Academic literature on the topic 'Law and economics in Vietnam'

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Journal articles on the topic "Law and economics in Vietnam"

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PHAM, Duy Nghia. "From Marx to Market: The Debates on the Economic System in Vietnam’s Revised Constitution." Asian Journal of Comparative Law 11, no. 2 (2016): 263–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/asjcl.2016.16.

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AbstractThis article analyzes the socio-economic and political contexts behind the2013 Constitution of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam(2013 Constitution), in which demands for deeper institutional reform emerged in Vietnam, and explains the constitutional discourse within Vietnam as to its economic order. Diverse forces and platforms within Vietnam’s party-state and beyond have contributed to the exchange of ideas and values on the economic order. As a result of this public discourse, the provisions on the economic order of the 2013 Constitution are ideological compromises, reflecting the contradicting views within the party-state and society in Vietnam on the role of the market, private property, and the freedom to conduct business. The 2013 Constitution has taken a step towards a free market economy by recognizing the decisive role of the market in the national economy. It emphasizes the importance of the private sector and promises that it will be treated fairly among all other economic sectors. From this perspective, the 2013 Constitution contains the seeds of future political and legal guarantees which could protect individual liberties. However, in line with the socialist ideology adopted by its predecessors, the 2013 Constitution reaffirms the dominance of the public sector and the leading role of state-owned enterprises, and preserves the ambiguous “ownership of the entire Vietnamese people of land and natural resources”. Due to this ambiguity, the 2013 Constitution fails to lay down the foundations for far-reaching comprehensive institutional reforms that Vietnam urgently requires.
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Tran, Thu Thi Hoai, and Louis De Koker. "Confiscation of proceeds of crime in Vietnam: improving the legal framework." Journal of Money Laundering Control 24, no. 2 (2021): 215–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jmlc-11-2020-0123.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to analyze the Vietnamese laws and practices concerning the confiscation of proceeds of crime, especially in view of Vietnam’s obligations to meet the international standards on money laundering and terrorist financing, set by the Financial Action Task Force and relevant international conventions that Vietnam ratified. To limit the scope of this paper, the analysis focuses on the confiscation of proceeds of domestic crimes that do not require international legal assistance. This paper concludes with recommendations for improving the legal framework on criminal asset recovery in Vietnam. Design/methodology/approach This is a doctrinal study that considers the applicable legal framework. This study is supported by brief case studies of major cases involving the confiscation of proceeds of crime. Findings Vietnam has a functioning asset confiscation regime but gaps in the law, lack of financial investigation expertise and lack of focused investigative attention on asset preservation and confiscation are hampering its effectiveness. The key gaps can easily be closed with appropriate amendments to the law. These reforms should be combined with a dedicated skills development program to produce sufficient number of financial investigation experts and criminal asset management experts to support the regime. The training should extend to judicial officers to ensure an appropriate understanding of the asset confiscation law. Reforms such as these should follow on a comprehensive review of Vietnam’s law and practices relating to the confiscation and forfeiture of criminal assets. This review should extend to assets linked to the financing of terrorism and proliferation to ensure that Vietnam has a comprehensive regime to deal with criminal assets. Research limitations/implications This paper draws on publicly available information regarding the confiscation of proceeds of crime in Vietnam. Little data is available on asset confiscation and that prevents an in-depth assessment of the regime. Originality/value This paper highlights gaps in the current asset confiscation regime and proposes reforms and approaches that will ensure a more effective asset confiscation regime for Vietnam.
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Hoa, Duong Quynh. "The Promotion and Protection Human Rights under Vietnam’s Civil Law." Journal of Politics and Law 10, no. 3 (2017): 182. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/jpl.v10n3p182.

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This article analyzes and assesses Vietnam’s civil law for the promotion and protection human rights, the successes and limitations of their implementation in practice. The research findings show that over the past years, the Civil Code has laid a firm ground for remarkable successes in the promotion and protection human rights, especially, not only of Vietnamese but also foreigners living and working in Vietnam. The code is deemed compliant with international human rights conventions, laws and practices. In the Civil Code, however, there remain some certain limitations. For example a number of provisions of the current Civil Code fail to meet the human rights legislation or do not really create favourable conditions for the promotion and protection human rights in the economic and social domains. Our objective aims to outline the theoretical bases and analyze, assess regulations on human rights provided for in the Civil Code of Vietnam at present, thence proposing some solutions for improving legal regulations and contributing to ensure human rights in the legal system of Vietnam in general and in the Civil Code in particular.
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Thanh, Ngo Ba. "Vietnam´s Economic Renovation and the Development of Law." Verfassung in Recht und Übersee 25, no. 2 (1992): 260–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/0506-7286-1992-2-260.

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Maitah, Kamil, Luboš Smutka, Jeta Sahatqija, Mansoor Maitah, and Nguyen Phuong Anh. "Rice as a Determinant of Vietnamese Economic Sustainability." Sustainability 12, no. 12 (2020): 5123. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su12125123.

