纵横网络重访:探索其对核能态度和倡导的影响

IF 1.2 4区 社会学 Q1 AREA STUDIES
K. Satoh, Tobias Weiss
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引用次数: 3

摘要

福岛核事故后,由于民间社会的抵制,日本经历了核能使用的急剧下降。这种公民社会活动可以用日本社区形成的强大社会资本来解释。相比之下,古典(以及最近的一些)文献认为,日本密集的协会和团体网络起到了传播保守意识形态的作用,从而控制了公民社会。传统思想学派将保守组织的网络描述为垂直的,而不是水平的。本文基于我们在2017年底进行的调查(n = 77,084),通过分析各类型群体的隶属关系对成员对核能政策的态度和倡导的影响,探索了这一讨论中的经验证据。对相关群体特征的群体效应的详细分析使我们重新定义了上述二分法。垂直网络通常与群体的保守主义联系在一起,但在后唯物主义和激进主义的程度上有所不同。群体特征的各个维度对成员对核能的看法、对反核运动的情绪以及对反核的倡导都有不同的影响。无论是社会资本理论还是垂直网络理论都没有得到本研究的充分证实。这两种效应都可以在不同的受访者群体中观察到。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Vertical and Horizontal Networks Revisited: Exploring Their Effects on Attitudes and Advocacy Toward Nuclear Energy
After the Fukushima accident, Japan experienced a drastic decline in nuclear energy use because of resistance from civil society. This civil society activity can be explained by the strong social capital forged in Japanese communities. By contrast, the classical (and some recent) literature has argued that Japan’s dense network of associations and groups functions to disseminate conservative ideology and thus control civil society. The classical school of thought has described networks of conservative organizations as vertical in contrast to horizontal networks. This article explores the empirical evidence in this discussion by analyzing the effect of affiliation of each type of group on the members’ attitude and advocacy toward nuclear energy policy based on our survey (n = 77,084) conducted in late 2017. Detailed analysis of group effects of relevant group features led us to reconceptualize the aforementioned dichotomy. Vertical networks are often associated with groups’ conservatism but vary in the degree of postmaterialism and activism. Each dimension of group features has different effects on members’ opinions of nuclear energy, sentiment toward antinuclear movements, and antinuclear advocacy. Neither social capital theory nor vertical network theory is fully confirmed by this study. Both effects can be observed in different segments of respondents.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
28
期刊介绍: Social Science Japan Journal is a new forum for original scholarly papers on modern Japan. It publishes papers that cover Japan in a comparative perspective and papers that focus on international issues that affect Japan. All social science disciplines (economics, law, political science, history, sociology, and anthropology) are represented. All papers are refereed. The journal includes a book review section with substantial reviews of books on Japanese society, written in both English and Japanese. The journal occasionally publishes reviews of the current state of social science research on Japanese society in different countries.
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