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Osaka University Press
Address | Osaka University West Front Ymadaoka2-7 Suita-shi Osaka, JAPAN ZIP:565-0871 |
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Policy Coordination in the Era of Decentralization
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〔オンデマンド版〕分散化時代の政策調整
(978-4-87259-812-4)
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(978-4-87259-812-4)
Wholesale Price: Members Only
1 pc /set
In Stock
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Shipping Date |
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About 10 days
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Dimensions |
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A5 size*214 pages
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Specifications |
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Country of manufacture: Japan
Material / component: Paper
Package: Individual Packaging
Year of manufacture: 2024
Product tag: None
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Description
Yuta Kobayashi The Cabinet Office is an administrative agency that plays a key role in providing comprehensive coordination beyond the "stove-piped administration" of the ministry bureaucracy in order to deal with increasingly complex policy issues. As an organization that assists the prime minister, minister in charge of special missions, and other cabinet ministers, it has been charged with the mission of coordinating policies as a command post for important policies such as economic policy and disaster prevention by running the administrative bureaucracy from a [one-step higher] position. However, as a series of diverse policy issues were brought to the Cabinet Office in the 2000s, including the issue of the declining birthrate, the organization of the Cabinet Office swelled. In order to make the organization more user-friendly, [the Cabinet Office was] streamlined in 2016, and some policies were transferred to the ministries and agencies. This [expansion of the Cabinet Office] has received a negative reputation in Japanese politics, but was it really only a negative aspect? This book clarifies the true background of the expansion of the Cabinet Office and shows the merits and demerits of the Cabinet Office in taking on administrative demands that could not be met by the ministry bureaucracy during the period of ongoing organizational reform immediately following the reorganization of central ministries and agencies. The paper then discusses the changes toward a [Prime Minister's Office-led] administrative system that would result from the supplementation of the ministry bureaucracy by the Cabinet Office, and the role played by the Cabinet Office in exercising flexibility within the administrative bureaucracy. On-demand version of [Policy Coordination in the Age of Decentralization], published November 2021. |
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The Cabinet Office is an administrative agency that plays a key role in providing comprehensive coordination beyond the "stove-piped administration" of the ministry bureaucracy in order to deal with increasingly complex policy issues. As an organization that assists the prime minister, minister in charge of special missions, and other cabinet ministers, it has been charged with the mission of coordinating policies as a command post for important policies such as economic policy and disaster prevention by running the administrative bureaucracy from a [one-step higher] position. However, as a series of diverse policy issues were brought to the Cabinet Office in the 2000s, including the issue of the declining birthrate, the organization of the Cabinet Office swelled. In order to make the organization more user-friendly, [the Cabinet Office was] streamlined in 2016, and some policies were transferred to the ministries and agencies.
This [expansion of the Cabinet Office] has received a negative reputation in Japanese politics, but was it really only a negative aspect? This book clarifies the true background of the expansion of the Cabinet Office and shows the merits and demerits of the Cabinet Office in taking on administrative demands that could not be met by the ministry bureaucracy during the period of ongoing organizational reform immediately following the reorganization of central ministries and agencies. The paper then discusses the changes toward a [Prime Minister's Office-led] administrative system that would result from the supplementation of the ministry bureaucracy by the Cabinet Office, and the role played by the Cabinet Office in exercising flexibility within the administrative bureaucracy.
On-demand version of [Policy Coordination in the Age of Decentralization], published November 2021.