Article: Studies from B. Rehder and colleagues provide new data on life sciences.

"The US has a distinctive legal style, which Robert Kagan has called ''adversarial legalism.'' It is marked by a pattern of political decisionmaking and conflict resolution in which the courtrooms and the law are systematically exploited as political arenas for making and implementing political settlements and policy outlines," scientists writing in the journal Regulation & Governance report (see also Life Sciences).

"In this article it is argued that a ''German way'' of adversarial legalism is about to emerge in the German industrial relations system. Economic liberalization, the fragmentation and decentralization of lawmaking authority in the political sphere, ...

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