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Breaking the backs of farmers

机译:打破农民的后背

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Tottori prefecture on the Sea of Japan is known for its vast sand dunes and for having the smallest prefectural population in Japan, of which about one in six lives on a farm. In last summer's election for the upper house, its 500,000-odd voters sent one representative to the Diet (parliament). Ka-nagawa prefecture, a gritty industrial area that borders Tokyo, has more than 7m voters of a much younger average age. Yet its electorate directly voted for just three upper-house seats. Since the election, high courts up and down Japan have ruled that having a vote in Tottori weigh about five times more than in Kanagawa is unconstitutional or "in a state of unconstitutionality".
机译:日本海上的鸟取县以其沙丘辽阔,日本人口最少而著称,其中六分之一居住在农场。在去年夏天的上议院选举中,其五十万多名选民向国会(议会)派出了一名代表。神奈川县是与东京接壤的肮脏的工业区,拥有超过700万名平均年龄更年轻的选民。然而,其选民直接投票只获得了三个上议院席位。自大选以来,日本上下的高等法院裁定,在鸟取市进行投票的权重是神奈川县的五倍,这是违宪的或“处于违宪状态”。

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    《The economist》 |2011年第8718期|p.2730|共2页
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