape and Culture - Colin P. A. Jones, Obey, Not Know: Essays on Japanese Law and Society (Kumamoto: Kurodahan Press, 2019) pp 450.”, pp. 585–587
Daniel PASCOE, “Judicial and Legal Transformation in Indonesia - Melissa Crouch , The Politics of Court Reform: Judicial Change and Legal Culture in Indonesia (New York and Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019) pp 446.”,pp.587-591
Book Discussion
“Commentary by David Engel, State University of New York”, pp. 593–596
“Commentary by Amy Barrow, Macquarie University”, pp. 596–599
“Commentary by Hsiao-Tan Wang, National Chengchi University”, pp. 599–602
“Commentary by Nick Cheesman, Australian National University”, pp. 602–605
Research Article
Lynette J. CHUA, “Response to Commentaries”, pp. 607–612
2019 Annual Conference of the Asian Law and Society Association
Hiroshi FUKURAI, “President’s Farewell Message: The Anthropocene, Earth Jurisprudence, and the Rights of Nature”, pp. 613–622
Link:https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/asian-journal-of-law-and-society/issue/D2C4955B08376E4BCCD217CD93F5F476
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.8 No.1 (February 2021)
Religious Nationalism and Religious Freedom in Asia
Jaclyn Neo and Brett G. Scharffs, “Religious Nationalism and Religious Freedom in Asia: Mapping Regional Trends in a Global Phenomenon”, pp. 1–18
Gilad Abiri, “Intimate Rivals: The Freedom of Religious Nationalism”, pp. 19–43
Peter van der Veer, “Minority Rights and Hindu Nationalism in India”, pp. 44–55
Jeffrey A. Redding, “A Secular Failure: Sectarianism and Communalism in Shayara Bano v. Union of India”, pp. 56–71
Khemthong Tonsakulrungruang, “The Revival of Buddhist Nationalism in Thailand and Its Adverse Impact on Religious Freedom”, pp. 72–87
Deasy Simandjuntak, “Disciplining the Accepted and Amputating the Deviants: Religious Nationalism and Segregated Citizenship in Indonesia”, pp. 88–107
Nyi Nyi Kyaw, “The Excuse of (Il)legality in Discriminating and Persecuting Religious Minorities: Anti-Mosque Legal Violence in Myanmar”,pp. 108–131
Dignity in East Asian Law and Society
Setsuo Miyazawa, “Editorial of ‘Dignity in East Asian Law and Society’”, pp. 132–133
Terence C. Halliday and Sida Liu, “Dignity Discourses in Struggles for Basic Legal Freedoms in China”, pp. 134–150
Qian Liu, “Relational Dignity, State Law, and Chinese Leftover Women’s Choices in Marriage and Childbearing”, pp. 151–167
Amy Huey-Ling Shee, “Construction of Socio-Legal Dignity for Old Persons: Narrative Perspectives from Taiwan”, pp. 168–180
Book Review
Sayak Dutta and Nandita Saikia, “Population policy and contraceptive choice - Population, Fertility and Family Planning: Contraceptive Method Mix in Asian Countries By Aditi KUNDU & Bhaswati DAS New Delhi: Rawat Publications, 2019. 248 pp.”, pp. 181–183
Colin P. A. Jones, “Civil juries in Okinawa’s past and Japan’s future - Civil Jury Trials Could Change Japan [Minji Baishin Saiban Ga Nihon Wo Kaeru] By Osamu NIIKURA, Satoru SHINOMIYA, Hiroshi FUKURAI, & Takayuki II Tokyo: Nihon Hyōronsha, 2020. 288 pp.”, pp. 183–191
Mehran Idris Khan, “Environmental governance in Asia - Transboundary Environmental Governance in Asia: Practice and Prospects with the UNECE Agreements By Simon Marsden & Elizabeth Brandon Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2015. 384 pp.”, pp. 191–194
Robin Gabriel, “International Law for Freedom - Justice for Some: Law and the Question of Palestine By Noura ERAKAT Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2019. 352 pp.”, pp. 194–197
���Link:https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/asian-journal-of-law-and-society/issue/0F7B301106EB70E0B75DF5511DA44A17
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.8 No.2 (June 2021)
Judging and Judgment in Contemporary Asia
David M. Engel, “Judging and Judgment in Contemporary Asia: Editor’s Introduction to this Special Issue”, pp. 199–205
