Dōshūsei (道州制) is a proposal to organize Japan into one circuit (dō) of Hokkaido and several new states (shū) that are each a combination of several prefectures. The states and circuit are proposed to have greater regional autonomy, similar to the United Kingdom. It was proposed by the Junichiro Koizumi administration, but has yet to materialize.
Most of the political parties in 2012 supported this reform.[1]
History
An early proposal to replace the prefectures with states (-shū) and transform Japan into a federal state was Ueki Emori's 1881 draft constitution (ja:東洋大日本国国憲按, Tōyō Dai-Nihon-koku kokken-an), one of the more well-known and radical manifestations of the many so-called "private" (i.e. not government-sponsored) constitutional drafts that sprang from the Freedom and People's Rights Movement in the 1880s.[2]
See also
- Osaka Metropolis Plan
- Chukyo Metropolis proposal
- Autonomous communities of Spain, similar grouping of Spanish provinces
References
- ↑ "道州制特別区域推進本部". www.kantei.go.jp. Retrieved 2022-11-03.
- ↑ National Diet Library: Modern Japan in Archives, UEKI Emori's Conception of a Constitution
External links