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Civil Society In Japan: The Growing Role of NGOs in Tokyo's Aid and Development Policy
 
 
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Civil Society In Japan: The Growing Role of NGOs in Tokyo's Aid and Development Policy [Hardcover]

Keiko Hirata (Author)

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Book Description

August 17, 2002 031223936X 978-0312239367 1
This book examines changing state-civil society relations in Japan with a focus on the role of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in Tokyo's foreign policy. Globalization and industrial maturation have weakened state authority and sparked the growth of NGOs in Japan. NGOs are gaining influence in a number of areas, most prominently in aid and development. This influence is expressed both through grassroots pressure campaigns and by growing collaboration between NGOs and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. By analyzing this important new phenomenon, the book sheds light on the changing nature of state-civil society relations and the role of NGOs in promoting democracy.

Editorial Reviews

Review

"This is an important book on an exciting phenomenon in Japanese politics. NGOs are key players in Japan's huge development aid program. Through case studies and an analysis of the broader trends in civil activism in Japan, Keiko Hirata shows NGOs to be new elements in Japan's changing structures of governance. Increasing pluralism within Japan's civil society gives NGOs a key function as issue advocates, policy players and agents of influence in the contemporary Japanese body politic. NGOs represent a new wave of issue-oriented policy intervention, and Hirata has opened up the issue for us in this fresh analysis." --Alan Rix, Professor of Japanese Studies, University of Queensland, Australia

"This book is the first study in English that specifically focuses on the influence of the newly emerging NGO community on Japan's foreign aid policy. Hirata's presents a convincing picture of the dual role played by NGOs as an emerging force in civil society and as new constituents for politicians and bureaucrats. The outcome of the struggle between NGOs as cooperative partners or as contentious gadflies of policymakers in an increasingly pluralistic political setting may have long-term implications not only for aid policy but also for Japan's future foreign policy. This study will therefore appeal to readers interested in both Japan's domestic political developments and its ability to contribute to the international community in the field of economic development." --Dennis Yasutomo, Professor of Government, Smith College

"This book about NGOs and foreign aid in Japan covers a broad range of hitherto unconnected subjects. . . . In so doing, it challenges several commonly accepted notions. One is the idea that Japanese are invariably deferent to state authority. Another is that the 'Japanese model' is a counter to Western ideas of democracy and citizen activism. And the third, on the other hand, is that NGOs in Japan are always in opposition to, and opposed by, the state. In fact, as Hirata shows, an independent and growing grass-roots citizen activism may be moving Japan closer to Western models of civil society and democracy. . . . This book should be of interest to both specialists and non-specialists alike who are interested in a changing Japan and how its foreign policy gets made." --Professor Ellis S. Krauss, Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies, University of California, San Diego
 
"Civil Society in Japan synthesizes a great deal of recent research in a highly readable way. It will be useful to readers interested in long-term socioeconomic and normative trends underlying state-society relations in Japan on on issues facing contemporary Japanese ODA." —Frank J. Schwartz, Japanese Journal of Political Science

About the Author

Keiko Hirata is a Visiting Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of California, Irvine.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Japan is typically viewed as a docile society, with its people subservient to their corporations and the government. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
pesticide aid, soft aid, japanese developmental state, developmental alliance, public interest corporations, critical cooperation, strategic aid, incorporated associations, sustainable human development, skill revolution, loan aid, global norms
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, World Bank, Japan International Volunteer Center, Defense Agency, Southeast Asia, United Nations, World War, Phnom Penh, Shapla Neer, Economic Cooperation Bureau, House of Representatives, Mekong Watch, Save the Children, Japan International Cooperation Agency, Japanese Embassy, Mekong River, Nikkei Weekly, Plaza Accord, Amnesty International Japan, Assistance Office, Association of Medical Doctors of Asia, Cambodian Ministry of Agriculture, International Campaign, Narmada Valley
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