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2. Securitizing Beijing through the maritime commons: the 'China threat' and Japan's security discourse in the Abe era.
- Author
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Dell'Era, Alice
- Subjects
- *
IDENTITY (Psychology) , *DISCOURSE , *LABELING theory - Abstract
The 'China threat' has been identified as an important driver of Japan's security agenda and discourse. The threat posed by China has been discussed either as a given factor determining the trajectory of Tokyo's security approach, as a product of identity construction, or as an expression of securitizing processes that facilitate institutional and policy change. This paper contributes to this debate by offering an alternative explanation of the process through which the Abe government constructed China as a threat. Building on securitization theory, the paper examines the modes and strategies employed by the Abe Administration to successfully securitize China. The paper argues that, while Beijing was labeled a 'concern' rather than an 'existential threat,' it was still securitized through a process of securitization that involves an association with those domains in which China engages assertively, namely the maritime commons. The paper suggests calling this type of securitizing pattern 'transversal securitization' and explores how this indirect strategy allowed the Abe government to pragmatically pursue its objectives both domestically and at the international level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Hard to say goodbye: South Korea, Japan, and China as the last lenders for coal.
- Author
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Davidson, Michael R., Gao, Xue, Busby, Joshua, Shearer, Christine, and Eisenman, Joshua
- Subjects
- *
COAL , *BELT & Road Initiative , *EXPORT financing , *MONEYLENDERS ,PARIS Agreement (2016) - Abstract
The politics of international finance for coal power plants have intensified since the 2015 Paris climate agreement was negotiated. Over the past few years, Japan and South Korea have signaled their intent not to fund new coal projects overseas, leaving China and its Belt and Road Initiative as the 'financier of last resort.' In September 2021, China too announced its intent to stop providing finance for overseas coal projects. What accounts for their decision to cease financing overseas coal projects despite prominent differences in political systems, degree of internationalization of their financial systems, and economic size? Drawing on datasets of coal projects and financing supplemented by case material and interviews, this paper explores the dynamics of coal export finance and how the combination of international reputational pressures and declining demand for coal finance diminished the domestic support for incumbent coal exporters in all three countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The inter-agency standing committee (IASC) guidelines on mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) in emergency settings: a critique.
- Author
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Marshall, Claire
- Subjects
- *
WELL-being , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *COMMITTEES , *SOCIAL support , *HUMANITARIANISM , *EMERGENCY services in psychiatric hospitals , *MENTAL health , *MEDICAL protocols , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *CULTURAL competence , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress - Abstract
The bio-medical model of 'mental health' and 'mental illness' that relates to the relationship between wellbeing and distress informs psychopathology and dominates conceptualisation in many Western Educated Industrialised Rich Democratic (WEIRD) populations. This paper aims to critique the model, questioning the appropriateness of psychopathology as a conceptual framework when working as a Western trained clinician with populations such as in China, Japan, Asia, the Middle-East and Africa. The paper also considers the cultural appropriateness of western notions of psychopathology when working inter-culturally in relation to the Inter-Agency Standing Committee (IASC) Guidelines on Mental Health and Psychosocial Support in Emergency Settings, and the Review of the Implementation of the IASC Guidelines on Mental Health and Psychosocial Support in Emergency Settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Phyllostachys Pubescens: From Traditional to Functional Food: Phyllostachys pubescens as functional food.
- Author
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Curci, Francesca, Cavalluzzi, M. M., Milani, G., Clodoveo, M. L., Radojčić Redovniković, I., Cellamare, S., Franchini, C., Mandracchia, D., and Corbo, F.
- Subjects
- *
PHYLLOSTACHYS , *ESSENTIAL amino acids , *BAMBOO shoots , *PHENOLIC acids - Abstract
Bamboo shoot (Phyllostachys pubescens) is mainly cultivated in China and Japan. It represents a reservoir of micro and macronutrients and contains a high amount of proteins, essential amino acids, phenolic acids, sterols, and fibers. Thank to these compounds, several beneficial health effects have been attributed to the bamboo shoot. This review is aimed at discussing a collection of research papers on Bamboo shoot in pharmaceutical and food fields. A particular focus is addressed to the chemical profile, the different biological activities, the different uses, the traditional recipes, the methods of conservation and the treatments of the shoot. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first example of a comprehensive review that is focused exclusively on the applications of the shoot of bamboo Phyllostachys pubescens in different fields. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Prognostic Role of Pretreatment Geriatric Nutritional Risk Index in Colorectal Cancer Patients: A Meta-Analysis.