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This paper aims to examine the rice industry in Vietnam during the period 1997–2017, focusing its production and export. The total area of Vietnam is 33.121 million hectares, out of which 39.25% consists of agricultural land. The agricultural sector adds up to 24% of the gross domestic product (GDP), 20% of the total exports and over 70% of the total employment. Vietnam’s economy is highly dependent on the agricultural sector, specifically rice production, which constitutes 30% of the country’s total agricultural production value. While its production at first aimed to ensure food security in the country, to date, Vietnam is one the world’s largest exporters. While extensive research has explored the rice industry, studies looking at the production through the use of fertilizers, external factors such as the exporting price of other countries and world consumption rates are still lacking. Given the complexity of the topic, data were analyzed through descriptive, econometric and quantitative methods. For production and export analyses, two and four hypotheses were derived and examined, respectively, all based on economic theory. The model consisted of two equations: (i) the paddy production is impacted by rice’s yield and fertilizer use and (ii) in addition to internal factors, the growth of exporting rice in Vietnam depends also on external factors such as Thailand’s rice export price and world consumption rates. Based on the model, a dynamic forecasting method was employed, using the previous forecast values of the dependent variables to compute the future ones. Findings showed that 98% of Vietnam’s rice production is explained through the yield and fertilizer usage and 83% of Vietnam’s rice export is explained by the production, the price in Vietnam and Thailand and the consumption levels around the world. When it comes to forecasting, an 8% growth is predicted with a peak in quantity produced, with 49,461 thousand tons in 2023, yet with difficulties when it comes to exporting. The research predicts a stagnation in exports.
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Maass, Matthias. "‘Soft’ Coercive Diplomacy versus Informal Resistance: Attempts at Deporting ‘Illegal Vietnamese’ from Reunifying Germany, 1990-1995." Hague Journal of Diplomacy 9, no. 3 (2014): 221–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1871191x-12341287.

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During the period of Germany’s reunification in the early 1990s, disagreement between Germany and Vietnam over the return of Vietnamese individuals to Vietnam escalated into a diplomatic dispute that also spilled over into Vietnam’s negotiations with the European Union over a major eu–Vietnam treaty. In mid-1995, however, the German and Vietnamese governments finally agreed on a repatriation arrangement that allowed Germany to begin deporting about 40,000 Vietnamese who were living in Germany illegally. This article explores the episode in the wider context of diplomatic dispute resolution. While Germany was demanding full cooperation from Vietnam on the issue of returning Vietnamese nationals, the Vietnamese government initially resisted large-scale repatriation for economic and social reasons. Hanoi attempted to frame the discussion within bilateral negotiations, economic costs and human rights, whereas Bonn argued from the perspective of customary international law and applied increasingly coercive diplomacy. German authorities escalated the disagreement and made economic threats with the aim of changing Hanoi’s behaviour. In order to frame this approach analytically, this article uses a modified form of coercive diplomacy. The analysis proceeds in three stages: first, the article analyses the origins of the dispute, which had its roots in German reunification; second, it evaluates the legal arguments advanced by each side; and third, it investigates Germany’s ‘soft’ coercive diplomacy and Vietnam’s response. The article concludes with an evaluation of Germany’s approach, benchmarking 1995’s diplomatic outcome against results on the ground, namely the number of returnees to Vietnam.
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Tonkin, Derek. "Whither Vietnam?" Asian Affairs 23, no. 3 (1992): 295–303. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/714041193.

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Nguyen, Phuong Thi, and Michael Kend. "The perceived motivations behind the introduction of the law on external audit in Vietnam." Managerial Auditing Journal 32, no. 1 (2017): 90–108. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/maj-01-2016-1299.

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Purpose Over the past 20 years, external auditing activities and practices in Vietnam have developed quickly. An important milestone is the first Law on External Audit No. 67/2011/QH12 which has been passed by the National Assembly of Vietnam on 29 March 2011. The purpose of this paper is to understand the perceived motivations in regard to the introduction of the Law on External Audit, through the eyes of various key stakeholders. There has been genuine public interest concerns regarding audit quality in Vietnam as prior academic research has indicated, and this is the first study to examine whether the new audit reforms where introduced specifically to deal with those concerns. Design/methodology/approach Face-to-face semi-structured interviews were conducted with 45 key stakeholders during 2014 in both Ha Noi and Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. Findings The study finds that the Law on External Audit was introduced because it holds the highest form of regulatory authority in Vietnam, and the lower level Decrees that existed before the law did not even detail the audit firms’ responsibilities resulting in low audit quality. Also, the new Law was introduced to add more credibility and trust in the external audit function in Vietnam, and to reduce unfair price competition. However, some of our findings indicate that the Governments’ motivations were not all purely public interest related. A theoretical framework is developed to evaluate whether these reforms are substantive enough in nature to effect public confidence in reported financial data and audits. Originality/value External auditing plays a crucial role in any market-based economy. In a developing economy, audit quality is often perceived to be lower than in a developed economy. Therefore, it is not uncommon to observe governments in developing economies producing tighter regulations for the auditing and assurance market to help attract more foreign investment and to establish credibility and more trust. In Vietnamese context, the current study conveys that the new audit reforms not only were introduced with genuine public interest concerns but also were a mechanism to protect the government’s interests.
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Tín, Võ Trung. "Assessing Vietnam’s Environmental Laws and Direction for Improvement." Vietnamese Journal of Legal Sciences 1, no. 1 (2020): 64–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/vjls-2020-0004.

