Political change in Japan : electoral behavior, party realignment, and the Koizumi reforms
著者
書誌事項
Political change in Japan : electoral behavior, party realignment, and the Koizumi reforms
Walter H. Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center, 2009
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
収録内容
- An overview of postwar Japanese politics / Steven R. Reed and Kay Shimizu
- Avoiding a two-party system : the Liberal Democratic Party versus Duverger's Law / Steven R. Reed and Kay Shimizu
- Has the electoral-system reform made Japanese elections party-centered? / Ko Maeda
- Pork barrel politics and partisan realignment in Japan / Jun Saito
- Declining electoral competitiveness in Japan : postreform trends and theoretical pessimism / Robert J. Weiner
- How Koizumi won / Chao-Chi Lin
- How long are Koizumi's coattails? Party-leader visits in the 2005 election / Kenneth Mori McElwain
- Two steps forward, one step back : Japanese postal privatization as a window on political and policymaking change / Patricia L. Maclachlan
- The slow government response to Japan's bank crisis : a new interpretation / Ethan Scheiner and Michio Muramatsu
- Stealing elections : a comparison of election-night corruption in Japan, Canada, and the United States / Ray Christensen and Kyle Colvin
- The puzzle of the Japanese gender gap in Liberal Democratic Party support / Barry C. Burden
- Women running for national office in Japan : are Koizumi's female "children" a short-term anomaly or a lasting phenomenon? / Alisa Gaunder
- Surrogate representation : building sustainable linkage structures in contemporary Japanese politics / Sherry L. Martin
- Japanese politics in the Koizumi era : temporary anomaly or a paradigm shift? / Kenneth Mori McElwain and Steven R. Reed
内容説明・目次
内容説明
In the past twenty years, Japan has undergone dramatic changes. Electoral reform has altered the relationship between politicians and voters, and Japan is increasingly a two-party system. The popularity of former prime minister Koizumi Junichiro highlighted the salience of telegenic party leaders. Amid so many shifts, it remains unclear whether such changes will stand the test of time and where Japanese politics is heading. However, it is not too early to assess the permanence and the direction of political change in Japan.
Each chapter in this wide-ranging volume addresses a key political development in Japan -from "stealing votes" to the constraints that women candidates face. Intended for scholars and students who study Japan, this timely volume also provides valuable reading for comparative political scientists. With contributions from some of the most distinguished scholars working on Japan today, Political Change in Japan seeks to answer the question: Was political reform in Japan a revolution or a flash in the pan?
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