The Policy Process and Social Policy in Japan
- 1 March 1992
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in PS: Political Science and Politics
- Vol. 25 (01), 36-43
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s1049096500034909
Abstract
Is Japan enigmatic because it is unique? Problems of social and economic policy in contemporary Japan challenge myths about uniqueness. By focusing on comparable problems, this essay notes the limits of world views about Japanese uniqueness and the exceptionalism of countries.An aim is to unbundle areas that illustrate the policy process and reflect on models of policymaking. In the diversity within Japan, policy-making in specific areas reflects on the approaches of corporatism, pluralism, and state-centered theorists.Across policy areas, instructors will discover problems of Japan's industrial society that are nonetheless comparable to elsewhere. Throughout East Asia, scholars note the distinct social, ideological, and historical contexts that challenge past social theory. A leading Asian country can offer rich additions to a course on comparative politics and public policy. In Japan, one also can emphasize familiar features of industrial society, economy, and polity that test various approaches and models of policymaking. Using areas of labor, welfare, agriculture, and education as examples, instructors may pursue these and additional topics found from the bibliographies and readings.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Changing relations among the government, labor, and business in Japan after the oil crisisInternational Organization, 1988
- The Unbundling of "Japan, Inc.": The Changing Dynamics of Japanese Policy FormationThe Journal of Japanese Studies, 1987