Benjamin Schonthal, “Judging in the Buddha’s Court: A Buddhist Judicial System in Contemporary Asia”, pp. 206–225
Deepa Das Acevedo, “From Mythic Saviours to #MeToo at the Indian Supreme Court”, pp. 226–254
Kwai Hand Ng and Peter C. H. Chan, “‘What Gets Measured Gets Done’: Metric Fixation and China’s Experiment in Quantified Judging”, pp. 255–281
Simon Butt, “What Makes a Good Judge? Perspectives from Indonesia”, pp. 282–323
Duncan McCargo, “Punitive Processes? Judging in Thai Lower Criminal Courts”, pp. 324–347
Legal transplants in contemporary Asia
Setsuo Miyazawa, “Legal transplants in contemporary Asia: Foreword”, pp. 348–350
Aziz Ismatov, “Do Hybrid Legal Systems Matter in Foreign Legal-Aid Programmes? Some Philosophical Aspects of Legal Aid in Uzbekistan as Provided by the Donor States”, pp. 351–371
Matthew S. Erie, Do Hai Ha, “Law and Development Minus Legal Transplants: The Example of China in Vietnam”, pp. 372–401
Yuka Kaneko, “Land-Law Reforms in Vietnam and Myanmar: ‘Legal Transplant’ Viewed from Asian Recipients”, pp. 402–428
Link:https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/asian-journal-of-law-and-society/issue/E6FD4623C7B7A57F100E6CFBC04F306B
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.8 No.3 (October 2021)
Refugees in Indonesia
Enny Soeprapto, “Foreword”, pp. 429–430
Susan Kneebone, Antje Missbach, Balawyn Jones, “The False Promise of Presidential Regulation No. 125 of 2016?”, pp. 431–450
Mahardhika Sjamsoe’oed Sadjad, “What Are Refugees Represented to Be? A Frame Analysis of the Presidential Regulation No. 125 of 2016 Concerning the Treatment of Refugees ‘from Abroad’” , pp. 451–466
I Nyoman Suyatna, I Made Budi Arsika, Ni Gusti Ayu Dyah Satyawati, Rohaida Nordin, and Balawyn Jones, “Assessment of the Responsibility of Local Governments in Indonesia for the Management of Refugee Care”, pp. 467–489
Antje Missbach and Yunizar Adiputera, “The Role of Local Governments in Accommodating Refugees in Indonesia: Investigating Best-Case and Worst-Case Scenarios”, pp. 490–506
Andrey Damaledo, “Identity Politics and Refugee Policies in Kupang, Eastern Indonesia: A Politico-Historical Perspective”, pp. 507–520
Dio Herdiawan Tobing, “Connecting the Obligation Gap: Indonesia’s Non-Refoulement Responsibility Beyond the 1951 Refugee Convention”, pp. 521–535
Bilal Dewansyah and Ratu Durotun Nafisah, “The Constitutional Right to Asylum and Humanitarianism in Indonesian Law: ‘Foreign Refugees’ and PR 125/2016”, pp. 536–557
Victor Imanuel W. Nalle, “The Politics of Intolerant Laws against Adherents of Indigenous Beliefs or Aliran Kepercayaan in Indonesia”, pp. 558–576
Book Review
Azirah Hashim, “Malaysia’s language shift and post-colonial common law - Language Choice in Postcolonial Law: Lessons from Malaysia’s Bilingual Legal System By Richard POWELL Singapore: Springer, 2021. 324 pp.”pp. 577–579
Leon Wolff, “Cross-border dispute resolutions in Asia and beyond - New Frontiers in Asia-Pacific International Arbitration and Dispute Resolution By Luke Nottage, Shahla ALI, Bruno JETIN, & Nobumichi TERAMURA, eds. Alphen aan den Rijn: Kluwer Law International BV, 2020. 370 pp.”, pp. 579–582
Xiaochen Liang, “China’s criminal justice institutions - Construction of Guilt: An Empirical Account of Routine Chinese Injustice By Yu MOU Oxford, Hart Publishing, 2020. 280 pp.”, pp. 582–584
ink:https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/asian-journal-of-law-and-society/issue/A10CC5513DF96888B3AAD154706EE360
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.9 No.1(February 2022)
Research Article
Dinesha Samararatne, “Resilience through Synergy? The Legal Complex in Sri Lanka’s Constitutional Crisis”, pp. 1–25
Björn Dressel, Tomoo Inoue, “Politics and the Federal Court of Malaysia, 1960–2018: An Empirical Investigation”, pp. 26–58
Ummey Tahura, “Role of Clients, Lawyers, Judges, and Institutions in Hiking Litigation Costs in Bangladesh: An Empirical Study”, pp. 59–80
