Vol.61 No.5 (2009)
Contents
Article
A Study of the Relationship between Transport Coordination and the Urban Transport Council after World War II
MIKI Masafumi (1)
Research Notes
Characteristics of a Social Networking Service Managed in a Local Area  from the Viewpoint of User Networking: A Case Study of “Stacomi” in  Okayama
WADA Takashi (20)
The Expansion of Municipal Authority and Regional Influence Resulting  from Long―term Care Insurance System Reform: The Case of Fujisawa City,  Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan
HATAKEYAMA Teruo (37)
Forum
Geography and Regional Studies of Human―Animal Relationship 	 (55)
Meeting Reports
116th Meeting of Historical Geography 	 (74)
117th Meeting of Historical Geography 	 (77)
97th Meeting of Geographical Thought 	 (80)
31st Meeting of Metropolitan Area Studies 	 (84)
32nd Meeting of Metropolitan Area Studies 	 (90)
15th Meeting of Geographical Education 	 (94)
Abstracts
A Study of the Relationship between Transport Coordination and the  Urban Transport Council after World War II
MIKI Masafumi
(Faculty of Letters, Nara University) 
This paper clarifies the decline of the municipal monopoly of urban  traffic facilities by analyzing transport coordination in Osaka City  after World War II. First, the author hypothesizes that influences in  urban traffic planning were reversed between the Ministry of  Construction (the Ministry of the Interior before World War II) and the  Ministry of Transport (the Ministry of Railways before World War II)  before and after World War II, by concentrating on the Urban  Transportation Council which played an important part in subsequent  transport coordination. This is considered from two points:
Transport management generally consists of both infrastructure and  transport systems. The Ministry of Railways that regarded transport  systems as businesses had difficulty controlling urban areas where the  ratio of tram traffic was much higher than railway traffic, because the  Ministry of the Interior, which regarded transport systems as belonging  to infrastructure, dominated urban areas through the Urban Planning  Central Council. However, the Urban Planning Central Council was  abolished in 1941 under the influence of the wartime regime. Therefore,  urban planning works were weakened because the Ministry of Interior was  also dissolved. Since the municipal monopoly of urban traffic facilities  in Osaka City was the basis of urban planning that was greatly  controlled by that ministry, it was thought to be obligated to conflict  with the Ministry of Transport after World War II.
The Ministry of Transport, which was organizationally constructed in  1949, promoted the Traffic Council to democratize traffic  administration. The Traffic Council was related to the Land Transport  Coordination Council from before World War II due to changes in  transport legislation. The Urban Transportation Council used to be the  Transport Coordination Council before World War II because it was  constructed as one branch of the Traffic Council in 1955.
This paper considers the decline of the municipal monopoly of urban  traffic facilities in Osaka from these two circumstances. Although  necessarily unsettled before World War II, the municipal monopoly of  urban traffic facilities was restored to reflect the desires of the  wartime regime. The Ministry of Transport tried to break through using  G. H. Q. support immediately after World War II; in spite of this, ideas  of municipal control continued to be entrenched. However, urban areas  had spread rapidly because residents were fleeing to the suburbs to  escape the bombing in the cities during the war. Because the  municipality had difficulty monopolizing transport businesses in  municipal areas due to serious traffic jams and increased automobile  traffic during the era of high economic growth, the municipal monopoly  of urban traffic facilities lost geographical validity. Therefore,  because the construction of municipal subway lines was very expensive,  the municipal monopoly of urban traffic facilities also lost economic  viability. As a result, the municipal monopoly of urban traffic  facilities declined rapidly after the end of the period of high economic  growth.
By considering the municipal monopoly of urban traffic facilities in  Osaka, the reasons for its decline may be generally seen as a deficit in  the transport businesses of the Osaka municipality. However, this paper  clarifies that the municipal monopoly of urban traffic facilities in  Osaka declined not only due to geographical factors but also economic  factors. Therefore, its decline was also related to the reversal of  relative power between the Ministries of Transport and Construction in  urban transport planning after World War II.
