“…In the early 19th century, Norway nationalized the entire legal profession for several decades, making lawyers' services available to all citizens without charge (Johnsen, 1988). During the interwar years, governments in both Japan and Germany sought to reduce the number of private practitioners and to restrain their actions in order to suppress challenges to Fascist hegemony (Blankenburg & Schultz, 1988;Haley, 1982;Reifner, 1982;Rokumoto, 1988). Third world countries like Mozambique have made all lawyers public employees in order to facilitate state planning, equalize access to justice, and reduce the perceived costs of legalism and litigiousness (Isaacman & Isaacman, 1982).…”
A Continuation Order Plan is available for this series. A continuation order will bring delivery of each new volume immediately upon publication. Volumes are billed only upon actual shipment. For further information please contact the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication DataNew dlrections jn ttle study of justice, law. and socIal control I prepared by the School of Justice STud1es, ArIzona State University.Tempe. A"'12cna.p. em. --(Critical lssues in social justice)Includes blbllographical references.ISBN 978-1-4899-3610-3 ISBN 978-1-4899-3608-0 (eBook)
“…In the early 19th century, Norway nationalized the entire legal profession for several decades, making lawyers' services available to all citizens without charge (Johnsen, 1988). During the interwar years, governments in both Japan and Germany sought to reduce the number of private practitioners and to restrain their actions in order to suppress challenges to Fascist hegemony (Blankenburg & Schultz, 1988;Haley, 1982;Reifner, 1982;Rokumoto, 1988). Third world countries like Mozambique have made all lawyers public employees in order to facilitate state planning, equalize access to justice, and reduce the perceived costs of legalism and litigiousness (Isaacman & Isaacman, 1982).…”
A Continuation Order Plan is available for this series. A continuation order will bring delivery of each new volume immediately upon publication. Volumes are billed only upon actual shipment. For further information please contact the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication DataNew dlrections jn ttle study of justice, law. and socIal control I prepared by the School of Justice STud1es, ArIzona State University.Tempe. A"'12cna.p. em. --(Critical lssues in social justice)Includes blbllographical references.ISBN 978-1-4899-3610-3 ISBN 978-1-4899-3608-0 (eBook)
“…Two other noteworthy essays discuss trends toward legalization and detegalization in Germany and Japan during the decades before fascism and World War II (Reifner, 1982;and Haley, 1982). There, too, conflicting lessons emerge: delegalization in Japan apparently ted to lack of support for and enforcement of important legal rights; in contrast, legalization in Germany, particularly the provision of legal assistance to workers, may have contributed to a dangerous complacency and dependency among the populace.…”
Section: The Politics O F Informal Justicementioning
Book reviews in this article:
Hein Kdtz and Reynald Ottenhof, eds., Les Conciliateurs, La Conciliation.
Jerold Auerbach, Justice Without Law.
Michard L. Abel, ed., The Politics of Informal Justice, Volume 2: Comparative Studies.
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