Shunsuke Kyo, “A Quantitative Analysis of Legislation with Harsher Punishment in Japan”, pp. 81–107
Lantian Li, “Legitimation of Illegality in Authoritarian States: The Case of Transnational Illegal Drug Brokerage in China”, pp. 108–132
Tobias Smith , Daniel Pascoe, “Suspended Execution beyond China’s Borders”, pp. 133–167
Book Review
Piya Pangsapa, “Extra-Territorial Law of Deaths and Injuries in Semi-Colonial Siam - Sovereign Necropolis: The Politics of Death in Semi-Colonial Siam. By Trais Pearson. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2020. xii + 252 pp.”, pp. 168–170
Jonathan Van Harmelen, “Legal History of Anti-Asian Racism in America - The Rise and Fall of America’s Concentration Camp Law: Civil Liberties Debates from the Internment to McCarthyism and the Radical 1960s. By Masumi IZUMI. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2019. 274 pp.” pp. 170–172
Archie Zariski, “The State and the Corporation as Legal Fictions: Original Nation and Dissent - Original Nation Approaches to Inter-National Law: The Quest for the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and Nature in the Age of Anthropocene. By Hiroshi FUKURAI & Richard KROOTH. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2021. xxii + 370 pp.”, pp. 172–175
Link:https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/asian-journal-of-law-and-society/issue/48BC15150A45951B813E83665100E58F
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.9 No.2(June 2022)
The Anthropocene and the Law in Asia
Hiroshi Fukurai, “The Prevention of the Sixth Mass Extinction: Socio-Legal Responses to Mitigate the Anthropogenic Crises in Asia and Beyond”, pp. 177–186
Lieselotte Viaene, “Can Rights of Nature Save Us from the Anthropocene Catastrophe? Some Critical Reflections from the Field”, pp. 187–206
Jonathan Liljeblad, “Integrating the Anthropocene in Legal Education: Considerations for Asia”, pp. 207–227
Peter D. Rush, “A Sense of Place with Landmark Judgments: Anthropogenic Justice, Wildlife Extinction, and Climate Change”, pp. 228–254
Research Article
Ninia Reza, Jean Jacques Du Plessis, “The Garment Industry in Bangladesh, Corporate Social Responsibility of Multinational Corporations, and The Impact of COVID-19”, pp. 255–285
Alvin Hoi-Chun Hung, “How Has the Legal Consciousness of Chinese Enterprise Managers Transformed since 1949? A Study of Chinese Enterprises under Socialism”, pp. 286–315
Takeshi Hamano, “Legislation as a Social Process: Japanese Family Law and the Drafting of the Bill on the Hague Child Abduction Convention”, pp. 316–335
Book Review
Noboru Yanase, “A Novel Perspective on the Contributions of Legal Outsiders in Japanese Criminal Justice (Won an Honorary Mention by the 2020 ALSA Distinguished Book Award Committee) - Lay and Expert Contributions to Japanese Criminal Justice. By Erik Herber. London: Routledge, 2019. 206 pp.”, pp. 336–338
Hiro N. Aragaki, “Civil Justice Reform in Chinese Law and Society - Dispute Resolution in China: Litigation, Arbitration, Mediation, and Their Interactions. By London/New York: Routledge, 2021. 288 pp.”, pp. 339–341
Yi Zhao, “Rule of Law with Chinese Characteristics - Law and Society in China. By Vai lo Lo. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2020. 235 pp.”, pp. 341–344
Link:https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/asian-journal-of-law-and-society/issue/A36D575510E81F68C113C2A333B6E798
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.9 No.3 (October 2022)
Monarchy and Society in Asia
Maartjie De Visser, Andrew Harding, “Monarchical Constitutional Guardianship and Legal Métissage in Asia”, pp. 345–362
Eugénie Mérieau, “A Constitutional Ethnography of Monarchy: Buddhist Kingship, ‘Granted Constitutionalism,’ and Royal State Ceremonies in Thailand”, pp. 363–381
Ben Lawrence, “The Symbolic Safeguard: Royal Absence in Cambodia’s Constitutional Monarchy”, pp. 382–398
