Europe and Japan Cooperation in the Fight against Cross-border Crime
Challenges and Perspectives
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Book Description
This book is the first to map and critically analyse the legalisation of EU-Japan cooperation in criminal justice matters, charting the existing legal instruments which regulate cooperation in the fight against crime between European states and Japan.
It examines which forms of cooperation are regulated by EU Law, and which are not, and takes stock through selected case studies of the functioning in practice of cooperation between the EU as an organisation, single European States and Japan. The book focuses particularly on police cooperation, exchange of electronic evidence, mutual legal assistance, extradition, transfer of prisoners and data exchanges. It looks at the EU-Japan MLA Agreement, the Europol-Japan National Police Agency Working Arrangement, the negotiations on a PNR Agreement, and the Council of Europe Convention for Transfer of Sentenced Persons; all instruments aimed at regulating cooperation against crime between European states and Japan. Finally, the book also looks at the implications for the fight against crime of the EU-Japan Economic Partnership Agreement, Strategic Partnership Agreement, and the European Commission Adequacy decision.
This book will be of key interest to scholars and students of EU Criminal law, EU-Japan cooperation, Japanese studies, transnational crime, and more broadly to comparative criminal justice, International Relations and security studies.
Chapter 1 and 9 of this book is available for free in PDF format as Open Access from the individual product page at www.routledge.com. It has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 licence.
Table of Contents
Preface by MASAKI Yasushi
Introduction
Irene Wieczorek
1. Transfer of prisoners and extradition cases between Europe and Japan: Legal and practical challenges
Irene Wieczorek and Anne Weyembergh
2. An analysis of the seven Mutual Legal Assistance (MLA) agreements concluded by Japan and the uniqueness of the EU-Japan MLA Agreement
Shin Matsuzawa
3. Norm diffusion as a tool to uphold and promote EU values and interests: A case study on the EU-Japan Mutual Legal Assistance Agreement
Anne Weyembergh and Irene Wieczorek
4. EU law enforcement cooperation with non-EU countries: A general overview and special focus on EU-Japan cooperation
Saskia Hufnagel
5. The Adequacy Decision on Japan under the General Data Protection Regulation: What are the possible implications for law enforcement exchanges?
Laura Drechsler
6. Is there an obligation not to cooperate with abolitionist States?: Noting the gaps in and potential of the Japan–EU Agreement on Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters
Megumi Ochi
7. EU-Japan cooperation in combatting cybercrime: From the Strategic Partnership Agreement to global partnerships
Wilhelm Vosse
8. Direct cooperation relating to the collection of electronic evidence in criminal investigations: The challenges for the European Union and Japan
Yurika Ishii
9. The Right to an attorney in interrogations in Japan: Is the Ghosn extradition case a turning point?
Dimitri Vanoverbeke
Editor(s)
Biography
Shin Matsuzawa is Professor of Criminal Law at the School of Law, Waseda University, Japan.
Anne Weyembergh is Professor of EU Criminal law at the Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium.
Irene Wieczorek is an Assistant Professor of European Union Law at Durham Law School, Durham University, UK.