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Japan
Launches Reforms to Bolster Lawyer Ranks
By Kana Inagaki
The Associated Press
New York Lawyer
August 22, 2006
In past years, 25-year-old
law school graduate Hiroyuki Ichikawa would have been facing an
almost impossible task -- a bar exam with a 97 percent failure rate.
Now, his chances are closer
to 50-50.
In the most sweeping reform
of Japan's legal system since World War II, the doors are opening
wide for a flood of new lawyers, prosecutors and judges to handle
criminal and civil cases in an increasingly litigious society.
Experts say the reforms are
long overdue and underscore a big shift in social attitudes that is
forcing Japan to change its longstanding policy of keeping the
number of lawyers low and the public out of the courts.
"People are beginning to
take more and more of their troubles to court," said Hideaki Kubori,
a corporate lawyer and a professor at Omiya Law School outside
Tokyo. "There are just not enough lawyers."
Japan has roughly 22,000
lawyers -- one for every 5,790 people, compared with one for every
268 in the United States. Under the old bar exam, to be scrapped in
2011, fewer than 1,500 people are allowed to pass every year. In the
United States, with about twice Japan's population, the number is
closer to 75,000.
To fill the vacuum, the
government has decided to more than double the number of legal
professionals, including lawyers, prosecutors and judges, to 50,000
by 2018. Juries for serious criminal cases will be introduced in
2009 to ease the load on judges. The first U.S.-style law school
opened in 2004, and, with government encouragement, Japan now has 72
of them, including the one that Ichikawa attended.
Previously, university law
departments tended to focus on the academic or theoretical side of
the law. The new schools concentrate on practical training and
preparing students to specialize. Their graduates are exempt from
the old exam and instead take one written specifically for them.
Economic necessity is the
driving force.
Kubori noted that, for
example, filings for personal bankruptcy have jumped more than
fivefold over 10 years, to 219,402 in 2004. Inheritance and divorce
disputes are also increasingly finding their way to court.
More important, business
leaders have been campaigning for a bigger pool of lawyers
specializing in tax law and intellectual property as legal
discussions surrounding those issues become ever more complicated.
Less certain is whether the
reforms will fix Japan's often-criticized penal justice system.
Cases often drag on for
years, and conviction rates are higher than 99 percent due to a
system weighted heavily in favor of prosecutors, who have superior
resources and status. The shortage of lawyers -- especially to
defend criminals -- has long been a target of criticism. Defense
lawyers are widely perceived as protectors of the public's enemies
and are often poorly paid.
The introduction of juries,
giving ordinary Japanese citizens their first chance to participate
in criminal court procedures, may change that balance when it takes
effect.
But defense lawyers warn
the reform will not necessarily answer allegations of human rights
violations and false charges that result from forced confessions
with no lawyer present. They also stress that pretrial access to
their clients will remain tightly restricted.
"Unlike other countries,
check mechanisms by lawyers are basically nonexistent in Japan
because they cannot witness interrogations," said Masashi Akita, a
criminal defense lawyer. "Verbal abuses and other acts that amount
to human rights violations occur all the time."
Freshly graduated Ichikawa
knows the odds will remain stacked against the defenders and
therefore wants to specialize in corporate law for now.
"I think it is impossible
to make a living by becoming a criminal lawyer," he said. "There are
so few incentives to become one."
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