- Author
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Yuan, Feng, Yuan, Qian, Hu, Jianrong, and An, Jingjing
- Subjects
- *
ONLINE information services , *META-analysis , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *NUTRITIONAL assessment , *NUTRITION disorders , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *GERIATRIC nutrition , *COLORECTAL cancer , *CANCER patients , *RISK assessment , *MEDLINE , *PROGRESSION-free survival , *DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
To identify the prognostic value of the pretreatment geriatric nutritional risk index (GNRI) in colorectal cancer. Several electronic databases were searched up to March 15, 2022, for relevant studies. The primary and secondary outcomes were overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS), respectively. The hazard ratios (HRs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were combined. Bess's funnel plot and Egger's test were conducted to detect publication bias, and the trim-and-fill method was performed to identify potentially unpublished papers and their impacts on the overall results. Nine studies from Japan and China involving 3440 participants were enrolled in the current meta-analysis. The pooled results indicated that a low pretreatment GNRI was significantly associated with poorer OS (HR = 2.28, 95% CI: 1.69–3.07, P < 0.001; I2=63.5%, Pheterogeneity=0.005) and DFS (HR = 1.62, 95% CI: 1.35–1.96, P < 0.001; I2=46.4%, Pheterogeneity=0.114). Subgroup analysis stratified by country and treatment showed similar results. Significant publication bias was manifested by the asymmetric Begg's funnel plot and P = 0.012 of Egger's test, but three potentially unpublished studies did not have a significant impact on the overall results. A lower pretreatment GNRI was a novel prognostic risk factor for Japanese and Chinese colorectal cancer patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. "Mr. Science", May Fourth, and the Global History of Science.
- Author
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Fan, Fa-ti
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of science , *WORLD history , *INTELLECTUAL history , *COMPARATIVE historiography - Abstract
This paper argues that Mr. Science and the May 4th Movement was a significant chapter in the global history of science. To contextualize the story better, I will adopt three broad interpretive frames. First, I shall place Mr. Science and May Fourth in a longer view than the particular events in the 1910s–1920s. This will allow us to trace the historical changes and the evolving institutions, discourses, and practitioners of science over a few generations. Second, I shall highlight the most relevant global conditions. Western imperialism was of course a crucial setting, but there were more specific historical moments that also deserve attention. Finally, comparisons and connections; it is necessary to examine the transmutations of ideas, knowledge, and institutions across political and cultural borders. In other words, we should study Mr. Science and May Fourth in the mode of global intellectual history. Other than China, my main comparative cases are India and Japan, though I will also refer to Ottoman Turkey. Taken together, these examples provide a range of comparisons central to our inquiry into Mr. Science and the global history of science. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. When are Islands not Islands: The Problems of Establishing Sovereignty Over the Senkaku / Diaoyu Islands.
- Author
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Szanto, Balazs
- Subjects
- *
SOVEREIGNTY , *BOUNDARY disputes ,UNITED Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (1982) - Abstract
The article takes a critical look at the sovereignty claims surrounding the Senkaku / Diaoyu Islands. The dispute has long plagued Sino-Japanese relations and is considered one of the key regional security hotspots, with the People's Republic of China mounting an active challenge to Japanese administrative control. This article reviews the case for sovereignty under both the discovery and the prescription principles. However, the article concludes that one cannot find a compelling case for sovereignty under either principle in favour of either claimants. The paper argues that this is due to the traditional insignificance of the islands prior to UNCLOS establishing exclusive economic zones. Rather, the article suggests that to facilitate a resolution to the disputes, the islands should not be classified as islands under UNCLOS as they do not meet the legal threshold for such a classification, either today or historically. If anything, the weakness of claims that contributes to the intractability of the dispute today shows that traditionally neither China nor Japan has considered these territories as islands in a manner that would be in the spirit of UNCLOS. While such a reclassification would not immediately resolve the dispute, it would be a significant step to remove incentives for the further pursuit of conflicting sovereignty over the islands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Teaching Expertise in Three Countries: findings and policy implications from an international comparative study in early childhood education.
