[{"onix":{"RecordReference":"9784750329406","NotificationType":"03","ProductIdentifier":{"ProductIDType":"15","IDValue":"9784750329406"},"DescriptiveDetail":{"ProductComposition":"00","ProductForm":"BA","ProductFormDetail":"B109","TitleDetail":{"TitleType":"01","TitleElement":{"TitleElementLevel":"01","TitleText":{"collationkey":"Human Beliefs and Values in East and Southeast Asia in Transition","content":"Human Beliefs and Values in East and Southeast Asia in Transition"},"Subtitle":{"collationkey":"13 Country Profiles on the Basis of the AsiaBarometer Surveys of 2006 and 2007","content":"13 Country Profiles on the Basis of the AsiaBarometer Surveys of 2006 and 2007"}}},"Contributor":[{"SequenceNumber":"1","ContributorRole":["B01"],"PersonName":{"collationkey":"イノグチ タカシ","content":"猪口　孝"},"BiographicalNote":"Takashi Inoguchi (Ph.D. from MIT) is professor of political science, Chuo University, and Professor Emeritus, University of Tokyo. He is also former Assistant Secretary General of the United Nations assigned to The United Nations University Headquarters, Member of the Legislative Council, and the Science Council of Japan, Executive Editor, Japanese Journal of Political Science (Cambridge University Press), Chairman, the Executive Committee of the Asian Consortium for Political Research. He has published widely, writing or editing 80 books in Japanese and English in the area of Japanese politics, world affairs and international relations. Some of his more recent publications include; Globalization, Public Opinion and the State ( Routledge, 2008), Federalism in Asia (Edward Elgar PUB,2007); The Uses of Institutions: the U.S., Japan and Governance in East Asia (Palgrave Macmillan, 2007); Political Cultures in Asia and Europe: Citizens, States and Societal Values (Routledge, 2006); Citizens and the State (Routledge, 2007); Japanese Politics: An Introduction (Trans Pacific Press, 2005), and American Democracy Promotion (Oxford University Press, 2000). His personal website can be viewed at http:\/\/www.t-inoguchi.com\/en\/index."}],"Language":[{"LanguageRole":"01","LanguageCode":"jpn","CountryCode":"JP"}],"Extent":[{"ExtentType":"11","ExtentValue":"316","ExtentUnit":"03"}],"Subject":[{"MainSubject":"","SubjectSchemeIdentifier":"78","SubjectCode":"0036"}],"Audience":[{"AudienceCodeType":"22","AudienceCodeValue":"00"}]},"CollateralDetail":{"TextContent":[{"TextType":"03","ContentAudience":"00","Text":"東・東南・南・中央アジアを網羅するアジア最大の比較世論調査プロジェクト〈アジア・バロメーター〉2006年度・2007年度調査の論文集。東・東南アジア14カ国を対象に、民主化・経済発展・地域統合の可能性を探る。（全文英語）"},{"TextType":"04","ContentAudience":"00","Text":"　Acknowledgements（Takashi Inoguchi）\n\n　List of Contributors\n　Fact Sheet\n\n　Introduction（Takashi Inoguchi）\n\nEast Asia:\n　Chapter 1 Vietnam “Vietnam: Most Optimistic Nation in Confucian Asia”（Le Hong Giang）\n　Chapter 2 China “The Perception of Well-Being and Social Harmony in China”（Dingping Guo and Min Shu）\n　Chapter 3 Singapore “Singapore: Overview”（Chua Beng Huat）\n　Chapter 4 Hong Kong “Hong Kong: Perception of Governance, Social Capital, and Quality of Life”（Ming Sing）\n　Chapter 5 Taiwan “Taiwan in 2006: Sociopolitical Orientations in the Context of Democratic Consolidation”（David W. F. Huang）\n　Chapter 6 Korea “Korea: A Confucian Society in Culture Shifts”（Daesong Hyun）\n　Chapter 7 Japan “Country Profile of Japan: Citizens’ Perception of Quality of Life, Social Capital, and Governance”（Takashi Inoguchi and Seiji Fujii）\n\nSoutheast Asia:\n　Chapter 8 Myanmar “Myanmar: Understanding Political Turmoil and Social Unrest”（Myat Thein）\n　Chapter 9 The Philippines “2007 Philippine Country Profile: Democracy in Peril”（Jennifer Santiago Oreta）\n　Chapter 10 Malaysia “Social Capital, Developmentalism, and Unconsolidated Democracy: The Malaysian Case”（Azeem Fazwan Ahmad Farouk）\n　Chapter 11 Lao PDR “Changing Needs and Perceptions in the Process of Economic Development in the Lao PDR”（Bounlouane Douangngeune）\n　Chapter 12 Thailand “Thailand in 2007: An Attitude of Reservation”（Chaiwat Khamchoo and Aaron Stern）\n　Chapter 13 Indonesia “Unsatisfactory Outcomes After Eight Years of Political Reform in Indonesia”（Pratikno）\n\nAppendix\n　AsiaBarometer Survey 2007 Overview\n　Questionnaire\n　Index of Questionnaire"}],"SupportingResource":[{"ResourceContentType":"01","ContentAudience":"01","ResourceMode":"03","ResourceVersion":[{"ResourceForm":"02","ResourceVersionFeature":[{"ResourceVersionFeatureType":"01","FeatureValue":"D502"},{"ResourceVersionFeatureType":"04","FeatureValue":"9784750329406.jpg"}],"ResourceLink":"https:\/\/cover.openbd.jp\/9784750329406.jpg"}]}]},"PublishingDetail":{"Imprint":{"ImprintIdentifier":[{"ImprintIDType":"24","IDValue":"0182"},{"ImprintIDType":"19","IDValue":"7503"}],"ImprintName":"明石書店"},"Publisher":{"PublishingRole":"01","PublisherIdentifier":[{"PublisherIDType":"24","IDValue":"0182"},{"PublisherIDType":"19","IDValue":"7503"}],"PublisherName":"明石書店"},"PublishingStatus":"08","PublishingDate":[{"PublishingDateRole":"01","Date":"20090312"}]},"ProductSupply":{"MarketPublishingDetail":{"MarketPublishingStatus":"00","MarketPublishingStatusNote":"1;"},"SupplyDetail":{"ProductAvailability":"99","Price":[{"PriceType":"03","PriceAmount":"10000","CurrencyCode":"JPY"}]}}},"hanmoto":{"toji":"上製","zaiko":33,"maegakinado":"Introduction to the AsiaBarometer 2006&2007 Surveys（Takashi Inoguchi）\n\n1. The AsiaBarometer Survey\n　The AsiaBarometer is a regional survey project regularly conducted in a broader Asia encompassing East, Southeast, South and Central Asia with a focus on daily lives of ordinary people.It was launched in 2002 in my article on the monthly magazine called Chuo Koron (Central Review) in 2002.