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Civil Society and Japan's Foreign Aid examines the changing relations between the Japanese state and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in promoting effective aid policies and analyzes the changing nature of policy making and governance in Japan. It is based on extensive research in Southeast Asia and Japan, investigating the role of Japanese aid in fields such as education, health care, environmental protection, and economic development. It analyzes the key players in aid policymaking, including donor governments, multinational organizations, international and local NGOs, the business community, and aid recipients.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Civil Society and Japan's Foreign Aid examines the changing relations between the Japanese state and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in promoting effective aid policies and analyzes the changing nature of policy making and governance in Japan. It is based on extensive research in Southeast Asia and Japan, investigating the role of Japanese aid in fields such as education, health care, environmental protection, and economic development. It analyzes the key players in aid policymaking, including donor governments, multinational organizations, international and local NGOs, the business community, and aid recipients.
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Autorenporträt
KEIKO HIRATA received her Ph.D. from the University of Hawaii, Manoa and is currently an Adjunct Professor of Political Science at the University of San Diego.
Rezensionen
"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." - DennisYasutomo, 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
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