Party Politics and Decentralization in Japan and France

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A01=Koichi Nakano
Asukata Ichio
Author_Koichi Nakano
autonomy
Category=JPL
center
Center Local Relations
Central Government
CGP
Chief Cabinet Secretary
Clean Government Party
coalition government
comparative politics
cumul
decentralisation policy impact
Decentralist Experts
Decentralization Commission
Decentralization Promotion Law
Decentralization Reform
democratic governance
des
Direct Democracy
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Gaston Defferre
Ideological Renewal
law
LDP
local
Local Chief Executives
mandats
Oppositional Policy
party system analysis
Pcf
policy reform processes
Political Parties
prefectoral
Prefectoral Corps
Progressive Local Governments
Public Administration
qualitative political research
reform
Regional Prefect
relations
SFIO
State Field Services
tA Ge

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415553056
  • Weight: 317g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Dec 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Decentralization is a curious policy for a central government to pursue. If politics is essentially about the struggle for power, why would anyone want to give away the power that one struggled for and won? This book argues that it is precisely party competition in search of power that propels decentralization.

Koichi Nakano develops his core argument through in-depth, qualitative research on the politics of reform in France and Japan. Introducing the concept of oppositional policy, he traces the process through which parties in opposition reinvent their ideologies and policy platforms in an attempt to present themselves as the voice of the governed, broaden popular support through the advocacy of enhanced democratic control of government, and proceed to implement some of these oppositional policies after capturing power. This book, thus, takes the role of political parties in the democratic process seriously - parties take up certain issues and espouse certain solutions actively as weapons in the power struggle both on the electoral front and in the policy process. Party competition is not merely a formal condition of democracy; it is also a mechanism with substantive policy impact on its evolution.

Party Politics and Decentralization in Japan and France will be of interest to students of Japanese and French politics and comparative politics in general.

Koichi Nakano, Ph.D. (Princeton) is Associate Professor of Political Science, Faculty of Liberal Arts, Sophia University in Japan.

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