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AbstractEnvironmental protection has gotten much attention and been prioritized in policy making for economic – social development of countries around the world, including Vietnam. The policies have been gradually institutionalized into law. Environmental Protection Law comes into existence in Vietnam as in other developing countries, which could be affirmed as the latest legal field. Before Environmental Protection Law was issued as an independent legal document by the National Assembly, other environmental regulations in Vietnam covered some aspects of environmental protection to meet management need without targeting the protection of environmental factors. Environment or environment-related regulations have been found in many separate legal documents. In order to meet the growing demand for integration, Vietnam needs to continue to reform environmental regulations. The paper analyzes the Vietnamese environmental regulations and practical implementation, thereby giving some suggestions.
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Phạm Thị Hoàng, Anh, and Thu Lê Hà. "An Evaluation of Relationship between Foreign Direct Investment and Economic Growth in Vietnam." Journal of Asian Business and Economic Studies 220 (April 1, 2014): 79–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.24311/jabes/2014.220.02.

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Foreign direct investment (FDI) is an essential source of capital in the gross investment conducive to national economic growth, including the case of Vietnam. Since the 1987 Foreign Investment Law, the country has attracted a large amount of foreign capital, which makes a significant contribution to economic development. This research employs a VAR model to analyze the relationship between FDI and Vietnam’s economic growth. The results suggest that FDI has a positive impact on the latter and vice versa. The research also finds that FDI stimulates export and improves the quality of human resources and technology - important prerequisites for the economic growth.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Law and economics in Vietnam"

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Van, Nguyen Thi Anh. "ECONOMIC LAW REFORM IN VIETNAM : BEFORE AND AFTER WTO ACCESSION." Center for Asian Legal Exchange (CALE), Nagoya University, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/2237/20342.

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Van, Nguyen Thi Anh. "An Overview of Vietnam Enterprise Law." 名古屋大学大学院法学研究科, 2001. http://hdl.handle.net/2237/5970.

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Bui, Ngoc Son. "Confucianism and constitutionalism in Vietnam." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10722/197124.

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Early twenty first century Vietnam has witnessed the emergence of constitutional discourse in line with some ideas and institutions of western liberal constitutionalism. This movement has unfortunately led the constitutional discourse to underestimation of the relevance of the local culture. In Vietnam, Confucianism is an integral component of the national culture. It has a long tradition and has continued to influence on different aspects of the modern society in the nation. As constitutionalism must be ultimately underpinned by culture values and political tradition, the relations of Confucianism to the promotion of constitutionalism in Vietnam should be taken into account. This account adopts a balanced approach to the relationship between Confucianism and constitutionalism. It supports the integrationist approach, which attempts to marry the best elements of Confucianism with the best elements of western constitutionalism to produce a distinctive form of constitutionalism suitable to the local context. However, to carry out the integrationist project, it is important to determine what can be integrated, and to do this, the integrationist approach must be combined and balanced with the indigenist and critical approaches. On the side of Confucianism, it is necessary to identify constitutionalist elements, and this requires us to, from an indigenist perspective, discover constitutionalist values in the Confucian tradition. On the side of western constitutionalism, it is necessary to, from a critical view, identify its disadvantages and advantages so as to select the most suitable elements for the integrationist project. General speaking, this study defends the thesis of the positive relationship of Confucianism to constitutionalism with particular reference to the case of Vietnam. The study firstly systematically discovers classical philosophical foundations of Confucian constitutionalism. It then examines the practice of Confucian constitutionalism in imperial Vietnam. Subsequently, it demonstrates the antecedent projects of integration of Confucianism with Western constitutionalism in the modern history of Vietnam. Finally, the study contemplates the possibility of further integration of Confucianism and western constitutionalism in contemporary Vietnam by proposing the Constitutional Academy as a mixed model of constitutional enforcement. This inquiry is significant in several ways. Firstly, it contributes to our better understanding of the history and development of Confucianism, constitutionalism, and their relationship in Vietnam. Secondly, it can further enhance the scholarship of the intellectual foundations and experimentations of constitutionalism in pre-modern East Asia. Finally, the findings in this study can have implications for further reflection on the global expansion of western liberal constitutionalism in non-western contexts, and the prospects of constitutionalism in an East Asian Confucian context.<br>published_or_final_version<br>Law<br>Doctoral<br>Doctor of Philosophy
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Linde-Rahr, Martin. "Household economics of agriculture and forestry in rural Vietnam /." Göteborg : Dept. of Economics [Nationalekonomiska institutionen], Univ, 2002. http://www.handels.gu.se/epc/data/html/html/PDF/LindeRahrdissNEpdf.pdf.

