This paper examines the influence of government transparency on changing views regarding nuclear energy before and after Japan’s natural and nuclear disaster of 2011. Individual level data were used, covering 45 countries and containing 27,423 observations. It was observed in the majority of countries that the rate of favoring nuclear energy declined after the disaster. However, empirical results show that such a tendency is less likely to be observed in a more transparent country. This implies that views regarding nuclear energy were less elastic to the news of the Fukushima incident when people were more certain about nuclear energy prior to the Fukushima incident
Accepted version.This paper presents results of a comparison of media coverage of fusion and fission...
Polls conducted in the United Kingdom following the Fukushima nuclear accident (March 2011) indicate...
The Fukushima accident in March 2011 calls for the reassessment of the nuclear regime in Japan, espe...
This paper examines the influence of government transparency on changing views regarding nuclear ene...
Using cross-country data, this paper examines the influence of government transparency on changing v...
Using cross-country data, this paper examines the influence of government transparency on changing v...
Using cross-country data, this paper examines the influence of government transparency on changing v...
Using cross-country data, this paper examines the influence of government transparency on changing v...
Using cross-country data, this paper investigates how governance influenced views regarding the secu...
Using cross-country data, this paper investigates how governance influenced views regarding the secu...
Using cross-country data, this paper investigates how governance influenced views regarding the secu...
Using cross-country data, this paper investigates how governance influenced views regarding the secu...
Japan’s 2011 natural disasters were accompanied by a devastating nuclear disaster in Fukushima. This...
Japan’s 2011 natural disasters were accompanied by a devastating nuclear disaster in Fukushima. This...
This paper uses cross-country data compiled immediately after the Fukushima nuclear accident to inve...
Accepted version.This paper presents results of a comparison of media coverage of fusion and fission...
Polls conducted in the United Kingdom following the Fukushima nuclear accident (March 2011) indicate...
The Fukushima accident in March 2011 calls for the reassessment of the nuclear regime in Japan, espe...
This paper examines the influence of government transparency on changing views regarding nuclear ene...
Using cross-country data, this paper examines the influence of government transparency on changing v...
Using cross-country data, this paper examines the influence of government transparency on changing v...
Using cross-country data, this paper examines the influence of government transparency on changing v...
Using cross-country data, this paper examines the influence of government transparency on changing v...
Using cross-country data, this paper investigates how governance influenced views regarding the secu...
Using cross-country data, this paper investigates how governance influenced views regarding the secu...
Using cross-country data, this paper investigates how governance influenced views regarding the secu...
Using cross-country data, this paper investigates how governance influenced views regarding the secu...
Japan’s 2011 natural disasters were accompanied by a devastating nuclear disaster in Fukushima. This...
Japan’s 2011 natural disasters were accompanied by a devastating nuclear disaster in Fukushima. This...
This paper uses cross-country data compiled immediately after the Fukushima nuclear accident to inve...
Accepted version.This paper presents results of a comparison of media coverage of fusion and fission...
Polls conducted in the United Kingdom following the Fukushima nuclear accident (March 2011) indicate...
The Fukushima accident in March 2011 calls for the reassessment of the nuclear regime in Japan, espe...