<i>‘Featuring eight learned contributions from a wide variety of academics, </i>Who Rules Japan?: Popular Participation in the Japanese Legal Process <i>is a seminal work of impressive scholarship that is very highly recommended as a critically important addition to professional, governmental, corporate, and academic library Japanese Studies reference collections and supplemental reading lists.’</i>
- The Midwest Book Review,
<i>‘The book takes a stimulating and fresh look at the classical question: Who rules Japan? Seven highly informative analyses explore to what extent the 2001 judicial reforms have already transformed the Japanese state and paved the way for Japan’s gradual shift from its (in)famous administrative governance model to a judicial state with the “rule of law” at its center and a broader participation of citizens in the various spheres of public life.’</i>
- Harald Baum, Max Planck Institute for Comparative and International Private Law, Germany,