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Tran, Kien. "The history of intellectual property law of Vietnam, 1945-1994." Thesis, University of Glasgow, 2015. http://theses.gla.ac.uk/6953/.

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This thesis centres on the principal question of the existence of intellectual property law between 1945 and 1994 in Vietnam, and related issues that flow therefrom. A common orthodoxy held that there was no real intellectual property law in the country until the early 1980s, and that the law has been a feature of the Vietnamese legal system only since 1981. This common belief is shared by an absolute majority of scholars, lawyers, and practitioners, both domestic and foreign, who have studied the intellectual property law of Vietnam. This thesis will seek to disprove that belief by drawing on extensive archival evidence, to reconstruct, for the first time, a unique, ignored system of laws regulating copyright, patent, and trade mark, among other kinds of intellectual property protection, in existence between 1945 and 1994. In fact, the existing system of intellectual property law was composed of two main sources. The first component part is comprised of a large corpus of colonial laws from France and a small number of indigenous provisions developed by local governments modelled after the French laws, as well as a unique and local common law practice in relation to intellectual property rights which has been recorded since the seventeenth century. This part of the system dated as far back as 1864 and lasted theoretically until 1955 within the context of a colonial and semi-feudal society. The second part, addressed in the principal part of this thesis, is the theory and practice of socialist law. This part was introduced into Vietnam as early as 1945. At first, it was a supplementation to the established, continued body of colonial laws but, subsequently, from the late 1950s, it evolved to become the principal system, replacing the old laws within the framework of socialist legality, upholding the dictatorship of the proletariat and a centrally planned economy. Since 1986, Vietnam has embarked on a radically different route to develop intellectual property law in compliance with various bilateral and international intellectual property and free trade treaties. Consequently, this socialist intellectual property law was finally displaced as of 1994, as the result of various reforms driving the country towards a market-based economy under a rule of law state.
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Okulicz, Danisz. "Essays in law and economics." Doctoral thesis, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, 2019. http://hdl.handle.net/10803/667985.

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En esta tesis se investigará el rol de la información asimétrica en el mercado de los servicios legales. En particular, se estudiará cómo los agentes individuales desinformados interactúan con abogados y agentes corporativos en el sistema de justicia civil. En el capítulo 1, se estudiará el problema clásico de negociaciones previas al juicio entre el demandante, quien está desinformado sobre el resultado del potencial juicio, y el demandado, que es capaz de predecirlo. Contribuyo a las fuentes ya existentes, proponiendo que el demandante contrate un abogado para recibir consejos no vinculantes, no verificables durante la negociación. Me parece que el resultado de la negociación depende en gran medida de si el abogado o el demandante están más dispuestos a resolver el caso mediante un juicio. Además, muestro que, aunque un contrato que alinea perfectamente los incentivos del demandante y el abogado es siempre factible, nunca es óptimo. Si el valor esperado de la compensación es alto, entonces el contrato óptimo es un salario por hora. En caso contrario, un contrato de tarifa contingente sería el indicado. En el capítulo 2, analizo cómo influyen las inquietudes profesionales en la elección de los agentes económicos sobre los casos realizados. Por ejemplo, cómo influyen estas en la decisión de un abogado sobre escoger o no un caso. Propongo un modelo en el que un agente caracterizado por su nivel de habilidad decide si realizar una tarea de dificultad aleatoria. Comparo el funcionamiento de un agente superior y el de uno menor. El agente superior está principalmente interesado en el pago monetario, pero el agente menor, le preocupa también la opinión del mercado sobre su nivel de habilidad. El mercado observa el resultado del caso, pero no su dificultad. Demuestro que el agente menor se enfrenta a un compromiso entre aparentar éxito mediante la elección de casos fáciles y aparentar experiencia completando todos los casos que recibe. Típicamente, la segunda impresión persiste, y el agente menor realiza más tareas que un agente superior. Propongo que el pago monetario del agente se determine de forma endógena mediante contratación con un principal. Demuestro que el principal está en mejores condiciones cuando se enfrenta con un agente menor, ya que es capaz de explotar sus inquietudes profesionales y reducir el precio ofrecido. En el capítulo 3, estudio cómo se forman las demandas por litigios colectivos, y cómo el demandado puede intervenir en el proceso. En los litigios colectivos, el resultado del juicio depende del número de litigantes. Propongo un modelo dinámico de litigio, en el que el demandado se enfrenta a la llegada de los demandantes con el tiempo. Demuestro que cuando todos demandantes deciden estratégicamente sobre la presentación de la demanda y la resolución del caso, el demandado puede evitar completamente la formación de un colectivo. Sin embargo, si algunos demandantes se unen exógenamente al colectivo y el demandado mantiene información privada sobre el alcance del daño, entonces las negociaciones previas al juicio con los demandantes estratégicos pueden fallar, y el litigio colectivo puede tener éxito. Analizo el papel de acuerdos secretos en este contexto. Demuestro que la disponibilidad de acuerdos secretos perjudica el proceso de aprendizaje de algunos demandantes y disminuye sus pagos. Además, el demandado, puede también perder en la disponibilidad de acuerdos privados.<br>In this thesis, I investigate the role of information asymmetries on the market for legal services. In particular, I study how uninformed individual agents interact with lawyers and corporate agents in the civil justice system. In Chapter 1 I study a classical problem of pretrial negotiations between a plaintiff who is uninformed about the outcome of a potential trial and a defendant who is able to predict it. I contribute to the existing body of the literature by allowing the plaintiff to contract an attorney and receive unbinding, unverifiable advice during the negotiation. I find that the outcome of the negotiation strongly depends on whether the attorney or the plaintiff are more willing to resolve the case by a trial. Moreover, I show that even though a contract that perfectly aligns the incentives of the plaintiff and the attorney is always feasible, it is never optimal. If the expected value of the compensation is high then the optimal contract is an hourly wage. In the opposite scenario, a contingent fee contract is optimal. In Chapter 2 I analyze how career concerns influence the economic agents' choice of performed tasks. For example, how they influence a lawyer's decision on whether to take a case. I propose a model in which an agent characterized by a skill level decides whether to perform a task of random difficulty. I compare the behavior of a senior and a junior agent. A senior agent is primary interested in the monetary pay-off, but the junior agent is also concerned with the market's belief about his skill level. The market observes the outcome of the task, but not its difficulty. I show that a junior agent faces a trade-off between appearing successful by cherry-picking only the simplest tasks and appearing experienced by performing any task received. Typically the second effect prevails and a junior agent performs more tasks than a senior agent. I allow for the monetary payoff of the agent to be endogenously determined by contracting with a principal. I show that the principal is better-off when dealing with a junior agent, since she is able to exploit his career-concerns and cut the offered price. In Chapter 3 I study how the collective litigation suits are formed, and how the defendants can interfere in this process. In collective litigations the outcome of the trial depends on the number of litigants. I propose a dynamic model of litigation in which a defendant faces the arrival of plaintiffs over time. I show that when all plaintiffs strategically decide on filing the suit and settling the case, the defendant can completely avoid the formation of a collective. However, if some plaintiffs exogenously join the collective and the defendant holds private information about the scope of the harm then pretrial negotiations with strategic plaintiffs may fail, and the collective litigation may succeed. I analyze the role of secret settlements in this context. I show that availability of private settlements harms the learning process of some plaintiffs and diminishes their payoffs. Moreover, the defendant may also lose on the availability of private settlements.
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Givati, Yehonatan. "Essays in Law and Economics." Thesis, Harvard University, 2013. http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:10782.