Andrew Harding, Harshan Kumarasingham, “The Malay Monarchies in Constitutional and Social Conception”, pp. 399–417
Dominik M. Müller, “Beyond the Sharia State: Public Celebrations and Everyday State-Making in the Malay Islamic Monarchy of Brunei Darussalam”, pp. 418–439
Nima Dorji, “The Progressive Monarchy of Bhutan: A Not-So-Absolute Monarchy to a Democratic Constitutional Monarchy”, pp. 440–459
Book Review
Frank W. Munger, “Thailand’s Monarchy and Constitutional History - Constitutional Bricolage: Thailand’s Sacred Monarchy vs. the Rule of Law. By Eugenie Mérieau. London: Hart Publishing, 2021, 328 pp.”, pp. 460–462
Noboru Yanase, “History and Meaning of Establishing the Constitutions of North-East Asian States - Constitutional Foundings in Northeast Asia. Edited by Kevin Y. L. Tan and Michael Ng. Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2022. 256 pp.”, pp. 462–465
Research Article
Enshen Li, “Policing Terrorism in the Chinese Community: A Critical Analysis”, pp. 466–499
BrendanClift, “Mandating Symbolic Patriotism: China’s Flag and Anthem in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region”, pp. 500–518
Book Discussion
Hiroshi Fukurai, “Book Discussion: Winner, 2020 Distinguished Book Award, Asian Law and Society Association (ALSA), Anna High, Non-Governmental Orphan Relief in China: Law, Policy, and Practice (Routledge, 2019): Introduction by Hiroshi Fukurai”, pp. 519–522
Zheng Xu and Shahla Ali, “Book Discussion: Non-Governmental Orphan Relief in China: Law, Policy and Practice, by Anna High: Comments by Zheng Xu and Shahla Ali”, pp. 523–525
Anna High, “Book Discussion: Response to Comments by Anna High”, pp. 526–530
Link:https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/asian-journal-of-law-and-society/issue/491134E4A67C9AE504CAE36C1A68370F
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.10 No.1 (February 2023)
Research Article
Hiroshi Fukurai, Robin Gabriel, and Xiaochen Liang, “The COVID-19 crisis, Herd Immunity, and ‘Vaccine Apartheid’ in the Age of Anthropocene”, pp. 1–10
Piya Pangsapa, “Vaccine Policy Failure: Explaining Thailand’s Unsuccessful Containment of COVID-19 in the Third Wave”, pp. 11–27
RobinGabriel, “Coloniality and Necropolitics in the Age of COVID-19: The Question of Palestine”, pp. 28–45
Robert B. Leflar, “Trust, Democracy, and Hygiene Theatre: Taiwan’s Evasion of the Pandemic”, pp. 46–56
Kunihiko Yoshida, “A Comparative Study of Socio-Legal Scenarios in the COVID-19 Pandemic: Focusing on Asian Responses”, pp. 57–69
Hrishika Jain, “Making Love Legible: Queering Indian Legal Conceptions of ‘Family’” , pp. 70–106
Yu-Hsien Sung, Yi-Ching Hsu, and Chin-Shou Wang, “A Court as a Means of Legislative Position Avoidance: Evidence from the Same-Sex Marriage Decision in Taiwan”, pp. 107–130
Hsiao-Tan Wang, “Being One of Us: The Role of Mutual Recognition and Emotion in Shaping Legal Consciousness in a Taiwanese Neighbourhood Dispute”, pp. 131–146
Book Review
Sida Liu, “Socio-Legal Ethnography of Divorce Litigation in China - Marriage Unbound: State Law, Power, and Inequality in Contemporary China. By Ke Li. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2022. 344 pp.”, pp. 147–149
Sandra Michelle Röseler, “The Faces of Modern Chinese Legal Identity - Legal Scholars and Scholarship in the People’s Republic of China: The First Generation, 1949–1992. By Nongji Zhang. Cambridge, MA and London: Harvard University Asia Center, 2022. 254 pp.”, pp. 149–152
Jack Fong, “Dynamics and Themes of Fourth World Advocacies and Activisms - Indigenous Identity, Human Rights, and the Environment in Myanmar. By Jonathan Liljeblad. New York: Routledge, 2022. 140 pp.”, pp. 152–155
Chulwoo Lee, “‘Ground-Up’ Legal Mobilization in South Korea - Rights Claiming in South Korea. Edited by Celeste L. Arrington & Patricia Goedde. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021, 300 pp.”, pp. 155–159
