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12 - Emergency powers and the limits of constitutionalism in Japan

from PART III - Emergencies, executive power and constitutional order

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 August 2010

Victor V. Ramraj
Affiliation:
National University of Singapore
Arun K. Thiruvengadam
Affiliation:
National University of Singapore
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Summary

Introduction

If emergency powers are conceptualised as involving the partial suspension of the rule of law for reasons of necessity (political or otherwise), and the principal justification for such action is the long-term preservation of the legal order and various basic liberties underlying that order, then the so-called Northeast Asian developmental state, of which Japan is a prominent example, poses something of a conundrum. After all, a recurring feature of developmental state discourse has been the contention that the law has, at least historically speaking, played a limited role in regulating political and social life, and that the rule of law has not yet fully emerged. It has often been suggested that the primary function of law within such states has been to bolster the position of the executive and to insulate, often ‘extra-legal’, administrative action from judicial scrutiny. This has been achieved by curtailing judicial independence and the scope of human rights, and has resulted in a greatly diminished zone of legality compared to other jurisdictions with comparable levels of economic development.

In the absence of a strong rule of law and human rights tradition one might conclude that the crucial elements that allow us to distinguish, in an analytically precise way, between a ‘normal’ and an ‘emergency’ situation are absent. This, in turn, casts some doubt on the necessity of constitutional or legislative provision for emergency powers or a ‘state’ of emergency. In the absence of substantive legal constraints on executive action, why legislate for their suspension?

Type
Chapter
Information
Emergency Powers in Asia
Exploring the Limits of Legality
, pp. 314 - 341
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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