Japan’s Dual Civil Society: Members Without Advocates

by Robert Pekkanen

Contemporary Issues in Asia and the Pacific

Publisher: Stanford: Stanford University Press
Publication Date: 2006
ISBN: 0-8047-5429-2
Binding: paper
Pages: xx, 252
Available from: Stanford University Press

Abstract

Japan's Dual Civil Society: Members Without Advocates is the twelfth title in the East-West Center book series, Contemporary Issues in Asia and the Pacific, published by Stanford University Press.

This book provides an overview of the state of Japan's civil society and a new theory, based on political institutions, to explain why Japan differs so much from other industrialized democracies. It offers a new interpretation of why Japan's civil society has developed as it has, with many small, local groups but few large, professionally managed national organizations. The book further asks what the consequences of that pattern of development are for Japan's policy and politics. The author persuasively demonstrates that political institutions -- the regulatory framework, financial flows, and the political opportunity structure -- are responsible for this pattern, with the result that civil groups have little chance of influencing national policy debates. The phenomenon of "members without advocates" thus has enormous implications for democratic participation in Japan.

 

Details and ordering information at
Stanford University Press


Contents
  1. Introduction
  2. Japan's Civil Society in Comparative Perspective
  3. The Regulatory Framework
  4. Neighborhood Associations and Local Civil Society
  5. The Politics of Regulating Civil Society
  6. Conclusion: Members Without Advocates


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