ABSTRACT
As Japanese companies establish overseas production facilities at an ever more repid pace, it is increasingly important for people in the host countries to understand the preconceptions upon which the Japanese approach to industrial relations is based. This book traces the development of Japanese labour law and shows how labour law has been related to the prevailing social, economic and political circumstances.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |2 pages
Part I PREWAR SOCIETY AND THE REPRESSION OF LABOUR
chapter |20 pages
EARLY MEIJI SOCIETY AND THE ABSENCE OF
chapter |26 pages
CONSTITUTIONAL JAPAN AND THE IMPOSSIBILITY OF LABOUR LAW
part |2 pages
Part II POSTWAR SOCIETY AND THE RELUCTANT RECOGNITION OF LABOUR