(2013) 2:2 Australian Journal of Asian Law is now available.
Australian Journal of Asian Law is the leading peer-edited journal of analysis, commentary and primary material on the laws, legal systems and legal cultures of Asia. It is a joint initiative of the members of the Asian Law Centre at the University of Melbourne and the Law Faculty of the Australian National University, with support and advice from Australian and international colleagues, and sponsored by the Asian Law Centre and the Australian National University. The journal provides a common forum for ideas and informed debate on current legal issues from a wide range of expert legal scholars and practitioners whose work focuses on Asia.
Table of
Contents:
Genders and
Genetics: The Legal and Medical Regulation of Family Forms in Contemporary
Japan.
Vera
Mackie, University of Wollongong - Faculty of Law, Institute for Social
Transformation Research
Regulating
Water Concessions in China: Towards a Transparent Pricing System.
Wei Yan,
Shanghai University Law School
Legal
Regulation of ‘Decent Work’: Evidence from Two Big Industries in Bangladesh.
Mia
Mahmudur Rahim, Queensland University of Technology - School of Accountancy
The
Establishment of Juvenile Courts and the Fulfilment of Vietnam's Obligations
Under the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Thi Thanh
Nga PHAM, University of Wollongong
Transnational
Corporations and Human Rights Violations in Indonesia.
Iman
Prihandono, Airlangga University
Criminalisation
of Money Laundering in the International Anti-Money Laundering Regime and its
Adoption by Vietnam.
Chat Le
Nguyen, University of Canterbury
Essay:
Muslim Law, Ahmadiyya and Islamic Doctrine in Singapore.
M. Barry
Hooker, Australian National University - ANU College of Law, University of
Melbourne - Asian Law Centre
Review
Essay: Law and Order in a Land of Tough Love.
Michael D.
Barr, Flinders University
Book
Review: Global Textiles and Clothing Trade.
James K.
Lockett, Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd, University Pelita Harapan (Jakarta) -
Faculty of Law, Foreign Trade University
Review
Essay: Legal Pluralism in Indonesia.
Melissa
Crouch, National University of Singapore (NUS)
Contributions:
Australian Journal of Asian Law welcomes contributions from scholars and professionals worldwide. Contributions should be submitted to the editors as an email attachment, using Microsoft Word or Rich Text Format. Standard articles or translations should be 8,000 to 12,000 words, depending on the subject matter; book reviews should be 1,000 to 3,000 words. Intending authors should adopt the style used in this journal. A style guide is available from the editors on request.
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