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Velisarios Kattoulas
For western journalists, working alongside their Japanese counterparts is often a disconcerting experience, one that leaves them feeling the Japanese public deserves better. In Closing the Shop, Laurie Ann Freeman, an assistant political science professor at the University of California in Santa Barbara, dissects the cozy relationships between Japanese journalists and their sources, and argues that their collusive arrangements undermine Japanese democracy by stifling the flow of information and suppressing open debate.— Far Eastern Economic Review
Overview
How is the relationship between the Japanese state and Japanese society mediated by the press? Does the pervasive system of press clubs, and the regulations underlying them, alter or even censor the way news is reported in Japan? Who benefits from the press club system? And who loses? Here Laurie Anne Freeman examines the subtle, highly interconnected relationship between journalists and news sources in Japan.
Beginning with a historical overview of the relationship between the ...