Over the past thirty years Japan has shown that it is a highly dynamic society, and its economic policy-making has often astonished the world. Japanese politics, however, though sometimes showing dynamism, are very stable and frequently strangely immobilist. In this book, six specialists on Japanese politics seek to find out why.
Dynamic and Immobilist Politics in Japan
Agriculture is one of the most politically powerful sectors in Japanese national politics. This book provides the first comprehensive account of the political power of Japanese farmers.
The third edition of Governing Japan provides a comprehensive introduction to Japanese political institutions, processes and culture, taking account of the remarkable changes of recent years.
In this book, Banno discusses the complicated relationship between these two concepts, ranging from incompatibility in some periods to symbiosis in others.
The authors in this volume all recognize the problematic nature of nationalist narratives as applied to the history of Parhae Even so, it seems to me that, taken as a whole, the interpretations advanced by these authors are more sustainable ...
that Japanese nationals would be regarded as whites in view of their honorary status . There was no official South African or Japanese ... Dynamic and Immobilist Politics in Japan , p . 304 . 90 Interview with Mr. Jerry Matsila ( Head ...
'Dynamic and Immobilist Aspects of Japanese Politics', in J.A.A. Stockwin, Alan Rix, Aurelia George, James Horne, Daiichi Ito ̄ and Martin Collick, Dynamic and Immobilist Politics in Japan. Basingstoke and London, Macmillan, 1988.
In Zwei zaghaste Riesen” Deutschland und Japan seit 1945. Herausgeben von Arnulf Baring und Masamori Sase. Stuttgart, Zürich: Belser Verlag, 1977, pp. 471–505. Nester, William R., The Foundation of Japanese Power: Continuities, Changes, ...
(eds), Dynamic and Immobilist Politics in Japan, pp. 22–53. Stockwin, J. A. A. (1992) 'The Japanese Socialist Party: Resurgence after Long Decline', in Hrebenar (ed.), The Japanese Party System, pp. 81–115.
Dynamic and Immobilist Politics in Japan, Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 297–324. —— (1993a) 'Japan and region: leading from behind', in Richard Higgott, Richard Leaver and John Ravenhill (eds) Pacific Economic Relations in the ...