Justine Guichard, “History of South Korea’s Courts and Constitutional Transitions - Constitutional Transition and the Travail of Judges: The Courts of South Korea. By Marie Seong-Hak Kim. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2019. 362 pp.”, pp. 159–161
Link:https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/asian-journal-of-law-and-society/issue/4FA0E1308E45331F44D46881FC59748D
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.10 No.2 (June 2023)
Editorial
Jingzhou Tao, “Editorial”, pp. 163–164
Research Article
Hiroyuki Tezuka, Mihiro Koeda, “Exploring the future of commercial dispute resolution in Asia: Accelerating efficiency and effectiveness in ADR”, pp. 165–182
Alvin Yeo, Hock Keng Chan, “Asian Courts in Times of COVID: Virtualization and the New Normal”, pp. 183–203
Cheng-Yee Khong, “Monetizing Legal Assets: Social and Economic Benefits of Third-Party Dispute Finance in Asia”, pp. 204–218
Faris Elias Nasrallah, “Arbitration in Syria: Navigating Postwar Disputes”, pp. 219–240
Kai-Shen Huang, “Internationalization as a Leap of Faith: Arbitration Reforms in China and the Challenges of Implementation”, pp. 241–271
Andrew Johnston, Kohei Miyamoto, “Independent Directors and Team Production in Japanese Corporate Governance”, pp. 272–305
A. Grebieniow, “Principles of Asian Contract Law at the Crossroads of Standardization and Legal Pluralism”, pp. 306–338
Book Review
Jie (Jeanne) Huang, “Multi-Tier Dispute Resolution (MDR) - Multi-Tier Approaches to the Resolution of International Disputes: A Global and Comparative Study. Edited by Anselmo Reyes and Weixia Gu. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2022. 400 pp.”, pp. 339–341
Alexander Loke, “Venture capital law in China - Venture Capital Law in China. By Lin Lin. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021. 340 pp.”, pp. 341–342
Li Guo, “Fintech regulation in China - Fintech Regulation in China: Principles, Policies and Practices. By Robin Hui Huang . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021. 314 pp.”, pp. 343–345
Link:https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/asian-journal-of-law-and-society/issue/7AC5EB286C86163198EC0A54790A9EF2
Asian Journal of Law and Society Vol.10 No.3 (October 2023)
Research Article
Nafacy Choudhury, “The Regulation of Informal Trade Credit (Ograyi) in Afghanistan”, pp. 347–375
David Tan, “Demystifying the proliferation of online peer-to-peer lending in Indonesia: Decoding fintech as a regulatory challenge”, pp. 376–400
Nicolas Lainez , Jodi Gardner, “Algorithmic Credit Scoring in Vietnam: A Legal Proposal for Maximizing Benefits and Minimizing Risks”, pp. 401–432
Duoqi Xu, C. John Taylor, Yuanda Ren, “Wait-and-See or Whack-a-Mole: What Is the Best Way to Regulate Fintech in China?”, pp. 433–462
Straton Papagianneas, “Automating Intervention in Chinese Justice: Smart Courts and Supervision Reform”, pp. 463–489
Ling Li, “Order of Power in China’s Courts”, pp. 490–515
Salwa Tabassum Hoque, “Neocolonial Digitality: Analyzing Digital Legal Databases Using Legal Pluralism”, pp. 516–549
Book Review
Yi-Li Lee, “The Transformative Evolution of Human Dignity in Asia’s Modern State-Building Projects - Human Dignity in Asia: Dialogue Between Law and Culture. Edited by Jimmy Chia-Shin Hsu. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2022. 386 pp.”, pp. 550–552
Rustam M. Khalafyan, Svetlana S. Racheva, “SCO and New Horizons for the Multi-Polar World - The Shanghai Cooperation Organization: Exploring New Horizons. By Sergey Marochkin and Yury Bezborodov (eds.), New York: Routledge, 2022. 262 pp.”, pp. 552–554
Rawin Leelapatana, “The Constitution and Religion - Buddhism and Comparative Constitutional Law. By Tom Ginsburg & Benjamin Schonthal. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2023. 300 pp.”, pp. 555–557
Link:https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/asian-journal-of-law-and-society/issue/0EA5D15259113D3A23906A0F0790736F