TSUJI YUICHIRO
   Department   Undergraduate School  , School of Law
   Position   Professor
Language English
Publication Date 2021/07
Type Academic Journal
Peer Review Peer reviewed
Title Marbury v. Madison and the Japanese Judiciary
Contribution Type Sole-authored
Journal UC Davis Journal of International Law and Policy
Journal TypeAnother Country
Publisher UC Davis law school
Volume, Issue, Page 27(2),pp.223-240
Details This manuscript examines how Marbury v. Madison influences the Japanese Constitution and the Administrative Case Litigation Act. The missing lesson of Marbury v. Madison in Japan is the fact that judicial review,
which is not explicitly mentioned in the U.S. Constitution, is a creation of the judicial branch born out of Marbury v. Madison, and that the case was based on a dispute between the old and new Presidents. The 2004 amendments to
the Administrative Case Law Act were expected by the Parliament to stop the executive branch. This makes it clear that the mandate of judicial review is not only to guarantee private rights, but also to realize the public interest. Inresponse to the Parliament's expectation in the Administrative Case Litigation Act of 2004, the courts have shown that public law-related actions serve as a corrective function for the courts when the political process is dysfunctional.The Tokyo High Court, though not the Supreme Court.........
URL for researchmap https://jilp.law.ucdavis.edu/issues/volume-27-2/27.2_YUICHIRO.pdf