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Part I examines the consequences of an organizational reform in Israel that transferred the responsibility for housing arrestees from the police to the prison authority. Using the staggered introduction of the reform in different regions of the country, we show that the reform led to an increase in the number of arrests and to a decrease in the number of reported crimes, with effects concentrated in more minor crimes. The reform also led to a decrease in the quality of arrests, measured by the likelihood of indictment following an arrest. These findings are consistent with the idea that the reform externalized the cost of housing arrestees from the Police's perspective, and therefore led to an increase in police activity. Part II examines why some countries mandate a long maternity leave, while others mandate only a short one. We incorporate into a standard mandated-benefit model social tolerance of gender-based discrimination, showing that the less tolerant a society is of gender-based discrimination, the longer the maternity leave it will mandate. Relying on recent research in psychology and linguistics we collected new data on the number of gender-differentiated personal pronouns across languages to capture societies' attitudes toward gender-based discrimination. We first confirm, using within-country language variation, that our linguistic measure is correlated with attitudes toward gender-based discrimination. Then, using cross-country data on length of maternity leave we find a strong correlation between our language-based measure of attitudes and the length of maternity leave. Part III examines why plea bargaining is commonly employed in some countries, while its use is heavily restricted in others. I develop a model in which a social planner, who minimizes the social harms from punishing the innocent and not punishing the guilty, decides on the optimal scope of plea bargaining. The model shows that a lower social emphasis on ensuring that innocent individuals are not punished leads to a greater use of plea bargaining. Using new cross-country data on social preferences for punishing the innocent versus not punishing the guilty and a new coding of plea bargaining regimes, I find results that are consistent with the model's prediction.<br>Economics
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Yang, Crystal Siming. "Essays in Law and Economics." Thesis, Harvard University, 2013. http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:10834.

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This dissertation consists of three papers relating to the field of Law and Economics. The first two papers examine the impact of increased judicial discretion on both racial disparities and inter-judge disparities in the federal criminal justice system. The third paper analyzes the effects of OSHA programs on workplace safety, wages, and employment. The common thread throughout this work is a focus on how legal actors and institutions affect substantive outcomes of individuals.<br>Economics
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Graham, Bradley J. "Essays in law and economics." Connect to online resource, 2008. http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&res_dat=xri:pqdiss&rft_dat=xri:pqdiss:3303824.

