• 360 pages
  • 6 x 9
  • 41 tables, 21 figs.
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  • Price: $55.50
  • EAN: 9781566390347
  • Publication: Jun 1993
  • Price: $57.50
  • EAN: 9781439900925

Japanese Cities in the World Economy

edited by Kuniko Fujita and Richard Child Hill

Japan is the world's second most powerful economy and one of the most urbanized nations on earth. Yet English-language literature contains remarkable little about cities in Japan. This collection of original essays on Japanese urban and industrial development covers a broad spectrum of city experiences. Leading Japanese and Western urbanists analyze Japan's largest metropolitan areas (Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya); proto-typical industrial cities (Kamaishi, Kitakyushu, Toyota); high technology urban satellites (Kanagawa); and smaller, more traditionally organized industrial districts (Tsubame). This book demonstrates how Japan's flexible economic growth strategies and changing relationship to the world economy have produced a uniquely Japanese pattern of urban development in this century.

Throughout the essays that describe individual cities, contributors provide commentary on each city's twentieth-century history and functional relations with other cities and focus on the dynamic linkage between global relations and local activities. They examine the role of government—central, prefectural, and local—in the restructuring of Japanese industrial and urban life. One essay is devoted to the urbanization process in pre-World War II Japan; another considers urban planning on the western Pacific Rim. This is the first book that analyzes how the economic transformation of Japan has restructured Japanese cities and how urban and regional development policies have kept pace with (and in some ways effected) changes in the economy.

This comprehensive study of Japanese cities provides interdisciplinary coverage of urban development issues of interest to the fields of economics, business, sociology, political science, history, Asian and Japanese studies, and urban planning.

Reviews

"There is really nothing quite like this book currently on the market and it should fill a gap in which there is high interest." —T.J. Pempel, Professor of Political Science, University of Colorado and author of Policy and Politics in Japan

About the Author(s)

Kuniko Fujita is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Michigan State University.

Richard Child Hill is Professor of Sociology and Urban Affairs at Michigan State University and co-author of Detroit: Race and Uneven Development (Temple).

In the Series

Conflicts in Urban and Regional Development

No longer active. Conflicts in Urban and Regional Development, edited by John R. Logan and Todd Swanstrom, includes books on urban policy and issues of city and regional planning, accounts of the political economy of individual cities, and books that compare policies across cities and countries.