- Author
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Hayashi, Akiko
- Subjects
- *
PRESCHOOL teachers , *TEACHING experience , *CAREER development , *ADULTS , *PROFESSIONAL education - Abstract
In this paper, Teaching Expertise in Three Countries project is used as an example to show the significance and contribution of international comparative research and to think about the possible implications for policy in early childhood education. The project studied the development of expertise in preschool teaching in Japan, China, and the United States by employing 'video-cued multivocal ethnography' to explore how teaching expertise is defined in each of these countries and what processes help teachers acquire advanced teaching skills. This project has shown similarities and culturally specific notions, in what the participants have to say about characteristics of less and more experienced teachers. These research findings raise issues and challenges in early childhood education that resonate with the situation not only in the three countries but also possibly in other countries, such as problematizing the role of remembering and reflection in professional practice and the value of experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Read-across approaches: current applications and regulatory acceptance in Korea, Japan, and China.
- Author
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Lee, Byung-Mu, Lee, Sang Hee, Yamada, Takashi, Park, Sanghee, Wang, Ying, Kim, Kyu-Bong, and Kwon, Seok
- Subjects
- *
GOVERNMENT agencies , *RECORDING & registration - Abstract
The aim of this paper was to investigate the current status of read-across approaches in the Republic of Korea, Japan, and China in terms of applications and regulatory acceptance. In the Republic of Korea, over the last 6 years, approximately 8% of safety data records used for chemical registrations were based upon read-across, and a guideline published on the use of read-across results in 2017. In Japan, read-across is generally accepted for screening hazard classification of toxicological endpoints according to the Chemical Substances Control Law (CSCL). In China, read-across data, along with data from other animal alternatives are accepted as a data source for chemical registrations, but could be only considered when testing is not technically feasible. At present, read-across is not widely used for chemical registrations and regulatory acceptance of read-across may differ among countries in Asia. With consideration of the advantages and limitations of read-across, it is expected that read-across may soon gradually be employed in Asian countries. Thus, regulatory agencies need to prepare for this progression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Table tennis match analysis: a review.
- Author
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Fuchs, Michael, Liu, Ruizhi, Malagoli Lanzoni, Ivan, Munivrana, Goran, Straub, Gunter, Tamaki, Sho, Yoshida, Kazuto, Zhang, Hui, and Lames, Martin
- Subjects
- *
ATHLETIC ability , *COACHES (Athletics) , *EXERCISE physiology , *RACKET games , *SPORTS events , *BODY movement , *MOTION capture (Human mechanics) - Abstract
In table tennis, many different approaches to scientific founded match analysis have been developed since the first ones in the 1960s. The aim of this paper is to give a review on some of the most acknowledged methods of match analysis in table tennis. The first chapter presents a historical overview of match analysis from all over the world. The second part reviews different approaches to match analysis in more detail, using the performance analysis classification of theoretical and practical performance analysis. The review includes the most actual theoretical performance analysis techniques in table tennis: performance indices, simulative approaches, momentum analysis, footwork analysis, and finally an approach which uses top expert knowledge for a comprehensive technical-tactical analysis. In the section of practical performance analysis, the paper presents two “best practice” examples describing performance analysis procedures of the two most successful countries of the last Olympics: China and Japan. The paper ends with a summary on the impact of the different approaches and gives an outlook on promising new developments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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12. Geoeconomics, easy money, and political opportunism: the Perils under China and Japan's high-Speed rail competition.
- Author
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Liao, Jessica C. and Katada, Saori N.
- Subjects
- *
OPPORTUNISM (Political science) , *HIGH speed trains , *INTEREST rates , *SMALL states , *GOVERNMENT accountability - Abstract
China and Japan have engaged in fierce competition over infrastructure lending in East Asia, particularly since the 2010s. Under the intense focus on the geopolitical roots of this competition, the political-economic effects of this competitive statecraft on the smaller Asian countries are less discussed. At first glance, lending competition seems to benefit borrowing countries through access to more financial resources. This paper argues, however, that competitive statecraft leads to an 'easy money' conundrum where overeager creditor countries, in pursuit of geostrategic goals, perpetuate political opportunism in borrowing countries. To support this claim, we examine China–Japan competition over two high-speed rail projects in Indonesia and Malaysia. Our process tracing analysis explains how push factors (easy money from China and Japan) and pull factors (the host government's desire to exploit easy money for political gain) interacted to advance two troubled projects at the cost of borrowing countries' fiscal discipline and government accountability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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13. Time varying correlations and causalities between stock and foreign exchange markets: Evidence from China, Japan and Korea.