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Miller, Alan Daniel McAfee R. Preston McAfee R. Preston. "Essays on law and economics /." Diss., Pasadena, Calif. : California Institute of Technology, 2009. http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-05292009-171353.

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Books on the topic "Law and economics in Vietnam"

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Lim, Terence. Vietnam: Risks, rewards & regulations. Cassia Communications, 1994.

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Riforma giuridica ed economia in transizione: Il caso del Vietnam. G. Giappichelli, 2002.

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Spencer, Cisca. A guide to doing business in Vietnam. Asia Research Centre, Murdoch University, in association with Department of Commerce and Trade, Western Australia, 1995.

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Hop, Chu Van. Guide to doing business in Vietnam. CCH International, 1991.

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Stults, Tamela J. How to do business in Vietnam. Indochina 2000, Inc., 1994.

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1974-, Rand John, Tarp Finn 1951-, Nguyẽ̂n Đình Tài, and Institute of Southeast Asian Studies., eds. From monobank to commercial banking: Financial sector reforms in Vietnam. NIAS Press, 2005.

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Schot, Anne C. M. J. Legal aspects of foreign investment in the Socialist Republic of Vietnam. Kluwer Law International, 1996.

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Water and Sanitation Program (World Bank). East Asia and the Pacific. Economic impacts of sanitation in Lao PDR: A five-country study conducted in Cambodia, Indonesia, Lao PDR, the Philippines, and Vietnam under the Economics of Sanitation Initiative (ESI). World Bank, Water and Sanitation Program, East Asia and the Pacific (WSP-EAP), 2009.

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Vietnam. Các văn bản về Ủy ban nhà nước về hợp tác và đầu tư. Văn phòng Ủy ban nhà nước về hợp tác và đầu tư, 1989.

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Thanh, Ngo Ba. Vietnam's economic renovation and the development of law. Law Commission of the National Assembly, Socialist Republic of Vietnam, 1991.

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Book chapters on the topic "Law and economics in Vietnam"

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Dat, Luu Van. "Foreign Investment Law in Vietnam: Legal and Economic Aspects and Comparative Analysis." In Economic Development and Prospects in the ASEAN. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-25921-2_3.

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Joshi, Moushami. "Shifting Sands: The Evolution and Future Course of U.S. Anti-dumping Law and Practice Against China and Vietnam." In Non-market Economies in the Global Trading System. Springer Singapore, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-1331-8_8.

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Ngo, Chien Quoc, and Hien Thi Tran. "Vietnam." In Private International Law Aspects of Corporate Social Responsibility. Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-35187-8_21.

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Phan, Viet D. "Vietnam." In MPI Studies on Intellectual Property, Competition and Tax Law. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-89702-6_13.

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Walters, Robert, and Marko Novak. "Vietnam." In Cyber Security, Artificial Intelligence, Data Protection & the Law. Springer Singapore, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-1665-5_11.

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Van Cuong, Nguyen. "Consumer sales law in Vietnam." In Comparative Consumer Sales Law. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315573052-11.

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Hanh, Nguyen Thi My. "Can Vietnam Move to Inflation Targeting?" In Beyond Traditional Probabilistic Methods in Economics. Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-04200-4_76.

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An, Nhung, and Ayi Gavriel Ayayi. "Motivational Factors in International Nongovernmental Organizations in Vietnam." In Finance & Economics Readings. Springer Singapore, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-8147-7_1.

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Moustaira, Elina. "Cultural Economics." In SpringerBriefs in Law. Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-15802-0_8.

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Van Tuan, Ngo, and Bui Huy Khoi. "Empirical Study of Worker’s Behavior in Vietnam." In Beyond Traditional Probabilistic Methods in Economics. Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-04200-4_52.

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Conference papers on the topic "Law and economics in Vietnam"

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Huang, Qiulian. "Analysis on the Influencing Factors of China’s Export of Forest Products to Vietnam." In 6th International Conference on Economics, Management, Law and Education (EMLE 2020). Atlantis Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/aebmr.k.210210.030.

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Nguyen, Ngoc Dan, Guoping Lei, and Xuan Minh Tran. "Overview of World Planning Trends and Land Use. Planning in a Sustainable Way in Vietnam." In 3rd International Conference on Economics, Management, Law and Education (EMLE 2017). Atlantis Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/emle-17.2017.60.

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Tran, Xuan Minh, and Guoping Lei. "Sustainable Use and Management of Sloping Fields in the Mountainous Area of Vietnam: Present Situation and Solution." In 3rd International Conference on Economics, Management, Law and Education (EMLE 2017). Atlantis Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/emle-17.2017.65.

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Nguyen, Van Thieu. "Draft Law On Special Administrative-Economic Units In Vietnam Media." In SCTCMG 2019 - Social and Cultural Transformations in the Context of Modern Globalism. Cognitive-Crcs, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.15405/epsbs.2019.12.04.479.

