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San Francisco sex workers in California filed a complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief against the district attorney, arguing that the criminalization of sex work violates several constitutional rights, including the right to sexual privacy and free speech. The Ninth Circuit rejected the sex workers’ arguments, concluding, in part, that there is no fundamental liberty interest to engage in prostitution. In addition, the Ninth Circuit relied on the lower court’s determination that there is an established link between prostitution and trafficking. A feminist opinion could offer much more insight into the nature of sex work, the question of sexual privacy, and the reliance on claims that sex work is inherently dangerous.
This chapter examines how foreign legal doctrine has affected constitutional judicial review in cases involving freedom of expression in Japan. Academics have studied free speech in the context of comparative law because the current constitutional law in Japan, enacted under the instruction of General Headquarters by United States, and the former Meiji Constitution were both influenced by the German Constitution. In the early years of the current Constitution, the Japanese Supreme Court took a ‘public interest’ approach, absent any constitutional standard. Some have proposed a change to this situation, recommending the introduction of a US-style constitutional standard. However, the Supreme Court has not taken that standard to heart. On the commencement of a new law school system in Japan, other scholars advocated the German ‘proportionality’ principle because they thought that it better suited to Japanese case law. However, detailed examination of that case law suggests that the Supreme Court took neither approach. In this chapter, the author seeks to reveal the true nature of the doctrine employed in the constitutional cases and to explore the issue of hate speech from the perspective of this controversy over free speech.
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