1st Edition
Law and Development in Asia
Notes on Contributors. Acknowledgements. Introduction: Law and Development in the 21st Century David M. Trubek Part 1: Law and Development Orthodoxy: Asian Challenges 1. Law and Development Orthodoxies and The Northeast Asian Experience John K.M. Ohnesorge 2. The Resurgence of the Right to Development Muthucumaraswamy Sornarajah 3. Japanese Law and Asian Development Tom Ginsburg 4. The Success of Law and Development in China: Is China the Latest Asian Developmental State? Connie Carter 5. The Politics of Law and Development in Thailand: Seeking Rousseau, Finding Hobbes Andrew Harding 6. Law and Development, FDI and the Rule of Law in Post-Soviet Central Asia: The Case of Mongolia Sukhbaatar Sumiya Part 2: Special Topics: Institutions and Areas of Law 7. Echoes of Through the Looking Glass: Comparing Judicial Reforms in Singapore and India Arun K. Thiruvengadam and Michael Ewing-Chow 8. Japanese Long-Term Employment Caslav Pejovic 9. Non-Economic Criteria in the Formulation of the World Trade Regime: From Social Clause to CSR Shin-ichi Ago 10. China’s Antimonopoly Law and Recurrence to Standards Steven Van Uytsel 11. The Privatization of Investor-State Dispute Resolution Gerald Paul McAlinn 12. Thailand and Legal Development Lawan Thanadsillapakul. Index
Biography
Gerald Paul McAlinn is Professor of Law at Keio University Law School in Tokyo, Japan. His books include Japanese Business Law; Comparative Law: Law and the Legal Process in Japan; Introduction to American Law and The Business Guide to Japan.
Caslav Pejovic is Professor of Law at Kyushu University in Fukuoka, Japan. He has published papers in the Journal of Business Law, the Journal of Maritime Law and Commerce, and the Pace International Law Review.






