Columbia Law School Center for Japanese Legal Studies

The Center for Japanese Legal Studies
Founded 1980
Location
  • Box E-27, Columbia Law School, 435 W. 116th Street, New York, NY USA 10027
    212-854-0685
    cjls (at) law.columbia.edu
Director
Curtis J. Milhaupt
Parent organization
Columbia Law School
Website www.law.columbia.edu/center_program/japanese
Remarks The first and only center of its kind in the U.S.

Columbia Law School's Center for Japanese Legal Studies (CJLS) is the first and only center of its kind in the United States.[1]

The Center for Japanese Legal Studies advances the study of Japanese law at Columbia Law School and fosters intellectual exchange between the Columbia community and the legal profession of Japan. The Center strives to be the principal source of intellectual exchange between the legal professions of the United States and Japan. Columbia Law School consistently ranks among the top schools nationally in the field of international law.[2]

The CJLS holds that its main challenge today is keeping abreast of dynamic changes in the Japanese legal system over the past decade. Reforms have been motivated by a variety of factors, ranging from domestic economic and demographic pressures to international relations considerations and the forces of globalization. Understanding and responding to these significant institutional changes requires in depth research and the timely dissemination of ideas.

History

Columbia Law School’s focus on Japanese law dates to the aftermath of World War II. Columbia spearheaded bilateral collaboration among lawyers, judges, and legal scholars. As early as the 1950s, the University of Tokyo invited the late Professor Walter Gellhorn CLS ’31, an architect of U.S. administrative law, to be a visiting professor in the Faculty of Law. Professor Gellhorn envisioned a center for Japanese legal studies at Columbia to facilitate student and faculty exchanges and to disseminate research on the fundamental changes in post-war Japanese law and society. In 1980, the Center for Japanese Legal Studies was founded at Columbia Law School with support from the Fuyo Group (a leading group of Japanese corporations and financial institutions at the time) and the Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission.

Today

More than a quarter century later, under the direction of Professor Curtis J. Milhaupt CLS ’89, the Center continues its mission to enhance the understanding of the Japanese legal system within the Columbia University community and beyond. During Professor Milhaupt’s tenure, the activities and reputation of the Center have grown in tandem with the increasing presence of Japanese students and scholars at Columbia Law School. In the decade from 1990 to 2009, the number of Japanese LL.M. students studying at Columbia Law School annually has more than doubled. The number of students studying Japanese law at Columbia has increased steadily. And Columbia Law School sends more students each summer to complete internships in Japan, both in law firms and public interest organizations, than any other major U.S. law school.

Toshiba Library

Among the wealth of resources available to the Center for Japanese Legal Studies is the Toshiba Library for Japanese Legal Research, which is considered to be among the finest private collections of Japanese Law and is the country’s premier collection of Japanese law materials.[3]

The library began in 1982 with a gift of the private collection of the late Jiro Tanaka, Justice of the Supreme Court of Japan from 1964 to 1973. Columbia Law School's Arthur W. Diamond Law Library began developing a comprehensive Japanese law collection in 1984 to support research and teaching at the Center. A permanent position of Japanese law curator was established with a generous endowment from the Toshiba Corporation. In 2003, the collection was enhanced by a gift of the private collection of Itsuo Sonobe, a visiting scholar at the Columbia Law School in 1958, who served as a Justice of the Supreme Court of Japan from 1989 to 1997.

The Toshiba Library is tended by a full-time curator. The collection contains approximately 23,000 volumes of books and bound periodicals, more than 90 percent of which are in Japanese.[3]

Director

The Center’s director, Curtis J. Milhaupt, Fuyo Professor of Japanese Law and Parker Professor of Comparative Corporate Law at Columbia Law School, is recognized as one of the world’s leading authorities on the Japanese legal system. He has also published widely in the fields of comparative corporate governance, law and economic development, and aspects of the Chinese and Korean legal systems. In addition to numerous academic articles, he is the co-author or editor of seven books, including most recently, U.S. Corporate Law (Yuhikaku, 2009, in Japanese);[4] Law and Capitalism: What Corporate Crises Reveal about Legal Systems and Economic Growth Around the World (University of Chicago Press, 2008); and Transforming Corporate Governance in East Asia (Routledge, 2008). His research is frequently profiled in The Economist and The Financial Times, and his scholarship has been widely translated. He is deeply engaged with academic institutions and think tanks around the world. In recent years, he has delivered keynote speeches, served as an endowed visiting professor, and participated in conferences from Tokyo to São Paulo and Beijing to Barcelona. Under his leadership, the Center for Japanese Legal Studies has become the leading forum for scholarly exchange on Japanese law.[5]

CJLS Programs

References

  1. "Columbia Law School : The Center for Japanese Legal Studies". Law.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2012-08-19.
  2. "Top Ten International Law Schools in the USA « MacQuil.com Global Portal". Macquil.com. Retrieved 2012-08-19.
  3. 1 2 "Columbia Law School : Toshiba Library". Law.columbia.edu. 1961-11-09. Retrieved 2012-08-19.
  4. "Columbia Law School : U.S. Corporate Law Book Written by Former LL.M. Students with Professor Milhaupt Released in Japan". Law.columbia.edu. 2009-10-23. Retrieved 2012-08-19.
  5. "Columbia Law School : About the Director". Law.columbia.edu. 1961-11-09. Retrieved 2012-08-19.

External links

Coordinates: 40°48′25″N 73°57′37″W / 40.80693°N 73.96027°W / 40.80693; -73.96027

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