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Japanese law was historically heavily influenced by Chinese law, but has been largely based on the civil law of Germany since the late 19th century.

1 Statutory law

Laws originate in the Diet of Japan with the rubber-stamp approval of the Emperor. Under the current constitution, the Emperor may not veto or otherwise refuse to approve a law passed by Diet.

1.1 Six Codes

The main body of Japanese statutory law is a collection called the Six Codes (六法 ropp):

  1. the Civil Code of Japan (民法 Minp, 1896) in five volumes (General Provisions, Rights, Claims, Families, and Inheritance)
  2. the Commercial Code of Japan (商法 Shh, 1899)
  3. the Criminal Code of Japan (刑法 Keih, 1907)
  4. the Constitution of Japan (日本国憲法 Nippon-koku-kemp, 1946)
  5. the Criminal Procedure Code of Japan (刑事訴訟法 Keiji-sosh-h, 1948)
  6. the Civil Procedure Code of Japan (民事訴訟法 Minji-sosh-h, 1996)

1.2 Contemporary laws

1.3 Historical laws

2 Administrative law

Japanese government agencies have very limited regulatory power in the absence of Diet legislation. However, when dealing with businesses, they often issue "directions," "requests," "warnings," "encouragements," and "suggestions," with the implication that noncompliant parties will be obstructed by the agency in the future by receiving poorer quotas or less government aid. The Cold War-era Ministry of International Trade and Industry was especially well-known for this practice.

3 Contract law

Japanese contract law allows greater ambiguity than American contract law. A Japanese contract, for instance, does not require clear statements of offer, acceptance, or consideration: most simply begin with a declaration, e.g. "Company X and Company Y hereby enter into the following agreement." Contracts also tend to contain very little detail, with the parties working out complications as they arise.

4 Criminal law

Japanese criminal sentencing, 19941994 is a common year starting on Saturday, and was designated the International year of the Family''. Events January events January 1 North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) goes into effect January 6 Nancy Kerrigan is clubbed on the right leg by an
Murder
(514)
7 - 10 years in prison
3 years at hard labor
3 - 5 years in prison
5 - 7 years in prison
Other sentences
103 (20%)
96 (19%)
94 (18%)
88 (17%)
133 (26%)
Assault
(10,920)
100-200,000 fine
200-300,000 fine
300-500,000 fine
1 - 2 years at hard labor
6 - 12 months at hard labor
6 - 12 months in prison
1 - 2 years in prison
Other sentences
4130 (38%)
2084 (19%)
1161 (11%)
857 (8%)
571 (5%)
541 (5%)
512 (5%)
1064 (9%)
Drug offenses
(10,766)
1 - 2 years at hard labor
1 - 2 years in prison
2 - 3 years in prison
Other sentences
3,894 (36%)
3,490 (32%)
1,791 (17%)
1591 (15%)

In comparison to other countries in the developed world, Japan has a unique prosecutorial system. 99 percent of criminal defendants are convicted in Japan, and almost all are convicted following their own confession. ProsecutorIn countries adopting the common law adversarial system or the civil law inquisitorial system, the prosecutor is the chief legal representative of the prosecution. The prosecution is the legal party responsible for presenting the case against an individuas tend to bring charges only when they have a signed confession from the accused, and such confessions often occur after long questioning by police. Although defendants have a right to counsel, it is generally not possible for them to obtain counsel between their arrest and indictmentIn the common law legal system, an indictment is a formal charge of having committed a serious criminal offense. In those jurisdictions which retain the concept of a felony, the serious crime offence would be a felony; those jurisdictions which have aboli. This makes it difficult to judge the true extent of criminal activity in Japan, since many possible criminals refuse to confess and are thus never indicted.

Japan has a death penalty that can be invoked by the Minister of Justice for murderMurder is the crime of causing the death of another human being, without lawful excuse, and with intent to kill them, or with intent to cause them grievous bodily harm. When an illegal death is not caused intentionally, but is caused by recklessness or ne, arsonArson is the crime of setting a fire with intent to cause damage. The definition of arson was originally limited to setting fire to buildings, but was later expanded to include other objects, such as bridges vehicles, and private property. Very often one, and crimes against humanity. The death penalty's constitutionality has been challenged by some advocacy groups in Japan but continues to be upheld by the Supreme Court. There are five other basic forms of criminal punishment in Japan: imprisonment at hard labor, imprisonment, fine, detention (less than 30 days), and minor fine (less than 10,000). Japan has been criticized for giving lenient punishments for some crimes, most notably rapeFor the domesticated crop plant called "rape," see rapeseed. For responding to rape as a medical emergency, see sexual assault. For the former administrative division of Sussex, see Rape (district). Rape is a crime of engaging another person into sexual a (which carries a typical sentence of 2 - 5 years in prison, and a theoretical maximum of fifteen).



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