ABSTRACT

Contested Governance in Japan extends the analysis of governance in contemporary Japan by exploring both the sites and issues of governance above and below the state as well as within it. This volume discusses the contested nature of governance in Japan and the ways in which a range of actors are involved in different sites and issues of governance at home, in the region and the globe. It includes chapters on global governance, local policy-making, democracy, environmental governance, the Japanese financial system, corruption, the family and corporate governance.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

Contested governance in Japan: modes, sites and issues
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part I|116 pages

Sites of governance

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chapter 2|18 pages

Japan's role in emerging East Asian governance

Regional and national implications
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chapter 4|19 pages

Local governance

The role of referenda and the rise of independent governors
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chapter 5|21 pages

Governance, globalization and the Japanese financial system

Resistance or restructuring?
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chapter 6|20 pages

Koizumi's ‘robust policy’

Governance, the Japanese welfare employment regime and comparative gender studies
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part II|122 pages

Issues of governance

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chapter 10|19 pages

Whose problem?

Japan's homeless people as an issue of local and central governance
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chapter 11|22 pages

The political economy of Japanese ‘corporate governance’

A metaphor for capitalist rationalization
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chapter 12|20 pages

Governance through the family

The political function of the domestic in Japan
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