Key words: urban transportation, Transportation Council, Osaka City, municipal monopoly of urban traffic facilities, urban infrastructure, transport system
Characteristics of a Social Networking Service  Managed in a Local Area from the Viewpoint of User Networking: A Case  Study of “Stacomi” in Okayama
 
WADA Takashi
(Faculty of Economics, Tokuyama University)
(Graduate Student, Hiroshima University)
This article attempts to examine the characteristics of a social  networking service managed locally as a communication space by using the  website “Stacomi” as an example. Its management, the characteristics of  its users, the social networks of the users, and network―related events  hosted in real space were analyzed.
Stacomi was founded in Okayama Prefecture by a venture enterprise  (Standard Co.) whose aim is to make local governance in Okayama more  active. Most users live in Okayama City, probably because personal  invitations sent by Standard Co. staff members, who are Okayama  residents themselves, are a primary method of recruitment. Highly  motivated users who require extensive social connections for their  businesses use Stacomi primarily as a database for tracking regional  news, as a medium for drawing participants to events, or as a tool for  attracting new customers. Stacomi includes hubs that are divided into  two types: groups of users who have ties to many popular users and are  eager to recruit new participants, and groups of users who have ties to  other hubs and wish to increase the number of their acquaintances.
The communities active on Stacomi include three types: those featuring  users who form groups in real space devoted to a common interest or  common goals and use Stacomi as a social medium; those featuring users  who met on Stacomi and thereafter plan and manage events in real space,;  and those featuring users whose primary aim is to share news related to  the area in which they live. The “Okayama Culture Zone,” for example,  provides a link between hubs that leads to links between different  clusters in the same area. This cooperation between hubs and active  users results in an enrichment of the activities held in real space.
Two types of events are hosted in real space: those that Standard Co.  strategically plans and manages, and those that users facilitate to  either engage in previously planned activities or plan new activities.  The participants in these events are also divided into two types: users  who need information for their businesses and are eager to form new  social ties, and users who need information for their daily lives and  wish to maintain contact with old acquaintances.
Key words: the Internet, SNS, community, social networks, Okayama
The Expansion of Municipal Authority and Regional  Influence Resulting from Long―term Care Insurance System Reform: The  Case of Fujisawa City, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan
 
HATAKEYAMA Teruo
(Department of Geography, College of Humanities and Sciences, Nihon University)
Citing Fujisawa City, Kanagawa Prefecture as an example, this  manuscript clarifies the changing authority and roles of municipalities  resulting from the introduction of the long―term care insurance system.  Additionally, it looks at the influence that this has had on long―term  care insurance services, as well as on the region.
The city did not become directly involved in the provision of long―term  insurance care services associated with the April 2000 introduction of  the long―term care insurance system. Furthermore, the entry of private  business into this area has accelerated, and long―term care facilities  have increased to a greater extent than municipal planning had targeted.  This means that the municipality cannot effectively regulate the  provision of long―term care insurance services.
Subsequently, in April 2006, the long―term care insurance system was  drastically revised. Municipal authority over the establishment of a  comprehensive support center for the community, community―based  services, etc., was greatly enhanced. This has been reflected by the  municipalities advancing into the area of construction of community  comprehensive care systems. However, regional control, which centers on  the municipalities in the midst of the mainstream trend of  neo―liberalism in public service outsourcing, has become a difficult  situation. It is necessary to reexamine this municipal involvement in  long―term care services, which has resulted from the expansion of  municipal authority through the movement towards regional  decentralization.
Thus, the author considers that regional gaps in the provision of  long―term care services can be largely attributed to municipal policies,  ideas, and financial conditions, following the expansion of municipal  authority. However, it is likely that if municipalities are more likely  to outsource services based on neo―liberalism, the aging situation, and  the industrial structure related to service providers’ market entry  activities, will be primary factors in regional gaps in long―term care  insurance services.
Key Words: Long―term care insurance system reform, municipal authority, comprehensive support center for the community, community―based service, Fujisawa City