Negative reaction to undesirable facilities in one’s neighborhood--“not in my back yard”--isn’t limited to the United States. Japanese communities have also resisted siting decisions for power plants, and have often delayed or killed projects for which a legitimate social need exists.\ud \ud NIMBY Politics in Japan is the first detailed account in English of energy siting disputes in postwar Japan. Based on an investigation of a hundred conventional and nuclear plants, the book draws on a wide range of local and corporate sources, as well as interviews with participants, to reveal the bargaining processes involved in social choices and their public policy outcomes.\ud \ud S. Hayden Lesbirel examines why some siting decisions have taken an e...
This book offers a comprehensive assessment of the dynamics driving, and constraining, nuclear power...
This paper examines the first occurrence of conflict between early nuclear policy and the local auto...
This book is about why and how central and local governments clash over important national policy de...
[Extract] Japan, like many other nations, confronts a NIMBY problem in implementing a range of priva...
© 2019, © 2019 Japanese Studies Association of Australia. This article examines the seven decades si...
The Fukushima nuclear disaster of March 2011 provoked a profound reassessment by the Japanese public...
This thesis compares the state of public participation in Japan’s nuclear energy policy-forming proc...
The siting or development of risky facilities, such as nuclear power plants or waste repositories, r...
This article seeks to explain how, given Japan’s “nuclear allergy ” following World War II, a small ...
The essay explores the events and background of the 1960 lockout at the Miike colleries of the Mitsu...
Article 9 has been the focus of legislative debate since Japanese leaders concluded the San Francisc...
Japan has assumed a central position within global discourses on energy since the catastrophic earth...
In this paper, we attempt to identify the reasons behind the differences in environmental policy bet...
The popular slogan NIMBY—Not in My Back Yard—captures a classic dilemma that confronts policymakers:...
This article seeks to explain how, given Japan’s “nuclear allergy ” following World War II, a small ...
This book offers a comprehensive assessment of the dynamics driving, and constraining, nuclear power...
This paper examines the first occurrence of conflict between early nuclear policy and the local auto...
This book is about why and how central and local governments clash over important national policy de...
[Extract] Japan, like many other nations, confronts a NIMBY problem in implementing a range of priva...
© 2019, © 2019 Japanese Studies Association of Australia. This article examines the seven decades si...
The Fukushima nuclear disaster of March 2011 provoked a profound reassessment by the Japanese public...
This thesis compares the state of public participation in Japan’s nuclear energy policy-forming proc...
The siting or development of risky facilities, such as nuclear power plants or waste repositories, r...
This article seeks to explain how, given Japan’s “nuclear allergy ” following World War II, a small ...
The essay explores the events and background of the 1960 lockout at the Miike colleries of the Mitsu...
Article 9 has been the focus of legislative debate since Japanese leaders concluded the San Francisc...
Japan has assumed a central position within global discourses on energy since the catastrophic earth...
In this paper, we attempt to identify the reasons behind the differences in environmental policy bet...
The popular slogan NIMBY—Not in My Back Yard—captures a classic dilemma that confronts policymakers:...
This article seeks to explain how, given Japan’s “nuclear allergy ” following World War II, a small ...
This book offers a comprehensive assessment of the dynamics driving, and constraining, nuclear power...
This paper examines the first occurrence of conflict between early nuclear policy and the local auto...
This book is about why and how central and local governments clash over important national policy de...