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El. knyga: Sustainability in Contemporary Rural Japan: Challenges and Opportunities

Edited by (Hokkaido University, Japan)
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Rural communities in Japan have suffered from significant depopulation and economic downturn in post-war years. Low birth rates, aging populations, agricultural decline and youth migration to large cities have been compounded by the triple disaster of March 11, 2011, which destroyed farming and fishing communities and left thousands of people homeless. This book identifies these challenges and acknowledges that an era of post-growth has arrived in Japan. Through exploring new forms of regional employment, community empowerment, and reverse migration, the authors address potential opportunities and benefits that may help to create and ensure the quality of life in depopulating areas and post-disaster scenarios. This book will be of interest not only to students of Japanese society, but also to those outside of Japan who are seeking new approaches for tackling depopulation challenges.

List of figures
vii
List of tables
ix
Contributors xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction xv
PART I Challenges in rural areas
1(62)
1 Social sustainability in post-3.11 coastal Japan: the significance of social capital
3(16)
Alyne E. Delaney
2 Schools in remote areas: challenges for youth, parents and community
19(16)
Johannes Wilhelm
3 The Heisei Municipal Mergers: measures of sustainability, equality and identity
35(14)
Anthony S. Rausch
4 Agriculture in Japan: free trade and the need for reform
49(14)
Stephanie Assmann
PART II Case studies: employment in rural areas
63(30)
5 Social enterprise businesses in rural community development in Hokkaido
65(14)
Rosario Laratta
6 Working for others in Kawakami: contradictive expectations, tensions, and negotiating power relations
79(14)
Meng Liang
PART III Sustainability across generations: life reform, lifestyle migration and U-turn movements
93(44)
7 Young urban migrants in the Japanese countryside between self-realization and slow life? The quest for subjective well-being and post-materialism
95(14)
Susanne Klien
8 Islands for life: artistic responses to remote social polarization and population decline in Japan
109(16)
Adrian Favell
9 Reforming life as mothers and wives in rural Japan: the post-WWII life reform (seikatsu kaizen) initiative in Hamlet M, Tochigi prefecture
125(12)
Noriko Yamaguchi
PART IV Brand management and tourism
137(30)
10 Tourism as a future for local rail services? An analysis of debates in Akita prefecture
139(12)
Peter Ackermann
11 Hokkaido's overlapping protected areas and regional revitalization: the case study of Toya-Usu geopark in Shikotsu-Toya national park
151(16)
Thomas E. Jones
Appendix: list of Japanese terms and translations 167(2)
Index 169
Stephanie Assmann is a professor in the Research Faculty of Media and Communication, Hokkaido University, Japan.