Trust and Mistrust in Contemporary Japanese Politics

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Central Government
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Edelman Trust Barometer
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Government’s Policy Performance
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Grocery Shopping Behavior
Increasing Ethno Cultural Diversity
Japanese politics
Japanese Public Schools
Kanagawa Prefecture
Low Trust Levels
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party system instability
political legitimacy
Political Trust
Political Trust Influences
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post-disaster governance case studies
post-Fukushima Japan
risk communication policy
Seikatsu Club
Sino-Japanese relations
Societal Majority
trust-building opportunities
voters' trust levels
Yasukuni Shrine

Product details

  • ISBN 9780815367277
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 189 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Jan 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book offers a timely examination of the role of trust – or lack thereof – in contemporary Japanese politics. It portrays the political trust deficit prevalent in Japan through a unique range of case studies, illustrating how mistrust, rather than trust, impacts politics in Japan today. The first chapter introduces key trust concepts and the state of trust research on Japan. The second analyses voters’ trust levels in politics and parties and explores possible consequences of prevalent mistrust, including electoral volatility and instability in the party system. The following case study investigates the government’s choices in rebuilding the Tohoku region, devastated by the ‘3/11’ triple disaster of earthquake, tsunami and nuclear reactor meltdown in 2011. It highlights how policies eroded already low trust levels among Japanese citizens in their government. The next chapter explores Japanese consumer trust in food safety and related regulations in post-3/11 Japan, finding deficiencies in the government’s risk communication. The fifth case study turns towards multiculturalism in educational policies and schooling practices, scrutinizing Japan’s readiness to face the challenge of trust-building between members of different ethnic groups. The final chapter illuminates the trust deficit in Japan’s relations with China, explaining how trust-building opportunities were missed in the past, leading to a continuous erosion of bilateral ties.

The chapters originally published as a special issue in Japan Forum.

Kerstin Lukner is the managing director of the Alliance for Research on East Asia (AREA) Ruhr, a joint research and teaching institution of the universities of Duisburg-Essen and Bochum, Germany. Alexandra Sakaki is a research fellow in the Asia division at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP) in Berlin, Germany.