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The ability to organize millions of people for political purposes
is a potent and relatively recent weapon in the struggle for power.
Political scientists have studied two types of mass organization,
the political party and the interest group. In this book Gregory
Kasza examines a third type, which he calls the administered mass
organization. AMOs are mass civilian bodies created by
authoritarian regimes to implement public policy. Officials use
them to organize youths, workers, women, or members of other social
sectors into bodies resembling the mass conscript army. A network
of AMOs produces a conscription society, a major force in
twentieth-century politics in over 45 countries. Using comparative
history and organization theory, Kasza analyzes the politics of the
conscription society in both military and single-party regimes. He
discusses the origins of AMOs in Japan, the Soviet Union, and
Fascist Italy and their subsequent spread to China, Egypt, Nazi
Germany, Peru, Poland, and Yugoslavia. He focuses on the use of
AMOs to curb political opposition, to mobilize for war, and to
shift control over the means of production. Kasza shows how, in the
hands of despotic rulers, AMOs have contributed to the extremes of
political barbarism characteristic of the twentieth century.
One World of Welfare offers a systematic, comparative examination
of Japan's welfare policies and a critical assessment of previous
research. Gregory J. Kasza rejects the view that the Japanese
welfare system is unique; he challenges the nearly universal belief
that the postwar Japanese state neglected welfare to promote rapid
economic growth; he rejects the claim that there is a regional
welfare model in East Asia; and he uses the Japanese case to
question the dominant framework for comparative welfare research.
The author explores the relevance of both convergence and
divergence theories for understanding the Japanese record and
spotlights the importance of international influences on the timing
and content of Japan's welfare policies.This book offers a fresh
comparative template for research on Japanese public policy. Case
studies of Japan have often exaggerated its distinctiveness.
Comparative research documents points of similarity as well as
difference; it unearths the foreign models that have swayed Japan's
policymakers; and it reveals what others might learn from Japan's
experience. Most of the welfare challenges that Japan has faced
over the last century have resembled those confronting other
nations, and the Japanese have often patterned their welfare
policies after those of Western countries. Japan's welfare system
must be understood within a broader pattern of global policy
diffusion.
This study examines the relationship between state and society in
early 20th-century Japan through a case study of public policies
directed towards the media. It raises basic issues about the
Japanese state and compares Japan with other countries during the
same era.
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