State Surveillance in Japan: Japanese Youngsters’ Attitudes towards the Snowden Revelations
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- MURATA Kiyoshi
- Centre for Business Information Ethics, Meiji University
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- ORITO Yohko
- Faculty of Collaborative Regional Innovation, Ehime University
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- FUKUTA Yasunori
- School of Commerce, Meiji University
Bibliographic Information
- Other Title
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- 国家による監視と日本社会:エドワード・スノーデンが教えてくれたこと
- コッカ ニ ヨル カンシ ト ニホン シャカイ : エドワード ・ スノーデン ガ オシエテ クレタ コト
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Description
<p>In collaboration with their international research partners, the authors conducted questionnaire and interview surveys of university students on attitudes towards Edward Snowden’s revelations of the NSA’s indiscriminate mass surveillance programmes as part of their SIGINT activities, which were started in June 2013, in eight countries including Japan in October and November 2014. The survey results demonstrate that Japanese youngsters are the outliers amongst those studied internationally in terms of social attitudes towards state surveillance. In this research, the authors show the characteristics of those attitudes in Japan, where a highly networked information society has been built, based on the survey outcomes, and examine their meaning for privacy protection, individual freedom and autonomy and democracy in Japanese society taking the Japanese socio-cultural and political environment surrounding privacy and state surveillance into account.</p>
Journal
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- Journal of the Japan Society for Management Information
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Journal of the Japan Society for Management Information 27 (1), 3-8, 2018-06-15
The Japan Society for Managemant Information
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Details 詳細情報について
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- CRID
- 1390022222477909376
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- NII Article ID
- 40021645225
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- NII Book ID
- AN10551813
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- ISSN
- 24352209
- 09187324
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- NDL BIB ID
- 029181401
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- Text Lang
- ja
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- Article Type
- journal article
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- Data Source
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- JaLC
- NDL Search
- CiNii Articles
- KAKEN
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- Abstract License Flag
- Disallowed