Introduction Jeff Kingston
Part 1: Political Environment
1. Japanese Politics: Mainstream or Exotic? Arthur
Stockwin
2. The Politics of Trade Policy Aurelia George Mulgan
3. Limiting Fundamental Rights Protection in Japan – The Role of
the Supreme Court Lawrence Repeta
4. Civil Society: Past, Present, and Future Akihiro Ogawa
5. Japan’s Contemporary Media David McNeill
Part 2: Nuclear and Renewable Energy
6. Revisiting the Limits of Flexible and Adaptive
Institutions: The Japanese Government’s Role in Nuclear Power Plant
Siting Over the Post-War Period Daniel P. Aldrich
7. Who Controls Whom? Constraints, Challenges and Rival Policy
Images in Japan’s Post-War Energy Restructuring Paul Scalise
8. Japan’s Nuclear Village: Power and Resilience Jeff Kingston
9. Japan’s Renewable Power Prospects Andrew DeWit
Part 3: International Dynamics
10. Bad War or Good War? History and Politics in Postwar
Japan Sven Saaler
11. Territorial Disputes with Korea and China: Small Islets,
Enduring Conflicts Mark Selden
12. An Inconvenient Truce: Domestic Politics and the Russo-Japanese
Northern Territories Dispute Tina Burrett
13. Okinawa Today: Spotlight on Henoko Alexis Dudden
Part 4: Social Dilemmas
14. Demographic Dilemmas, Women and Immigration Jeff
Kingston
15. Reproductive Rights in Japan: Where do women stand? Tin Tin
Htun
16. Hiding in Plain Sight: Minority Issues in Japan Kyle
Cleveland
17. Mental Health and Therapy in Japan: Conceptions, Practices, and
Challenges Sachiko Horiguchi
18. Violence in Schools: Tensions Between `the Individual’ and `the
Group’ in the Japanese Education System Robert Aspinall
19. Hidden Behind Tokyo: Observations on the Rest of Japan John
Mock
Part 5: Reforming Japan?
20. Seeking to Change Japanese Society Through Legal Reform
Matthew J. Wilson
21. Parochialism – Japan's Failure to Internationalize Robert
Dujarric and Ayumi Takenaka
22. What’s Behind what Ails Japan David Leheny
Jeff Kingston is Professor of History and Director of Asian Studies at Temple University, Japan. He is the author of Japan's Quiet Transformation (2004) and Contemporary Japan (2011).
`From immigration and demographics to Okinawa and the changing role
of the Supreme Court, this collection of essays provides a fresh
and comprehensive guide to a society that is changing more than
widely recognised. Kingston has gathered a collection of essays
that shun cliché in favour of rational discussion.’ – David
Pilling, Asia Editor, Financial Times `In a post-earthquake,
tsunami and radiation Japan, many of the assumptions we had about
Japan, even those we had felt were chronically problematic, have
been directly challenged. This volume is an important collection
that allows us to explore that challenge, both in our understanding
of what is distinct to a rapidly changing Japan in itself, but also
as a way for us to engage in comparative research on a number of
dynamics that are characteristic to post-industrial society in Asia
and around the world. Hugely valuable for current research and a
great teaching tool for advanced students.’ – David Slater, Sophia
University Faculty of Liberal Arts, Japan `This highly accessible
book captures – better than any other I know currently available in
English –the key debates currently taking place in Japan as it
searches for a new sense of identity following the triple disasters
of earthquake, tsunami and nuclear meltdown which befell the
country on 11 March 2011. It should go straight on the reading list
of anyone teaching courses on contemporary Japan.’ – Roger Goodman,
Nissan Professor of Modern Japanese Studies, University of Oxford,
UK `This timely collection by cutting-edge scholars of East Asia
covers many of the key issues in Japanese domestic society and
international relations. The readable and informative essays take
us beyond the mass media stereotypes, making it a valuable tool for
students, teachers, journalists, and general readers seeking a
deeper understanding of Japan today.’ – Jordan Sand, Associate
Professor of Japanese History, Georgetown University, USA 'Critical
Issues in Contemporary Japan provides a reminder to the more
optimistic analysts that much more reform work remains before the
promised dawn breaks ... this work offers an excellent summary for
students, or even experts, of Japan’s host of pressing issues,
spanning a wide range of domestic matters, energy policy,
international and social affairs.' – Anthony Fensom, Japan Times
'This very useful book is a timely collection of 22 accessible
essays on a wide range of issues in contemporary Japan. Aimed at a
"broad audience of readers," the essays by knowledgeable scholars
of Japanese life and society include useful discussions of the
"political environment"; social questions as varied as the crisis
of population decline, school bullying, and minority issues; essays
on the international dynamics of Japan's economic and political
life; and energy questions in the wake of the nuclear crisis
brought on by the 2011 earthquake and its aftermath. The essays are
extremely readable, and go a long way to illuminate a society that
has changed dramatically from the halcyon days of Japan's Pacific
preeminence just a very few years ago. Many of the authors have
lived and taught in Japan for years, and have been close observers
of the changes that have occurred and are occurring still. General
readers and specialists alike will learn much from these essays and
their thoughtful engagement with contemporary Japan. Summing Up:
Highly recommended. All levels/libraries.' – W. D. Kinzley,
University of South Carolina, CHOICE Magazine, July 2014 Vol. 51
No. 11 "Critical Issues in Contemporary Japan makes an honest
effort to tackle several issues in Japanese society that may be
foreign to many non-Japanese. The strength of the text is that it
articulates, in an easy-to-understand manner, the nature of
contemporary Japanese society and the problems it faces today.
Furthermore, the text is highly relevant to the changes occurring
at this very moment, and will be so for the foreseeable future. It
is undeniably one of the most thorough volumes ever written on the
subject, with chapters authored by world-renown scholars such as
David Aldrich, David McNeill, Kyle Cleveland, and Jeff Kingston
himself. It is highly recommended to all students, scholars, and
specialists alike who wish to better understand contemporary Japan,
and perhaps utilize the information within to change the course of
the nation." Douglas M. Mille, Henry M. Jackson School of
International Studies
University of Washington - Journal of Global and International
Studies
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