AUTHOR BIO | SUBJECT CATEGORIESAnalyzes six major areas of domestic policy-making in Japan Policy and Politics in JapanCreative ConservativismSearch the full text of this bookT. J. Pempel
In a comparative framework, Pempel analyzes six major areas of domestic policy-making in Japanadministrative reform, economic policy, labor relations, social welfare, environmental policy, and higher education. Each case is accompanied by selected readings translated from official government documents and the writings of critics of official policy. The book offers an unusually strong point of view, one that is sure to invite debate. Pemple attempts to unravel the intertwined issues of the autonomy of the Japanese bureaucracy and the strength of the conservative coalition. He describes the weaknesses of opposition politics and labor but goes on to suggest how protest movements can be effective and how change can occur in the face of a powerful conservative consensus. The "economic miracle" of Japan, like the other policy areas, is realistically assessed in the context of events in other industrialized countries. About the Author(s)T. J. Pempel is Director of the China-Japan Program and Associate Professor of Government at Cornell University. Subject CategoriesPolitical Science and Public Policy
In the seriesPolicy and Politics in Industrial States, edited by Douglas E. Ashford, Peter J. Katzenstein, and T.J. Pempel. Each volume in Policy and Politics in Industrial States, edited by Douglas E. Ashford, Peter J. Katzenstein, and T.J. Pempel, is a sophisticated textbook that focuses on a single country but in a comparative policy context. Each consists of a balance of analysis and primary documents for six major issues. The issues include topics like economic policy, labor relations, social welfare, and the internal organization of the state. |