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El. knyga: Law Reform in Developing and Transitional States

(University of Melbourne, Australia)

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Law reform in developing countries has become an increasingly topical subject in recent years. A critical issue is why so many law reform projects in developing economies are regarded by their sponsors and recipients as unsuccessful. This informative book:

  • examines examples of law reform projects in post-socialist and post-authoritarian states in Asia
  • identifies common problems
  • proposes analytical frameworks for understanding the problems identified.

Though parallels between Asian models and those in developing states elsewhere in the world are strong, the book has been developed to avoid suggestion that the issues covered are somehow peculiarly ‘Asian’- indeed, it is shown that cultural relativist approaches to Asia are unsustainable. This is an invaluable reference for those involved in the areas of development economics, Asian studies and comparative politics.

List of contributors
xiii
Acknowledgements xvii
Preface xix
Tim Lindsey
Glossary xxiii
PART I THEORETICAL APPROACHES
1(140)
1 Legal infrastructure and governance reform in post-crisis Asia: the case of Indonesia
3(39)
Tim Lindsey
2 Why law reform fails: Indonesia's anti-corruption reforms
42(23)
Howard Dick
3 What kind of legal system is necessary for economic development? The China puzzle
65(18)
Donald C. Clarke
4 The law reform Olympics: measuring the effects of law reform in transitional economies
83(23)
Veronica Taylor
5 Law reform in developing countries
106(35)
Gary Goodpaster
PART II CASE STUDIES
141(272)
6 Comparative law and legal transplants between socialist states: an historical perspective
143(16)
Penelope (Pip) Nicholson
7 The collapse of the World Bank's judicial reform project in Peru
159(21)
Jeffrey A. Clark
Patricia Armstrong
Robert O. Varenik
8 Legal education reform - the forgotten intervention? Assessing the legal retraining model in transitional economies
180(16)
Stewart Fenwick
9 The dynamics and politics of legal reform in China: induction, deduction and, above all, pragmatism
196(40)
Randall Peerenboom
10 State and law reform in Indonesia
236(32)
Daniel S. Lev
11 Like a fish needs a bicycle: public law theory, civil society and governance reform in Indonesia
268(23)
David Linnan
12 Competition laws for Asian transnational economies: adaption to local legal cultures in Vietnam and Indonesia
291(26)
William A.W. Neilson
13 Labour law reform in Namibia: transplant or implant?
317(27)
Colin Fenwick
14 Global trajectories of tax reform: the discourse of tax reform in developing and transitional countries
344(47)
Miranda Stewart
15 Intellectual property, civil law and the failure of law in Indonesia: can criminal enforcement of economic law work in developing countries?
391(22)
Simon Butt
Tim Lindsey
Index 413
Tim Lindsey is Professor of Asian Law, Director of the Asian Law Centre and Deputy Director of the Centre for the Study of Contemporary Islam at the University of Melbourne, Australia.