Prix bas
CHF112.00
Pas encore paru. Cet article sera disponible le 11.01.2025
Auteur
Hideo Nakazawa holds a Doctoral degree in Sociology from University of Tokyo. He is a professor of Regional and Environmental Sociology at Sophia University (Tokyo) and was a Visiting Research Fellow at the School of Social Policy, Sociology and Social Research (SSPSSR), University of Kent (2006-07). Since 2021, he is the Editor-in-Chief of Japanese Journal of Sociology, published by Wiley on behalf of JSS. He is the principal investigator of an international research team called as JAFCOF (Japan Association for study of Former COalFields). Recent publications include: Sengo Nihon no Shupattsu to Tanko Rodo Kumiai [Coalmine Union in the Departure of Post-war Japan] in collaboration with other JAFCOF scholars (Tokyo: Ochanomizu Shobo, 2022); 'Suburban/Hinterland Aging in Japan and Types of Policy/Civic Reactions: Contraction, Relocation, or Machizukuri?' (2017, Korean Regional Sociology 18(2): 293-317).
Texte du rabat
This book takes you through fundamental texts in the Japanese sociology canon. It is the first book to curate and translate these key works into English, bringing together a diverse range of voices, ideas and issues in Japanese sociology.
Contenu
Part I: Sociological Explorations in Contemporary Japan at Crossroads
Chapter 1. Reexamining "Made in Japan" from the Factory Floor: Working Conditions and Workers' Objections in the Automobile Industry, by Ryoji Ihara
Chapter 2. Rationalizing Foodwork at Home: Coping Strategies and Social Stratification among Working Women with Children, by Yuiko Fujita and Misako Nukaga
Chapter 3. Running Away Barefoot: Girls in Nightlife Okinawa, by Yoko Uema, Translated by Alexander Brown
Chapter 4. Why Hasn't Established the Official Migration Policy? Migration Politics and Liberal Trilemma in Japan, by Sachi Takaya
Part II: How Have Unique Concepts been Created on Emerging Realities
Chapter 5. Study of Social Mobility (1971), by Saburo Yasuda, Commented and translated by Satoshi Miwa
Chapter 6. The concept of "Beneficial and Victimized Spheres": Excerpts from Shinkansen Pollution (1985), by Harutoshi Funabashi, Commented and translated by Tsunehide Chino
Chapter 7. Explanation of Class Identification by the Fararo-Kosaka Model: Revised text from Formal Theory of Sociology (2006), by Kenji Kosaka, Commented and translated by Hiroshi Hamada
Chapter 8. Life cycle of Wage Worker Family: Excerpts from A Sociology of Poverty (1964/2011), by Toshiko Kamada, Commented and translated by Hideo Nakazawa
Chapter 9. Paradigm Shift of Analysis of Contemporary Rural Communities: The T-type Participatory Rural Appraisal (2014), by Sadao Tokuno, Commented and translated by Taro Hirai
Part III: Networks and Institutions on which Japanese Sociologists Work
Chapter 10. Japanese General Social Survey and International Research Collaboration: East Asian Social Survey, by Satomi Yoshino, Tetsuo Mo, Kuniaki Shishido and Noriko Iwai
Chapter 11. Open Data of Social Surveys by Hiroki Sato, Hiroshi Matsui, Hiroshi Ishida and Ken'ichi Ikeda
Chapter 12. Educational Policy, Educational Practice and Evidence Based Policy, by Wataru Nakazawa and Ichiro Kuraishi
Chapter 13. The Formulation Process of the "Reference Standard for the Field of Sociology" and Its Outline, by Harumi Sasatani
Part IV: Postwar Japan in the Making: Classical Studies in 1950-70s
Chapter 14. Workers' Political Attitudes (1955), by Rokuro Hidaka, Akira Takahashi, Kotaro Kido and Joji Watanuki Commented by Toru Kikkawa
Chapter 15. Thinking Styles and Organizational Principles in Religious Movements during the Expansion Period (1976), by Tsutomu Shiobara Commented and translated by Yoshihide Sakurai
Chapter 16. Research on the Tokara Islands Society (1982), by Hiroyuki Torigoe Commented and translated by Atsushi Makino
Chapter 17. The Hell of the Gaze (1973), by Munesuke Mita Commented and translated by Kenji Sato