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312
01/10/2004
5.75 x 8.75 (Hardcover)
5.5 x 8.25 (Paperback)

9781876843731

Constructing Civil Society in Japan

Voices of Environmental Movements
Stratification and Inequality Series
Japan's post-World War II "economic miracle" is well-known and much discussed, as is the collapse of the "bubble economy" and the almost decade long economic stagnation of the 1990s. In this collection of essays and articles spanning two decades of intellectual work, Koichi Hasegawa - one of Japan's foremost environmental...

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Japan's post-World War II "economic miracle" is well-known and much discussed, as is the collapse of the "bubble economy" and the almost decade long economic stagnation of the 1990s. In this collection of essays and articles spanning two decades of intellectual work, Koichi Hasegawa - one of Japan's foremost environmental sociologists - reveals another dimension to the Japanese experience of the late 20th century, a developing civil society. Hasegawa's aim in this collection is manifold, beginning with an outline of the aims, objectives and distinguishing characteristics of environmental sociology. Combining a historical analysis of the rise of this new discipline with an overview of the theoretical frames that define it, Hasegawa argues that environmental sociology challenges the sociological conventions of "disengaged observation" as well as the anthropocentrism inherent to the sociological perspective. At the same time, environmental sociology challenges a powerful environmentalists' perspective, stressing that environmental are not simply scientific or technical problems but are always and especially social problems. Environmentalism therefore needs a sociological perspective and sociology needs an environmental perspective if they are to address the most pressing problems facing human societies - environmental destruction. In the process, Hasegawa indirectly provides a compelling answer to that seemingly interminable question, "What do sociologists actually do about social problems?" Beginning with the foundations of environmental sociology and concluding with considerations of the experiences and future prospects of Japanese civil society, Constructing Civil Society in Japan will appeal to numerous audiences. It is an introductory textbook in environmental sociology as well as a guide to environmental activism. It is a unique introduction to civil society, combining European theories and Japanese case studies to reveal the obstacles and opportunities facing the Japanese citizenry. It critically addresses a range of sociological and political theories regarding citizen's activism and a range of activists' strategies in order to illuminate obstacles and openings on the path ahead.

About Editors and Authors

HASEGAWA Koichi is a Japanese sociologist and Professor in the Graduate School of Arts and Letters, Tohoku University. He obtained a PhD in Sociology from the University of Tokyo in 2004 and is renowned for his research on environmental sociology. He graduated from the University of Tokyo in 1977 and after working as an Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Literature, University of Tokyo, moved to Tohoku University in 1984 where he took up a lecturing position in the Faculty of Liberal Arts. He served as Associate Professor from 1987 before being appointed to his current position in 1997.

Table of contents


Tables
Figures
Acknowledgements
Preface to the English edition


Part I: The principles and issues of environmental sociology
1 Perspectives of environmental sociology: The issues of the second stage
2 Sociology of environmental issues: A look at the downstream side


Part II: The sociology of environmental movements
3 Environmental issues and movements
4 Motivating and mobilizing the environmental movements
5 Researching and developing environmental movements
6 The environmental movements and policy research
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Tables
Figures
Acknowledgements
Preface to the English edition

Part I: The principles and issues of environmental sociology
1 Perspectives of environmental sociology: The issues of the second stage
2 Sociology of environmental issues: A look at the downstream side

Part II: The sociology of environmental movements
3 Environmental issues and movements
4 Motivating and mobilizing the environmental movements
5 Researching and developing environmental movements
6 The environmental movements and policy research
7 Anti-pollution lawsuits in the public sphere
8 Anti-nuclear power movements as new social movements
9 Regional referendums: Community responses to nuclear facilities
10 The dynamics of social movements and official policies: Green electricity
11 Civil society and the new public sphere
12 Environmental movements and the new public sphere
13 Transforming the Citizens’ Sector
Conclusion: Towards a vibrant civil society
Notes
Bibliography
Name index
Subject index

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