Advice and Consent
The Politics of Consultation in Japan
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:5th Mar '01
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Schwartz explores how political conflicts of interest among economic groups are resolved in Japan.
This book explores how political conflicts of interest among economic groups are resolved in Japan with the help of consultative councils, or shingikai. Schwartz also makes broader observations about the political economy of Japan, and, by extension, other advanced industrial economies.If the postwar era has witnessed a pluralizing trend in Japan, that is not to say that many diverse, fluctuating groups compete equally in the political marketplace. Instead, small sets of well-organized, narrowly-focused interest groups typically join specific bureaucratic agencies, groups of politicians, and individual experts to dominate policymaking in relatively self-contained issue areas. One useful window on interest-group politics is Japan's system of consultative councils. More than 200 of these councils, or shingikai, are attached to the ministries. Composed of business people, bureaucrats, scholars, journalists, union members, and others, they deliberate on virtually every aspect of public policy. This book reviews the functions and operations of Japan's council system, and presents three case studies of specific governmental decisions involving the use of shingikai in the late 1980s.
'… this book is a valuable data resource. Published in 1998, when central government reform was being widely debated, it is also timely and useful in understanding the character of recent Japanese administrative reform. if students read the case studies carefully - especially the passages where Schwartz's interviewees give blow-by-blow accounts of specific debates - they will surely discover important materials for future studies in this area.' Social Science Japan Journal
ISBN: 9780521005364
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 20mm
Weight: 510g
344 pages