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Full Description
This edited collection analyzes the innovative changes in Japan's foreign policy. Pursuing new relationships with South Asia, Africa, and Eastern Europe, Japanese initiatives include regional peace-building and human security activities, Asian multilateralism, and the Indo-Pacific concept. This collection focuses on these evolving international relationships through Japan's unique approach to political change and continuity.
Contents
Introduction: More Changes; More Continuity
Part I: "Three Pillars" of Japanese Foreign Policy: Member of the West, an Asian Country and UN-Centrism
The Japan-US Alliance in the 21st Century: Indispensability of US Extended Deterrence
Japan and Western Europe: From Post-war Acrimonious Conflict to Comprehensive Collaboration
Tokyo's Quest for a United Nations Security Council Permanent Seat
Japanese Foreign Policy as an "Asian" Country
Part II: Domestic Sources of Japanese Foreign Policy
Kantei Diplomacy Under the Abe Administration
Much Ado about a Constitution
"Opposition" in Power and their Foreign Policies 2009-2012: Legacy of DPJ through Policy Comparison
Part III: Japanese Diplomacy Old and New: Policy
Tokyo's Defense and Security Policy: Continuity and Change
Addressing Territorial Disputes with Neighboring Countries: Continuity and Change from a Japanese Perspective
Japan's Foreign Aid: Continuity and Change
Japan's Human Security and Peacebuilding in the 21st Century
Japan and the Governance of Global Fisheries
Part IV: Japanese Diplomacy Old and New: Regional Engagement
Japan's Quest for an Autonomous Role in East Asian Regionalism: Strengthening its US Alliance and Balancing China's Rise
From Cautiously Reactive to Eagerly Proactive: Japan's Policy Towards Southeast Asia
Japan-India Relations: Bilateral, Regional and Global Contexts
Japan's Value-Oriented and Resource Diplomacy in Central Asia: Before and After Belt and Road
Japan's Africa Engagement