| Fukushima and Civil Society: The Japanese Anti-Nuclear Movement from a Socio-Political Perspective Subjects: Area Studies; Politics & International Relations; Social Sciences; Sociology & Social Policy; Asian Studies; Asian Politics; Regulatory Policy; Political Behavior and Participation; Japanese Studies; Japanese Politics; Energy Policy; Social Movements; Political Sociology; This book analyzes the impact of the Fukushima disaster on civil society in Japan with particular attention to the anti-nuclear movement, focusing on its development, repertoire of action, mobilization strategies, modes of operation, and impact on the state's energy policy. Combining social movement theory and civil society theory, the author draws on extensive fieldwork in Japan to explore the context of the sociopolitical situation in Japan up to the Fukushima accident and to offer a typological description and analysis of the anti-nuclear movement that emerged after the disaster. Through an analysis of the relationship between the power elite and the anti-nuclear movement organizations, this volume considers the influences exercised by the ruling elites on civil society and vice versa, thus assessing the effects of the anti-nuclear movement on the state policy and the society. A comprehensive account of the anti-nuclear movement in post-Fukushima Japan, embedded within a broader perspective of the movement's historical development, contemporary political structures, and opportunities, Fukushima and Civil Society will appeal to scholars of sociology and politics with an interest in social movements. Beata Bochorodycz is Associate Professor at the Institute of Oriental Studies, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland, and the co-author of Japan's Foreign Policy Making: Central Government Reforms, Decision-Making Processes, and Diplomacy . Her research focuses on Japanese politics, social movements and civil society, diplomacy and foreign policy, and US-Japan relations and the Okinawa issue. |