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Research Article

Triggers for policy change: the 3.11 Fukushima meltdowns and nuclear policy continuity

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Pages 1214-1235 | Published online: 23 Aug 2018
 

ABSTRACT

The Fukushima meltdown in Tohoku, Japan, served as catalyst for some nations, including Germany, Belgium and Italy, to alter nuclear policies but had no impact on the approaches of a number of others such as Vietnam, China and Russia. Why, despite facing the same focusing event, did private- and state-owned utilities in some countries alter their nuclear energy policies while others kept the status quo. Adopting a mixed-methods approach to understand this variation in energy policy outcomes, quantitative analysis of 90 countries based on a new, sui generis dataset shows that strong voice/accountability is negatively correlated with changes in nuclear power programs while media openness and political stability are positively connected with atomic energy decisions. Using in-depth case studies of Germany and Japan, the role of domestic political institutions and country-specific norms is explored to show more precisely how actors interacted with ideas to influence energy decisions.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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