This powerful study suggests that strategic pragmatism has enabled Japan to use Western theories and doctrines more comprehensively and thoroughly than the West. The authors contend that Japan's success depends, in part, upon three factors: the ability to recognize a need for action; the ability to respond to such a need even under less than optimal technological conditions, cutting across theoretical and ideological lines; and the ability to adjust or correct action as soon as failure is recognized. By comparing Japan's policies and structure to patterns prevailing in major Western...
This powerful study suggests that strategic pragmatism has enabled Japan to use Western theories and doctrines more comprehensively and thoroughly ...
This book addresses two countervailing challenges to theory and policy in law and economics. The first is the rise of legal origins theory, which denies the comparative law view of convergence between common law and civil law by the assertion of an economic superiority of common law. The second is the series of economic crises in the very financial markets on which that assertion was based. Both trends unsettled certainties about the rule of law and institutional economics.
Meeting legal origins theory in its main areas of political science, sociology and economics, the book extends...
This book addresses two countervailing challenges to theory and policy in law and economics. The first is the rise of legal origins theory, which d...
Originally published in 1986, after a period of global changes and financial crisis in the majority of industrialised countries, this book explores how Japan s economy seemed to maintain its success. This study provides an overview of the Japanese case and the main schools of thought that arose from it by dealing with export-related issues such as reforms in foreign exchange and trade control laws and the internationalisation of Japan s financial markets as well as more domestic issues such as employment and wages. This title will be of interest to students of Asian Studies and Economics....
Originally published in 1986, after a period of global changes and financial crisis in the majority of industrialised countries, this book explores...
This book addresses two countervailing challenges to theory and policy in law and economics. The first is the rise of legal origins theory, which denies the comparative law view of convergence between common law and civil law by the assertion of an economic superiority of common law. The second is the series of economic crises in the very financial markets on which that assertion was based. Both trends unsettled certainties about the rule of law and institutional economics.
Meeting legal origins theory in its main areas of political science, sociology and economics, the book extends...
This book addresses two countervailing challenges to theory and policy in law and economics. The first is the rise of legal origins theory, which d...