Description:A thoughtful, illuminating exploration of modern Japanese politics and culture through the eyes of an investigative reporter
Dreux Richard presents post-Fukushima Japan in three illustrative parts. For six years, he follows members of Japan’s Nigerian community, whose struggles with a hostile immigration system lead to the starvation death of a Nigerian immigrant in a Japanese detention center, investigated here for the first time. In Japan’s northernmost city, Richard goes door to door with the region’s youngest census employee, meeting the city’s elderly residents and documenting the individual stories that comprise the nation’s record-breaking population decline. Finally, he takes us into the offices of energy executives and nuclear regulators, as they fight to determine whether reactors threatened by earthquake faults will be permitted to restart after the Fukushima disaster, a conflict that brings the entire regulatory system...