@article{oai:kansai-u.repo.nii.ac.jp:00018336, author = {土田, 昭司}, issue = {2-3}, journal = {関西大学社会学部紀要}, month = {Mar}, note = {Based on Hirose, Ishizuka, and Tsuchida (1995)'s survey data of Japan, the United States, and France in 1992, Tsuchida (1997) suggested that most Japanese had a tendency to believe in zero-risk, that is, most Japanese wanted to believe that the world should and could have no risk. Tsuchida (1997) proposed a hypothetical model that the heavy regulation in Japanese society made the Japanese tend to perceive zero-risk. But, after 1992 the experience of the collapse of "the bubble economy" and the nerve gas attack in subways by a destructive cult, and so on have made most Japanese understand gradually that there cannot exist zero-risk in their lives and that they must manage their daily risks. To investigate whether and how the risk perception and risk-taking behaviors among the Japanese have changed, a pilot social survey was carried out in the Tokyo metropolitan area in January 1998. The samples were 250 females aged between 20 and 39 (quota sampling). In the survey they stated their risk perception, risk-taking behaviors, information behaviors, values, and so on. The distribution of zero-risk perception and the factors which the zero-risk perception would cause were analyzed.}, pages = {257--279}, title = {日本におけるゼロ・リスク認知 : 研究の試み}, volume = {31}, year = {2000} }