When are Judges and Bureaucrats Left Independent? Theory and History from Imperial Japan, Postwar Japan, and the United States

CIRJE F-Series Pub Date : 2001-08-01 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.305900
E. Rasmusen, J. Ramseyer
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This is one chapter from the book, Judicial Independence: Economic Theory and Japanese Empirics, that Mark Ramseyer and Eric Rasmusen are writing. In preceding chapters we explain the institutions of modern Japan's judiciary and use regression analysis to test whether judges who rule in ways the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (the LDP) disliked were penalized in their careers. We find that they were for some kinds of cases-involving such things as the constitutionality of the military, injunctions against the national (but not local) government, reapportionment, and electioneering laws. They were not penalized for other kinds of cases-tax and criminal cases. Those results are drawn from our earlier published papers, reorganized and synthesized for the present book. This chapter does not draw on our published work. It asks why the degree and type of independence of judges in modern Japan is different from that of other civil servants. In particular, we compare judges in modern Japan, pre-war Japan, and the United States; and we compare judges with other kinds of public employees, asking why they are not elected and why they are not directly under the control of politicians.
法官和官僚什么时候能独立?日本帝国、战后日本和美国的理论和历史
这是Mark Ramseyer和Eric Rasmusen合著的《司法独立:经济理论和日本经验》一书中的一章。在前面的章节中,我们解释了现代日本的司法制度,并使用回归分析来检验以执政的自民党(LDP)不喜欢的方式进行统治的法官是否在其职业生涯中受到惩罚。我们发现,它们是针对某些类型的案件——涉及军队的合宪性、针对国家(而不是地方)政府的禁令、重新分配和选举法。他们没有因其他类型的案件——税务和刑事案件——受到处罚。这些结果是从我们早期发表的论文中得出的,为本书进行了重组和综合。本章没有引用我们已发表的著作。现代日本法官的独立程度和类型为何与其他公务员不同?我们特别比较了近代日本、战前日本和美国的法官;我们将法官与其他类型的公共雇员进行比较,问他们为什么不是选举产生的,为什么他们不直接受政治家的控制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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