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Nguyen, Ngoc Dan, Guoping Lei, and Xuan Minh Tran. "Research and Development of the Map and Assessment of Land Degradation for Sustainable Development of Land Resources (Research Location: Thua Thien Hue Province—Vietnam)." In 3rd International Conference on Economics, Management, Law and Education (EMLE 2017). Atlantis Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/emle-17.2017.25.

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Guandong, Song, Thang Van Huy, and Le Thi Hoang Anh. "Research on the Remaining Problems and Solutions for Management Policy of Academic Lecturer at Public Universities in Vietnam." In Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Economics, Management, Law and Education (EMLE 2018). Atlantis Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/emle-18.2018.190.

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Gill, Grandon, and Matthew Mullarkey. "Fitness, Extrinsic Complexity and Informing Science." In InSITE 2017: Informing Science + IT Education Conferences: Vietnam. Informing Science Institute, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/3715.

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[This Proceedings paper was revised and published in Informing Science: the International Journal of an Emerging Transdiscipline (InfoSci)] Aim/Purpose: We establish a conceptually rigorous definition for the widely used but loosely defined term “fitness”. We then tie this definition to complexity, highlighting a number of important implications for the informing science transdiscipline. Background: As informing science increasingly incorporates concepts of fitness and complexity in its research stream, rigorous discussion and definition of both terms is essential to effective communication. Methodology: Our analysis consists principally of a synthesis of past work in the informing science field that incorporates concepts from evolutionary biology, economics and management. Contribution: We provide a rigorous approach to defining fitness and introduce the construct “extrinsic complexity”, as a measure of the amount of information required to predict fitness, to more fully differentiate this form of complexity from other complexity constructs. We draw a number of conclusions regarding how behaviors under low and high extrinsic complexity will differ. Findings: High extrinsic complexity environments are likely to produce behaviors that include resistance to change, imitation, turbulence and inequality. Recommendations for Practitioners: As extrinsic complexity grows, effective search for problem solutions will increasingly dominate employing recommended solutions of “best practices”. Recommendation for Researchers: As extrinsic complexity grows, research tools that rely on decomposing individual effects and hypothesis testing become increasingly unreliable. Impact on Society : We raise concerns about society’s continuing investment in academic research that discounts the extrinsic complexity of the domains under study. Future Research: We highlight a need for research to operationalize the concepts of fitness and complexity in practice.
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Linh, Dinh Thi My. "Civil Liability for Ship-Source Oil Pollution: Russian Legislation and Reference to Vietnam." In XIV European-Asian Congress "The value of law" (EAC-LAW 2020). Atlantis Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.201205.011.

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Dao, Le Thi Anh. "Implementation Of Marine Environmental Treaties In Vietnam: Problems And Resolutions." In ICLES 2018 - International Conference on Law, Environment and Society. Cognitive-Crcs, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.15405/epsbs.2019.10.18.

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Luan, Nguyen Thanh. "Proposals To Amend The Law On Land Prices In Vietnam Today." In International Scientific Conference «Social and Cultural Transformations in the Context of Modern Globalism» dedicated to the 80th anniversary of Turkayev Hassan Vakhitovich. European Publisher, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.15405/epsbs.2020.10.05.86.

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Reports on the topic "Law and economics in Vietnam"

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Donohue, John. The Law and Economics of Antidiscrimination Law. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w11631.

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Jolls, Christine. Behavioral Law and Economics. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w12879.

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Djankov, Simeon, Rafael LaPorta, Florencio Lopez-de-Silanes, and Andrei Shleifer. The Law and Economics of Self-Dealing. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w11883.

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London, Jonathan. Outlier Vietnam and the Problem of Embeddedness: Contributions to the Political Economy of Learning. Research on Improving Systems of Education (RISE), 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.35489/bsg-rise-wp_2021/062.

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Recent literature on the political economy of education highlights the role of political settlements, political commitments, and features of public governance in shaping education systems’ development and performance around learning. Vietnam’s experiences provide fertile ground for the critique and further development of this literature including, especially, its efforts to understand how features of accountability relations shape education systems’ performance across time and place. Globally, Vietnam is a contemporary outlier in education, having achieved rapid gains in enrolment and strong learning outcomes at relatively low levels of income. This paper proposes that beyond such felicitous conditions as economic growth and social historical and cultural elements that valorize education, Vietnam’s distinctive combination of Leninist political commitments to education and high levels of societal engagement in the education system often works to enhance accountability within the system in ways that contribute to the system’s coherence around learning; reflecting the sense and reality that Vietnam is a country in which education is a first national priority. Importantly, these alleged elements exist alongside other features that significantly undermine the system’s coherence and performance around learning. These include, among others, the system’s incoherent patterns of decentralization, the commercialization and commodification of schooling and learning, and corresponding patterns of systemic inequality. Taken together, these features of education in Vietnam underscore how the coherence of accountability relations that shape learning outcomes are contingent on the manner in which national and local systems are embedded within their broader social environments while also raising intriguing ideas for efforts to understand the conditions under which education systems’ performance with respect to learning can be promoted, supported, and sustained.
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Shavell, Steven. Economic Analysis of Welfare Economics, Morality and the Law. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w9700.

