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LOCAL AUTONOMY LAW

The 'Local Autonomy Law' (地方自治法 ''Chihō-jichi-hō'') of Japan was passed as Law No. 67 on April 17, 1947, an Act of Devolution that established most of Japan's contemporary local government structures, including:

★ The four types of prefecture (to - do - fu - ken)

★ Cities, towns, villages, and rural districts

City designated by government ordinance (Japan)

★ The 23 special wards of Tokyo
The text of the law is lengthy (more than 200 pages in print) and is subject to amendment several times a year.

Contents
Local Public Institutions
Heads of the LPIs
Directly elected heads
External links

Local Public Institutions


The classification of local public institutions (LPIs) are:

★ Ordinary LPIs


★ Prefectures (to, dō, fu and ken)


★ Cities, towns, villages

★ Special LPIs (incomplete)


★ special wards


★ unions
The Ordinary LPIs and special wards are regarded as basic local governments.
Unions are consortia of basic LPIs for specific fields (say schools, water etc.)

Heads of the LPIs


Directly elected heads

The heads of the ordinary LPIs and the special wards have strong exectutive power.
They are generically called , specifically for prefectures, and 'mayors': city's , town's , village's , and in Tokyo special ward's .
They are elected by four-yearly direct popular votes (The separate election law defines the electors are from Japanese nationals of 20 years or older living in the area of the governemnt for no less than three month). Voting is not compulsory. He / she can be recalled by popular initiatives but the prefecture and the national government cannot sack him / her. He / she has strong executive power. Towards the assembly he / she prepares budgets, proposes local acts and has a veto on local acts just approved by the assembly which can be overridden by two third assembly support. He / she can resolve the assembly if the assembly passes a motion of no confidence or he / she thinks the assembly has no confidence in fact.

External links



Current text (in Japanese)

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