In 2004, Japan instituted a system to protect citizens against military attacks and terrorism for the first time after World War II. Faced with the changing security environment in East Asia, the Japanese government was forced to implement the most extensive reform of its domestic crisis management ("Kiki-Kanri") system in the postwar era.
In 2004, Japan instituted a system to protect citizens against military attacks and terrorism for the first time after World War II. Faced with the changing security environment in East Asia, the Japanese government was forced to implement the most extensive reform of its domestic crisis management ("Kiki-Kanri") system in the postwar era.
Yasuhiro Takeda is a professor in the Department of International Relations at Tokyo International University, Japan, and an Emeritus Professor at the National Defense Academy, Japan. Jun Ito is an associate professor in the Department of Global Liberal Arts, Faculty of International Communication at Aichi University, Japan. Yusuke Kawashima is an associate professor in the College of Humanities and Social Sciences at Ibaraki University, Japan.
Inhaltsangabe
Contents List of Figures List of Tables Preface Acknowledgments Editors List of Contributors List of Japanese Laws and Acts Introduction: Questioning Japan's Outdated Safety Myths Yasuhiro Takeda Chapter 1. A Guide to Japan's Crisis Management System: History, Laws, and Policies Jun Ito Chapter 2. Decentralization and Integration in Civil Protection Governance Yusuke Kawashima Chapter 3. Local Governments' Crisis Management Systems: Conflicts over Cooperation Ken Kato Chapter 4. An Overview of and Issues in Legislative Management Regarding Civil Protection in Armed Attack Situations Hironobu Nakabayashi Chapter 5. The Civil Protection Trap: Why Government-led Evacuation Plans for War and Terrorism are Impractical Naofumi Miyasaka Chapter 6. The Realities of Civil Protection Training in Local Governments Yusuke Kawashima, Jun Ito, and Daisuke Hakiai Chapter 7. A Response to the Civil Protection Plans of Japan's Municipalities for the Problems of the Remote Islands Koji Furukawa Chapter 8. The Private Sector Response to Ballistic Missile Attacks Takashi Ashizawa Chapter 9. Two Approaches to Responding to Destructive Cyber Attacks on Critical Infrastructure in Japan: Addressing Cyber Crises as "Service Failures" or "Armed Attacks" Takahisa Kawaguchi Chapter 10. Pitfalls in Japan's Civil Protection Framework: A Reconsideration Based on a Red Team Attack Scenario Policy Simulation Tomoaki Honda Chapter 11. Japan's Changing Approach to Dealing with Rumors in the Aftermath of Natural Disasters and War Masahiro Hayashi Conclusion Yasuhiro Takeda References Index
Contents List of Figures List of Tables Preface Acknowledgments Editors List of Contributors List of Japanese Laws and Acts Introduction: Questioning Japan's Outdated Safety Myths Yasuhiro Takeda Chapter 1. A Guide to Japan's Crisis Management System: History, Laws, and Policies Jun Ito Chapter 2. Decentralization and Integration in Civil Protection Governance Yusuke Kawashima Chapter 3. Local Governments' Crisis Management Systems: Conflicts over Cooperation Ken Kato Chapter 4. An Overview of and Issues in Legislative Management Regarding Civil Protection in Armed Attack Situations Hironobu Nakabayashi Chapter 5. The Civil Protection Trap: Why Government-led Evacuation Plans for War and Terrorism are Impractical Naofumi Miyasaka Chapter 6. The Realities of Civil Protection Training in Local Governments Yusuke Kawashima, Jun Ito, and Daisuke Hakiai Chapter 7. A Response to the Civil Protection Plans of Japan's Municipalities for the Problems of the Remote Islands Koji Furukawa Chapter 8. The Private Sector Response to Ballistic Missile Attacks Takashi Ashizawa Chapter 9. Two Approaches to Responding to Destructive Cyber Attacks on Critical Infrastructure in Japan: Addressing Cyber Crises as "Service Failures" or "Armed Attacks" Takahisa Kawaguchi Chapter 10. Pitfalls in Japan's Civil Protection Framework: A Reconsideration Based on a Red Team Attack Scenario Policy Simulation Tomoaki Honda Chapter 11. Japan's Changing Approach to Dealing with Rumors in the Aftermath of Natural Disasters and War Masahiro Hayashi Conclusion Yasuhiro Takeda References Index
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