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Academic & Professional Books  Environmental & Social Studies  Pollution & Remediation  Pollution & Remediation: General

Transnational Japan in the Global Environmental Movement

By: Simon Avenell(Author)
328 pages, 13 b/w illustrations
Transnational Japan in the Global Environmental Movement
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  • Transnational Japan in the Global Environmental Movement ISBN: 9780824867133 Hardback Mar 2017 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 1-2 weeks
    £79.99
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  • Transnational Japan in the Global Environmental Movement ISBN: 9780824879358 Paperback Sep 2018 Out of stock with supplier: order now to get this when available
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About this book

What motivates people to become involved in issues and struggles beyond their own borders? How are activists changed and movements transformed when they reach out to others a world away? This adept study addresses these questions by tying together local, national, regional, and global historical narratives surrounding the contemporary Japanese environmental movement. Spanning the era of Japanese industrial pollution in the 1960s and the more recent rise of movements addressing global environmental problems, it shows how Japanese activists influenced approaches to environmentalism and industrial pollution in the Asia-Pacific region, North America, and Europe, as well as landmark United Nations conferences in 1972 and 1992.

Japan's experiences with diseases caused by industrial pollution produced a potent "environmental injustice paradigm" that fueled domestic protest and became the motivation for Japanese groups' activism abroad. From the late 1960s onward Japanese activists organized transnational movements addressing mercury contamination in Europe and North America, industrial pollution throughout East Asia, radioactive waste disposal in the Pacific, and global climate change. In all cases, they advocated strongly for the rights of pollution victims and people living in marginalized communities and nations – a position that often put them at odds with those advocating for the global environment over local or national rights. Transnational involvement profoundly challenged Japanese groups' understanding of and approach to activism. Numerous case studies demonstrate how border-crossing efforts undermined deeply engrained notions of victimhood in the domestic movement and nurtured a more self-reflexive and multidimensional approach to environmental problems and social activism.

Transnational Japan in the Global Environmental Movement will appeal to scholars and students interested in the development of civil society, social movements, and environmentalism in contemporary Japan; grassroots inter-Asian connections in the postwar period; and the ways Asian countries and their citizens have shaped and been influenced by global issues like environmentalism.

Customer Reviews

Biography

Simon Avenell is associate professor of history at the College of Asia and the Pacific, the Australian National University.

By: Simon Avenell(Author)
328 pages, 13 b/w illustrations
Media reviews

"Simon Avenell relates the largely untold transnational history of Japan's environmental activism and the ways in which Japanese scholars, activists, and environmental pollution victims benefited from and contributed to global responses to pollution and environmental degradation. Avenell invested a great deal of effort in researching this work, using a wide variety of original Japanese sources as evidence in his investigation. His book is a major accomplishment."
– Daniel Aldrich, Northeastern University

"This book features first-rate scholarship on an important topic about which relatively little has been published. Readers stand to gain a deep and nuanced understanding of the origins and evolution of Japanese environmental activism thanks to Simon Avenell's discussion of specific cases of pollution that sparked civic activism in Japan and how these movements were influenced by interactions with overseas activists. The globalization of Japan's environmental movement is exceptionally interesting, and there is really nothing quite like this case study of transnational environmental activism viewed through the paradigm of injustice."
– Jeffrey Kingston, Temple University

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