From Manners to Rules: Advocating for Legalism in South Korea and Japan
From Manners to Rules traces the emergence of legalistic governance in South Korea and Japan. While these countries were previously known for governance characterized by bureaucratic discretion and vague laws, activists and lawyers are pushing for a more legalistic regulatory style. Legalism involves more formal, detailed, and enforceable rules and participatory policy processes. Previous studies have focused on top-down or structural explanations for legalism. From Manners to Rules instead documents bottom-up sources of institutional and social change, as activists and lawyers advocate for and use more formal rules and procedures. By comparing recent reforms in disability rights and tobacco control, the book uncovers the societal drivers behind legalism and the broader judicialization of politics in East Asia's main democracies. Drawing on 120 interviews and diverse sources, From Manners to Rules challenges the conventional wisdom that law and courts play marginal roles in Korean and Japanese politics and illuminates how legalistic governance is transforming citizens' options for political participation.
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From Manners to Rules: Advocating for Legalism in South Korea and Japan
From Manners to Rules traces the emergence of legalistic governance in South Korea and Japan. While these countries were previously known for governance characterized by bureaucratic discretion and vague laws, activists and lawyers are pushing for a more legalistic regulatory style. Legalism involves more formal, detailed, and enforceable rules and participatory policy processes. Previous studies have focused on top-down or structural explanations for legalism. From Manners to Rules instead documents bottom-up sources of institutional and social change, as activists and lawyers advocate for and use more formal rules and procedures. By comparing recent reforms in disability rights and tobacco control, the book uncovers the societal drivers behind legalism and the broader judicialization of politics in East Asia's main democracies. Drawing on 120 interviews and diverse sources, From Manners to Rules challenges the conventional wisdom that law and courts play marginal roles in Korean and Japanese politics and illuminates how legalistic governance is transforming citizens' options for political participation.
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From Manners to Rules: Advocating for Legalism in South Korea and Japan

From Manners to Rules: Advocating for Legalism in South Korea and Japan

by Celeste L. Arrington
From Manners to Rules: Advocating for Legalism in South Korea and Japan

From Manners to Rules: Advocating for Legalism in South Korea and Japan

by Celeste L. Arrington

Hardcover

$140.00 
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    Available for Pre-Order. This item will be released on July 31, 2025

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Overview

From Manners to Rules traces the emergence of legalistic governance in South Korea and Japan. While these countries were previously known for governance characterized by bureaucratic discretion and vague laws, activists and lawyers are pushing for a more legalistic regulatory style. Legalism involves more formal, detailed, and enforceable rules and participatory policy processes. Previous studies have focused on top-down or structural explanations for legalism. From Manners to Rules instead documents bottom-up sources of institutional and social change, as activists and lawyers advocate for and use more formal rules and procedures. By comparing recent reforms in disability rights and tobacco control, the book uncovers the societal drivers behind legalism and the broader judicialization of politics in East Asia's main democracies. Drawing on 120 interviews and diverse sources, From Manners to Rules challenges the conventional wisdom that law and courts play marginal roles in Korean and Japanese politics and illuminates how legalistic governance is transforming citizens' options for political participation.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781108496049
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 07/31/2025
Series: Cambridge Studies in Law and Society
Pages: 280
Product dimensions: 6.50(w) x 1.50(h) x 9.50(d)

About the Author

Celeste L. Arrington is Korea Foundation Associate Professor of Political Science and International Affairs at the George Washington University. She is the award-winning author of numerous articles and Accidental Activists: Victim Movements and Governmental Accountability in Japan and South Korea (Cornell, 2016) and the co-editor with Patricia Goedde of Rights Claiming in South Korea (Cambridge, 2021).

Table of Contents

1. Introduction; 2. Legalistic regulatory style: indicators and explanations; Part I: 3. The history of disability rights activism in Korea and Japan; 4. Mobility rights and accessibility; 5. Disability discrimination legislation; Part II: 6. The history of tobacco control in Korea and Japan; 7. Liability and litigation challenging the tobacco industry; 8. Nonsmoking environments; 9. Conclusions; Methods Appendix.
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