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Phung, D. L. Theory and evidence for using the economy-of-scale law in power plant economics. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/6304295.

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Pritchett, Lant, and Martina Viarengo. Learning Outcomes in Developing Countries: Four Hard Lessons from PISA-D. Research on Improving Systems of Education (RISE), 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.35489/bsg-rise-wp_2021/069.

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The learning crisis in developing countries is increasingly acknowledged (World Bank, 2018). The UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) include goals and targets for universal learning and the World Bank has adopted a goal of eliminating learning poverty. We use student level PISA-D results for seven countries (Cambodia, Ecuador, Guatemala, Honduras, Paraguay, Senegal, and Zambia) to examine inequality in learning outcomes at the global, country, and student level for public school students. We examine learning inequality using five dimensions of potential social disadvantage measured in PISA: sex, rurality, home language, immigrant status, and socio-economic status (SES)—using the PISA measure of ESCS (Economic, Social, and Cultural Status) to measure SES. We document four important facts. First, with the exception of Ecuador, less than a third of the advantaged (male, urban, native, home speakers of the language of instruction) and ESCS elite (plus 2 standard deviations above the mean) children enrolled in public schools in PISA-D countries reach the SDG minimal target of PISA level 2 or higher in mathematics (with similarly low levels for reading and science). Even if learning differentials of enrolled students along all five dimensions of disadvantage were eliminated, the vast majority of children in these countries would not reach the SDG minimum targets. Second, the inequality in learning outcomes of the in-school children who were assessed by the PISA by household ESCS is mostly smaller in these less developed countries than in OECD or high-performing non-OECD countries. If the PISA-D countries had the same relationship of learning to ESCS as Denmark (as an example of a typical OECD country) or Vietnam (a high-performing developing country) their enrolled ESCS disadvantaged children would do worse, not better, than they actually do. Third, the disadvantages in learning outcomes along four characteristics: sex, rurality, home language, and being an immigrant country are absolutely large, but still small compared to the enormous gap between the advantaged, ESCS average students, and the SDG minimums. Given the massive global inequalities, remediating within-country inequalities in learning, while undoubtedly important for equity and justice, leads to only modest gains towards the SDG targets. Fourth, even including both public and private school students, there are strikingly few children in PISA-D countries at high levels of performance. The absolute number of children at PISA level 4 or above (reached by roughly 30 percent of OECD children) in the low performing PISA-D countries is less than a few thousand individuals, sometimes only a few hundred—in some subjects and countries just double or single digits. These four hard lessons from PISA-D reinforce the need to address global equity by “raising the floor” and targeting low learning levels (Crouch and Rolleston, 2017; Crouch, Rolleston, and Gustafsson, 2020). As Vietnam and other recent successes show, this can be done in developing country settings if education systems align around learning to improve the effectiveness of the teaching and learning processes to improve early learning of foundational skills.
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Gordon, Eleanor, and Briony Jones. Building Success in Development and Peacebuilding by Caring for Carers: A Guide to Research, Policy and Practice to Ensure Effective, Inclusive and Responsive Interventions. University of Warwick Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.31273/978-1-911675-00-6.

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The experiences and marginalisation of international organisation employees with caring responsibilities has a direct negative impact on the type of security and justice being built in conflict-affected environments. This is in large part because international organisations fail to respond to the needs of those with caring responsibilities, which leads to their early departure from the field, and negatively affects their work while in post. In this toolkit we describe this problem, the exacerbating factors, and challenges to overcoming it. We offer a theory of change demonstrating how caring for carers can both improve the working conditions of employees of international organisations as well as the effectiveness, inclusivity and responsiveness of peace and justice interventions. This is important because it raises awareness among employers in the sector of the severity of the problem and its consequences. We also offer a guide for employers for how to take the caring responsibilities of their employees into account when developing human resource policies and practices, designing working conditions and planning interventions. Finally, we underscore the importance of conducting research on the gendered impacts of the marginalisation of employees with caring responsibilities, not least because of the breadth and depth of resultant individual, organisational and sectoral harms. In this regard, we also draw attention to the way in which gender stereotypes and gender biases not only inform and undermine peacebuilding efforts, but also permeate research in this field. Our toolkit is aimed at international organisation employees, employers and human resources personnel, as well as students and scholars of peacebuilding and international development. We see these communities of knowledge and action as overlapping, with insights to be brought to bear as well as challenges to be overcome in this area. The content of the toolkit is equally relevant across these knowledge communities as well as between different specialisms and disciplines. Peacebuilding and development draw in experts from economics, politics, anthropology, sociology and law, to name but a few. The authors of this toolkit have come together from gender studies, political science, and development studies to develop a theory of change informed by interdisciplinary insights. We hope, therefore, that this toolkit will be useful to an inclusive and interdisciplinary set of knowledge communities. Our core argument - that caring for carers benefits the individual, the sectors, and the intended beneficiaries of interventions - is relevant for students, researchers, policy makers and practitioners alike.
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