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1 GLR 1 (1997)

handle is hein.journals/gmglwr1 and id is 1 raw text is: GAMING LAW REVIEW
Volume 1, Number 1, 1997
Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.

Editorial
A Word from the House

IN THE SUMMER OF 1991, I embarked upon a
two-year stint as a research scholar in Japan.
My mission: no less than to discover the heart
and soul of the Land of the Rising Sun. Who
would have imagined that my quest would end
with a visit to that prototypical Japanese gam-
ing institution: the pachinko (pinball) parlor!
Here, amid blaring music and the roar of
steel balls clattering through hundreds of up-
right pinball machines, staid salarymen shrug
off their gray jackets and lose themselves to the
lure of fickle fortune. In a country famous for
its orderliness and thriftiness, pachinko stands
out like a protruding nail-the kind that, ac-
cording to a popular Japanese saying, gets
hammered down. This nail, however, is
golden. Literally.
In fact, despite Japan's worst recession since
World War II, gross revenue from pachinko has
doubled since the late 1980s, according to esti-
mates of both the government and private an-
alysts. It has hit $275 billion a year-more than
the world-wide sales of Japan's auto industry.1
Japan's experience has been echoed across
the globe in recent years. Indeed, the spectac-
ular success and growth of gaming has
spawned new efforts to further regulate what
is already the most regulated industry in the
world. These efforts range from the enactment
of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act in the
United States to the birth of the U.S. National
Gaming Impact Commission to new laws in
countries from the United Kingdom to Monaco,
from the West Indies to Saipan and Tinian. Yet,
to date, there has been a disappointing lack of
full-fledged gaming law periodicals.
As Editor-in-Chief of Gaming Law Review, my
goal is to fill this void. Gaming Law Review will
begin as a quarterly journal and contain inter-

national coverage of legislative, regulatory, and
judicial matters affecting gaming. From a stel-
lar editorial board to authoritative analyses and
opinion pieces to publication of hard-to-find in-
formation and documents, Gaming Law Review
is meant to keep you up-to-date on the latest
developments in this burgeoning field.
In our first issue, you will find full text and
summaries of cutting-edge judicial decisions
and articles that:
 review the results of recent gaming initia-
tives at the polls;
 analyze the National Gambling Impact
Study Commission Act;
 explore jurisdiction and regulatory issues in
Internet gaming;
 examine gaming legislation and regulation
in the U.K. and the West Indies;
 trace the link between Native American land
claims to casino gambling in New York State;
 explain the rules for enforcement of gaming
debts;
 spotlight casino siting issues in Mississippi;
 document the Native American struggle to
gain economic independence through gam-
ing;
 address the legal and social costs of com-
pulsive gambling;
 discuss the impact of casino gaming in Nova
Scotia and Ontario;
 consider the ramifications of gaming law in
Tinian.
In upcoming issues, we will bring you arti-
cles on the legal dimensions of lotteries, sports
betting, pari-mutuel wagering, bingo, card
games, riverboat gaming, casinos, and cruise
and in-flight gaming. We will report and ana-

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