Publication Laka-library:
Post-political uncertainties: Governing nuclear controversies in post-Fukushima Japan

AuthorMaxime Polleri
-
Date2019
Classification 4.21.0.00/22 (JAPAN - GENERAL)

From the publication:

Post-political uncertainties:
Governing nuclear controversies in post-Fukushima Japan
Maxime Polleri
Center for International Security and Cooperation, 
Stanford University, USA
2019

Abstract
This article examines a set of public controversies surrounding the role of nuclear 
power and the threat of radioactive contamination in a post-Fukushima Japan. The 
empirical case study focuses on the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI), 
Japan’s most influential ministry and, more importantly, the former regulator of 
nuclear energy before the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster.

Through participant observation of METI’s public conferences, as well as interviews 
with state and non-state actors, I examine how particular visions of nuclear power 
continue to affect the basis of expert authority through which state actors handle 
post-Fukushima controversies and their subsequent uncertainties. In its post-Fukushima 
representations, METI frames nuclear power as an apolitical necessity for the well-
being of the Japanese nation-state and the common humanity.

It does so by mobilizing categories of uncertainty around specific political scenes, 
such as global warming. For METI, the potential uncertainties linked with the 
abandonment of nuclear power have the power to trigger political turmoil of a higher 
scale than those linked with Fukushima’s radioactive contamination. A form of double 
depoliticization takes place, in which the issue of Fukushima’s radioactive 
contamination gets depoliticized through perceived priorities that are paradoxically 
depicted as ‘post-political’ – that is, in an urgent need for immediate action and 
not open to in-depth deliberation. I refer to this process as establishing ‘post-
political uncertainties’.

This kind of depoliticization raises ethical questions surrounding meaningful public 
participation in decisions that happen at the intersection of politics and science 
and technology study.

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