Commercial Law in East Asia

- Publisher:
- Taylor & Francis Ltd.
- Authors:
-
Roman Tomasic
Leon Wolff - ISBN:
- 9781315095585
Introduction: Mapping the Contours of East Asian Commercial Law for the Asian Century
Part 1: General Issues
- Chapter 1: The Future of Law in a Global Economy
- Chapter 2: Property Rights, Collateral, Creditor Rights, and Insolvency in East Asia 1
- Chapter 3: Economic Development and the Rights Hypothesis: The China Problem
- Chapter 4: Testing the Limits to the “Rule of Law”: Commercial Regulation in Vietnam
- Chapter 5: Legal transplantation and local knowledge: Corporate governance in Malaysia
- Chapter 6: Living With the IMF: A New Approach to Corporate Governance and Regulation of Financial Institutions in Korea
- Chapter 7: Legal Transplants through Private Contracting: Codes of Vendor Conduct in Global Supply Chains as an Example
Part 2: Case Studies
- Chapter 8: Cultivating Guanxi as a Foreign Investor Strategy
- Chapter 9: Caveats for Cross-Border Negotiators
- Chapter 10: The Norms and Incentive Structures of Relational Contracting in Vietnam – Two Surveys
- Chapter 11: Rethinking Relationship-Specific Investments: Subcontracting in the Japanese Automobile Industry
- Chapter 12: Aggressive Legalism: The Rules of the WTO and Japan’s Emerging Trade Strategy
- Chapter 13: No More Negotiated Deals?: Settlement of Trade and Investment Disputes in East Asia
- Chapter 14: The Establishment and Development of the Chinese Economic Legal System in the Past Sixty Years
- Chapter 15: Berle and Means, Corporate Governance and the Chinese Family Firm
- Chapter 16: Company Law and the Limits of the Rule of Law in China
- Chapter 17: Creative Norm Destruction: The Evolution of Nonlegal Rules in Japanese Corporate Governance
- Chapter 18: Delusions of Hostility: The Marginal Role of Hostile Takeovers in Japanese Corporate Governance Remains Unchanged