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Japan in Asia : post-Cold-War diplomacy

Author
Tanaka, Akihiko, 1954- author.
田中明彦, 1954- author.
Uniform Title
Ajia no naka no Nihon. English
アジアのなかの日本. English
Title
Japan in Asia : post-Cold-War diplomacy / Tanaka Akihiko ; translated by Jean Connell Hoff.
ISBN
9784916055637
4916055632
Edition
Second edition.
Publication
Tokyo : Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture, 2017.
Physical Description
xv, 440 pages : illustrations, portraits, charts ; 24 cm
Notes
An updated and revised translation of: Ajia no naka no Nihon : gekidō no naka no tenbō.
Errata sheet inserted.
Translated from the Japanese.
Summary
"Official development assistance (ODA), direct investment in Southeast Asia, participation in the Cambodian peace process, peacekeeping operations (PKO), the founding of APEC and other large-scale regional frameworks, the response to the Asian economic crisis, grappling with the "history" problem, trilateral summits: these have all been important milestones for postwar Japan--and especially for post-Cold-War Japan--in its efforts to rediscover Asia and Japan's place in it. Tanaka Akihiko traces the role of diplomacy in redefining the role of Japan in Asia from the 1977 Fukuda Doctrine of "heart-to-heart contact" between Japan and its Southeast Asian neighbors to the Abe administration's negotiations to settle the comfort woman issue with South Korea at the end of 2015. But he also looks at the transformation that Asia itself underwent during that period. The Cold War in Asia was not a simple bipolar confrontation between the United States and the Soviet Union and their allies. The situation there was complicated by the presence of China, the importance of nationalism for countries that had once been colonies, and the need to escape third-world status and become economically developed. Asia during the Cold War, especially East Asia, was a divided region; few countries had normal international relations with China. But in the late 20th century, Asia underwent three structural changes--the end of the Cold War, globalization, and democratization. The result has been dynamic growth in tandem with deepening economic interdependence and the development of a complex web of regional institutions among Asian countries. What has been Japan's role in this increasingly interconnected Asia? What has Japan achieved--or failed to achieve--in Asia? This book is a history of post-Cold-War international politics, the themes of which are crises, responses to crises, and institution-building to prevent crises before they happen, aimed to provide an overview of political trends in Asia and Japan's diplomatic response to them"-- Publisher's description.
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
August 08, 2017
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 399-425) and index.
Contents
Asia before the end of the Cold War
Northeast Asia and the end of the Cold War
Southeast Asia and the end of the Cold War
"Asia-Pacific" experiments
The rise of China and the crisis on the Korean peninsula
The "history" flare-up and strains in Japan-China relations
The Asian financial crisis
East-Asian regionalism and Japan
Enter Koizumi
Six prime ministers in six years
Abe's come-back.
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