Japan Decides 2017 The Japanese General Election /
| Yhteisötekijä: | |
|---|---|
| Muut tekijät: | , , , | 
| Yhteenveto: | XXIV, 351 p. 40 illus. text  | 
| Kieli: | englanti | 
| Julkaistu: | 
        Cham :
          Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,
    
        2018.
     | 
| Painos: | 1st ed. 2018. | 
| Aiheet: | |
| Linkit: | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-76475-7 | 
| Aineistotyyppi: | Elektroninen Kirja | 
                Sisällysluettelo: 
            
                  - Part I Introduction
 - 1. Introduction; Robert J. Pekkanen, Steven R. Reed, Ethan Scheiner and Daniel M. Smith
 - 2. Japanese Politics Between 2014 and 2017; Robert J. Pekkanen and Steven R. Reed
 - 3. The 2017 Election Results: An Earthquake, a Typhoon, and another Landslide; Ethan Scheiner, Daniel M. Smith and Michael F. Thies
 - Part II Political Parties
 - 4. Komeito 2017: New Complications; Axel Klein and Levi McLaughlin
 - 5. The Opposition: From Third Party Back to Third Force; Robert J. Pekkanen and Steven R. Reed
 - 6. The JCP: A Perpetual Spoiler?; Ko Maeda
 - Part III Campaign and Issues
 - 7. Scandals during the Abe Administrations; Matthew Carlson and Steven R. Reed
 - 8. Public Opinion and the Abe Cabinet: Alternating Valence and Position Issues; Yukio Maeda
 - 9. Survey of Candidates' Policy Preferences; Kiichiro Arai and Miwa Nakajo
 - 10. Party Competition and the Electoral Rules; Kuniaki Nemoto
 - 11. Persistence of Women’s Under-representation; Mari Miura
 - 12. Does Japan want to Build a Wall Too? Immigration and the 2017 General Election in Japan; Michael Strausz
 - 13. Inequality and the 2017 Election: Decreasing Dominance of Abenomics and Regional Revitalization; David Chiavacci
 - 14. The First Two Arrows of Abenomics: Monetary and Fiscal Politics in the 2017 Snap Election; Saori Katada and Gabrielle Cheung
 - 15. Abenomics Third Arrow: Fostering Competitiveness?; Kenji E. Kushida
 - 16. Constitutional Revision in the 2017 Election; Kenneth Mori McElwain
 - 17. The North Korea Factor in the 2017 Election; Yasushi Izumikawa
 - 18. Foreign Policy; Sheila Smith. .