A. Sorensen, Conflict, consensus or consent: implications of Japanese land readjustmentpractice for developing countries, HABITAT INT, 24(1), 2000, pp. 51-73
This paper is relevant to the international effort to transfer an urban lan
d development technique, land readjustment (LR), to several developing coun
tries in South East Asia. The paper examines the model of the Japanese LR m
ethod presented by Japanese scholars and development experts to the interna
tional audience, and argues that in the context of attempts by several deve
loping countries to adopt the method, there are several crucial shortcoming
s of the description of Japanese LR in the existing literature. Most import
ant is that the history of opposition to LR in Japan is virtually ignored,
and there is very little mention of the enormous commitments of local plann
ing resources necessary to organise consent to projects. These issues are i
mportant for an understanding of the use of LR in Japan, and may also have
implications for those attempting to make use of LR techniques in other cou
ntries. The paper briefly outlines the LR method and the project to export
the method to South East Asia, examines the existing literature, and draws
on case studies of project organising in three suburban cities in the Tokyo
area. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.