Table of Contents for Beyond Common Knowledge
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction, by Erik G. Jensen and Thomas C. Heller
1.Evaluating Systems of Justice Through Public Opinion:Why, What, Who, How, and What For?, by José Juan Toharia
2.Judicial Systems in Western Europe:Comparative Indicators of Legal Professionals, Courts, Litigation, and Budgets in the 1900s, by Erhard Blankenburg
3.Debased Informalism:Lok Adalats and Legal Rights in Modern India, by Marc Galanter and Jayanth K. Krishnan
4.Democratization of Justice:The Indian Experiment with Consumer Forums, by Robert S. Moog
5.Empirical Research into the Chinese Judicial System, by Donald C. Clarke
6.Putting China’s Judiciary into Perspective:Is It Independent, Competent, and Fair?, by Hualing Fu
7.Economic and Political Aspects of Judicial Reform:The Chilean Case, by Carlos Peña González
8.Judicial Reform in Mexico:What Next?, by Héctor Fix-Fierro
9.International Assistance to Latin American Justice Programs:Toward an Agenda for Reforming the Reformers, by Linn Hammergren
10.The Rule of Law and Judicial Reform:The Political Economy of Diverse Institutional Patterns and Reformers’ Responses, by Erik G. Jensen
11.An Immodest Postscript, by Thomas C. Heller