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Environmental Politics in Japan
Networks of Power and Protest
Explores the social, cultural, and political explanations for Japan's environmental problems through a local and national study.
Jeffrey Broadbent (Author)
9780521665742, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 28 July 1999
440 pages, 13 b/w illus. 3 maps
22.9 x 15.2 x 2.5 cm, 0.62 kg
'… an excellently researched and clearly written contribution to the study of comparative and international environmental politics.' Asian Journal of Political Science
After World War Two, Japan attained economic growth but suffered environmental disaster. In response to massive protest in the 1960s and 1970s, the Japanese government rapidly reduced the worst air and water pollution. Jeffrey Broadbent's case study of industrial growth and pollution in a rural Japanese prefecture explains this response while testing political, social movement and environmental theory. The state, conservative political party and big business pushed rampant growth until movements posed a political and disruptive challenge. Then, the elites passed some pollution control, but also demobilized local protest, quashed discontent, and prevented the formation of national environmental groups. Without the protest threat, business stymied other government pollution-control plans. The interaction of material, institutional and cultural factors, especially informal institutions, explained the dominance of actors and the pattern of outcomes. Through this syncretic lens in a non-Western setting, this study refines our theories of the state, protest movements, political process, and environmental problems.
List of figures and tables
Preface
1. Growth versus the environment in Japan
2. Visions and realities of growth
3. Protest and policy change
4. Movement startups
5. Protest against landfill No. 8
6. Under the machine
7. The Governor gives in
8. Contested consensus
9. Pyrrhic victories
10. Power, protest, and political change
Appendix 1: Meso-networks and macro-structures
Appendix 2: Oita Prefecture and Japan National Growth and environmental key events: 1955–1980
Appendix 3: Pollution legislation at prefectural and national levels: 1964–1985
References
Index.
Subject Areas: Social & cultural anthropology, ethnography [JHMC]
