Frank J. Schwartz / Susan J. Pharr (eds.)
The State of Civil Society in Japan
Herausgeber: Frank J., Schwartz; Schwartz, Frank; Pharr, Susan
Frank J. Schwartz / Susan J. Pharr (eds.)
The State of Civil Society in Japan
Herausgeber: Frank J., Schwartz; Schwartz, Frank; Pharr, Susan
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This survey about associational life and the public sphere brings the study of civil society in Japan into the mainstream of the Western literature on the subject. Its importance thus lies not only in deepening our understanding of Japan, but of civil society generally.
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This survey about associational life and the public sphere brings the study of civil society in Japan into the mainstream of the Western literature on the subject. Its importance thus lies not only in deepening our understanding of Japan, but of civil society generally.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 416
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. März 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 672g
- ISBN-13: 9780521534628
- ISBN-10: 0521534623
- Artikelnr.: 22463525
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 416
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. März 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 672g
- ISBN-13: 9780521534628
- ISBN-10: 0521534623
- Artikelnr.: 22463525
Introduction; Part I. Context: 1. What is civil society? Frank Schwartz;
2. From Meiji to Heisei: the state and civil society in Japan Sheldon
Garon; 3. Capitalism and civil society in postwar Japan: perspectives from
intellectual history Andrew Barshay; Part II. The Associational Sphere: 4.
Japan's civil society organizations in comparative perspective Tsujinaka
Yutaka; 5. Molding Japanese civil society: state structured incentives and
the patterning of civil society Robert Pekkanen; 6. After Aum: religion and
civil society in Japan Helen Hardacre; 7. State-society partnerships in the
Japanese welfare state Margarita Estevez-Abe; Part III. The Nonmarket
Activities of Economic Actors: 8. Redefining the conservative coalition:
agriculture and small business in Japan Robert Bullock; 9. The death of
unions' associational life? Political and cultural aspects of enterprise
unions Suzuki Akira; 10. The struggle for an independent consumer society:
consumer activism and the state's response in postwar Japan Patricia
Maclachlan; Part IV. State-Civil Society Linkages: 11. Media and the
Internet in the development of civil society in Japan Laurie Freeman; 12. A
tale of two legal systems: prosecuting corruption in Japan and Italy David
Johnson; Part V. Globalization and Value Change: 13. Trust and social
intelligence in Japan Yamagishi Toshio; 14. Building global civil society
from the outside in? Japan's development NGOs, the state, and international
norms Kim Reimann; Conclusion: targeting by an activist state: Japan as a
civil society model Susan Pharr.
2. From Meiji to Heisei: the state and civil society in Japan Sheldon
Garon; 3. Capitalism and civil society in postwar Japan: perspectives from
intellectual history Andrew Barshay; Part II. The Associational Sphere: 4.
Japan's civil society organizations in comparative perspective Tsujinaka
Yutaka; 5. Molding Japanese civil society: state structured incentives and
the patterning of civil society Robert Pekkanen; 6. After Aum: religion and
civil society in Japan Helen Hardacre; 7. State-society partnerships in the
Japanese welfare state Margarita Estevez-Abe; Part III. The Nonmarket
Activities of Economic Actors: 8. Redefining the conservative coalition:
agriculture and small business in Japan Robert Bullock; 9. The death of
unions' associational life? Political and cultural aspects of enterprise
unions Suzuki Akira; 10. The struggle for an independent consumer society:
consumer activism and the state's response in postwar Japan Patricia
Maclachlan; Part IV. State-Civil Society Linkages: 11. Media and the
Internet in the development of civil society in Japan Laurie Freeman; 12. A
tale of two legal systems: prosecuting corruption in Japan and Italy David
Johnson; Part V. Globalization and Value Change: 13. Trust and social
intelligence in Japan Yamagishi Toshio; 14. Building global civil society
from the outside in? Japan's development NGOs, the state, and international
norms Kim Reimann; Conclusion: targeting by an activist state: Japan as a
civil society model Susan Pharr.
Introduction; Part I. Context: 1. What is civil society? Frank Schwartz;
2. From Meiji to Heisei: the state and civil society in Japan Sheldon
Garon; 3. Capitalism and civil society in postwar Japan: perspectives from
intellectual history Andrew Barshay; Part II. The Associational Sphere: 4.
Japan's civil society organizations in comparative perspective Tsujinaka
Yutaka; 5. Molding Japanese civil society: state structured incentives and
the patterning of civil society Robert Pekkanen; 6. After Aum: religion and
civil society in Japan Helen Hardacre; 7. State-society partnerships in the
Japanese welfare state Margarita Estevez-Abe; Part III. The Nonmarket
Activities of Economic Actors: 8. Redefining the conservative coalition:
agriculture and small business in Japan Robert Bullock; 9. The death of
unions' associational life? Political and cultural aspects of enterprise
unions Suzuki Akira; 10. The struggle for an independent consumer society:
consumer activism and the state's response in postwar Japan Patricia
Maclachlan; Part IV. State-Civil Society Linkages: 11. Media and the
Internet in the development of civil society in Japan Laurie Freeman; 12. A
tale of two legal systems: prosecuting corruption in Japan and Italy David
Johnson; Part V. Globalization and Value Change: 13. Trust and social
intelligence in Japan Yamagishi Toshio; 14. Building global civil society
from the outside in? Japan's development NGOs, the state, and international
norms Kim Reimann; Conclusion: targeting by an activist state: Japan as a
civil society model Susan Pharr.
2. From Meiji to Heisei: the state and civil society in Japan Sheldon
Garon; 3. Capitalism and civil society in postwar Japan: perspectives from
intellectual history Andrew Barshay; Part II. The Associational Sphere: 4.
Japan's civil society organizations in comparative perspective Tsujinaka
Yutaka; 5. Molding Japanese civil society: state structured incentives and
the patterning of civil society Robert Pekkanen; 6. After Aum: religion and
civil society in Japan Helen Hardacre; 7. State-society partnerships in the
Japanese welfare state Margarita Estevez-Abe; Part III. The Nonmarket
Activities of Economic Actors: 8. Redefining the conservative coalition:
agriculture and small business in Japan Robert Bullock; 9. The death of
unions' associational life? Political and cultural aspects of enterprise
unions Suzuki Akira; 10. The struggle for an independent consumer society:
consumer activism and the state's response in postwar Japan Patricia
Maclachlan; Part IV. State-Civil Society Linkages: 11. Media and the
Internet in the development of civil society in Japan Laurie Freeman; 12. A
tale of two legal systems: prosecuting corruption in Japan and Italy David
Johnson; Part V. Globalization and Value Change: 13. Trust and social
intelligence in Japan Yamagishi Toshio; 14. Building global civil society
from the outside in? Japan's development NGOs, the state, and international
norms Kim Reimann; Conclusion: targeting by an activist state: Japan as a
civil society model Susan Pharr.