\n　The AsiaBarometer surveys of 2006 and 2007 were conducted in societies of East and SoutheastAsia, covering 13 countries, which included Vietnam, China, Singapore, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Korea,Myanmar, the Philippines, Malaysia, Lao PDR, Thailand, Indonesia, and Japan.\n　What are the principles of the AsiaBarometer? The principles of the AsiaBarometer are expressed in eight sentences. (1) Minimize obtrusiveness in asking questions. (2) Try to be as clear and concrete as possible in formulating questions. (3) Be culturally and linguistically sensitive. (4) Analyze data from bottom up rather than top down. (5) Analyze data on the basis of knowledge of environments surrounding respondents. (6) Formulate a questionnaire with maximum input from local experts. (7) Analyze survey data jointly with local experts. And (8) seek truth with optimism and open mind.\n\n　　（The rest of this part is omitted.）\n\n2. Focus on East and Southeast Asia and Its Significance\n　The AsiaBarometer Survey has been conducted annually since 2003 by the team led by its director, Takashi Inoguchi. It covers the entire region of Asia, meaning East, Southeast, South and Central Asia. In 2003 it covered selective societies in all subregions. In 2004 it covered mostly East and Southeast societies. In 2005 it focused on South and Central Asia. The 2006 and 2007 AsiaBarometer Surveys focus on East and Southeast Asia. The 2006 AsiaBarometer Survey was conducted in Japan, South Korea, China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore and Vietnam. The 2007 AsiaBarometer Survey was conducted in the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei, Indonesia, Cambodia, Laos, and Myanmar. Its significance is that this broad region experienced a great leap upward in terms of gross national product and associated changes in beliefs and values people entertained in their daily lives. Retrospectively, the years 2006 and 2007 were the eve of the Great Financial Crisis originating from the bust of the subprime housing loan in the United States, which diffused globally and deepened its grave negative effects in 2008. The regional economies expanded in concert with the burst of American consumption. Per capita income level went up continuously. Their exports to and investments in the United States brought a huge amount of foreign reserves, especially to China, Japan and Korea. Southeast Asian economies went hand in hand with East Asian and American economies. As a result, the total amount of intraregional trade surpassed that of interregional trade in the region of East and Southeast Asia in the early 2000s. Yet at the same time glaring inequalities expanded and associated social miseries manifested themselves. This was most serious in those countries in which social welfare policy has not been yet well institutionalized. Relatively well institutionalized are Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Taiwan, whereas relatively poorly institutionalized are the rest, including China and most of Southeast Asia. The responses to the questionnaire registered in the Surveys reflect these and other social changes through which people lived their lives. The broad region of East and Southeast Asia was swept by the “third wave”of democratization in the 1980s and 1990s. At least on the surface during a few years since the end of the Cold War it looked as if the whole region was moving toward establishing democratic or quasidemocratic regions. By the mid-2000s the speed of rising income started to go down in many places. This volume gives country profiles of these 13 societies. As before, the 2006 and 2007 Surveys examined (1) people’s anxiety, anguish, contentment, and aspiration; (2) how people relate to social institutions, i.e., family, neighborhood, workplace, the court, the parliament, mass media, political parties, the police, the military, the state, the nation, business firms, and international organizations; and (3) the preference of people about regime types such as dictatorship, technocracy, military rule and democracy. In this volume readers are provided with the profiles of rapidly changing political consciousness underneath the strident expansion of the economies and associated social changes.\n","author":[{"listseq":1,"dokujikubun":"編"}],"datemodified":"2012-01-23 12:34:10","datecreated":"2010-02-18 00:00:00","hanmotoinfo":{"name":"明石書店","yomi":"アカシショテン","url":"http:\/\/www.akashi.co.jp\/","twitter":"","facebook":"","chokutori":"","toritsugitorikyo":"","toritsugisonota":"","eigyoudaihyousha":"","phoneshoten":"","facsimileshoten":"","emailshoten":"","ordersite":"4","ordersitesonota":"","ordersitejisha":"","henpin":""},"dateshuppan":"2009-03"},"summary":{"isbn":"9784750329406","title":"Human Beliefs and Values in East and Southeast Asia in Transition","volume":"","series":"","publisher":"明石書店","pubdate":"20090312","cover":"https:\/\/cover.openbd.jp\/9784750329406.jpg","author":"猪口孝／編"}}]