Long considered a smoker’s paradise, Japan passed its strictest regulations yet on indoor smoking in 2018 with revisions to the Health Promotion Law and a new ordinance in Tokyo. Timed for the Tokyo Olympics, both reforms made smoking regulations stronger and more legalistic despite reflecting distinctive policy paradigms in their particulars. The national regulations curtailed smoking in many public spaces but accommodated smoking in small restaurants and bars. Tokyo’s stronger restrictions emphasized public health protection by exempting only eateries with no employees. I argue that fully understanding these contemporaneous reforms requires analyzing insider activists: state actors who participated in the tobacco control movement or had sustained interaction with it during earlier reform waves. Case studies drawing on interviews and movement and government documents illustrate the mechanisms insider activists can access because they straddle multiple fields. This article contributes to scholarship about ideas, policy entrepreneurship, and the blurry line between insiders and outsiders in policymaking.
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July/August 2021
Research Article|
June 02 2021
Insider Activists and Secondhand Smoke Countermeasures in Japan
Celeste L. Arrington
Celeste L. Arrington
Celeste L. Arrington is Korea Foundation Associate Professor of Political Science and International Affairs at the George Washington University, Washington, DC, USA. She thanks Mark Levin, Patricia Maclachlan, Ken Tanaka, Eric Feldman, Christopher Rathbone, Mina Kashiwabara, and the three anonymous reviewers for helpful comments on earlier drafts. This publication was made possible by support from the Social Science Research Council. Email: <[email protected]>
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Asian Survey (2021) 61 (4): 559–590.
Citation
Celeste L. Arrington; Insider Activists and Secondhand Smoke Countermeasures in Japan. Asian Survey 1 August 2021; 61 (4): 559–590. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/as.2021.1237533
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