- Author
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Park, Young K., Binh, Ki Beom, and Kim, Suk-Joong
- Subjects
- *
FOREIGN exchange market , *STOCK exchanges , *MARKET volatility - Abstract
This paper examines the time-varying relationship between the stock and the foreign exchange markets for China, Japan and Korea for the period July 2005 to November 2013. The cross-market relationship within each country differs among the three countries and varies over time. There is no evidence of a significant and consistent pattern of causality between the two market segments in China for the whole sample. However, there is some evidence of causality, mostly from the foreign exchange to the stock market during major crisis periods. For Japan, we find a significant causality from the foreign exchange to the stock market for most of the sample period. During the periods of stock market turmoil (2007 and 2011) in Japan, however, the stock market drives the foreign exchange market. In contrast, there is a strong and consistent causality from the stock to the foreign exchange market in Korea throughout the sample except for 2009. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. More educated and more equal? A comparative analysis of female education and employment in Japan, China and India.
- Author
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Sinha Mukherjee, Sucharita
- Subjects
- *
WOMEN'S education , *EMPLOYMENT , *GENDER inequality , *WOMEN'S employment , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RIGHT to education , *LABOR market , *GOVERNMENT policy -- Social aspects - Abstract
This paper attempts to explore the connections between expanding female education and the participation of women in paid employment in Japan, China and India, three of Asia's largest economies. Analysis based on existing data and literature shows that despite the large expansion in educational access in these countries in the last half century, women have lacked egalitarian labour market opportunities. A combination of social discouragement and individual choice largely explains the withdrawal, non-participation or intermittent female presence in the labour force, notwithstanding increased educational access. In taking stock of these issues and debates across these countries, it is argued that the parallel experiences of women in these countries can be traced back to persistent gender norms which, amongst other things, imply the centrality of marriage and non-market unpaid labour for women. The paper argues that there is a need for gender-sensitive public policy in order for increased education to translate to labour market gains for women, leading to sustainable development outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
15. Beyond the Nationalist Narrative: Contextualising the History of the Overseas Chinese Press in Japan.
- Author
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Chan, Lih-Shing
- Subjects
- *
NATIONALISM , *ETHNIC identity of Chinese , *OVERSEAS Chinese , *CHINESE people ,CHINA-Japan relations - Abstract
Scholars tend to overlook the overseas Chinese press as a communicative tool for Chinese nationalism. This paper takes media history as its focal point to demonstrate the contextual influences that shaped the operations of Chinese print media and gave rise to the manifestation of the overseas Chinese (huaqiao) identity in Japan. In particular, it emphasises that the mobilisation of the modern Chinese nationalism movement of the time was not the sole determinant of Chinese identity. It was also influenced by the way in which Chinese ethnic boundaries came to be shaped and reshaped in different historical periods through the dynamics between overseas Chinese communities and Japanese society. I use two overseas Chinese publications from different periods to illustrate the impacts of modern Chinese nationalism and the changing social and political context of Japan on the Chinese press. Finally, I present a synthetic narrative to account for the history of the overseas Chinese press in Japan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Cultural attraction, ‘soft power’ and proximity: the popularity of Japanese language in Hong Kong since the 1980s.
- Author
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Yu, Xiaojiang, Takata, Kazuyuki, and Dryland, Estelle
- Subjects
- *
LANGUAGE & languages , *JAPANESE language , *POPULAR culture , *LANGUAGE schools , *EDUCATION , *CULTURAL industry export & import trade , *MANNERS & customs - Abstract
This paper discusses the cultural attraction, ‘soft power’, and importance of cultural proximity to the popularity of the Japanese language in Hong Kong over the last three decades. Exploration of both primary and secondary sources constitutes the main research methodology employed. Email surveys and face-to-face interviews were undertaken to ascertain the nature and degree of the cultural attraction that stimulates local people's interest in learning Japanese language and culture. The paper concludes that Japan's ‘soft power’, i.e., popular culture and cultural products, are the most influential driving forces behind the popularity of Japanese language in Hong Kong. Also, the Japanese cultural proximity to the Chinese is another factor that excites local people's interest in learning Japanese as a foreign language. In the Hong Kong context, geopolitical and national identity factors do not seem to detract from the popularity of the Japanese language. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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17. Competition and cooperative practices in Sino-Japanese energy and environmental relations: towards an energy security 'risk community'?
- Author
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Wishnick, Elizabeth
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL policy , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *ENERGY conservation , *ENVIRONMENTAL protection , *ECONOMICS ,CHINA-Japan relations - Abstract
This article reexamines the conventional wisdom that characterizes Sino-Japanese energy relations as predominantly competitive, but views Sino-Japanese environmental relations as essentially cooperative. Using sociological theories of risk, it is argued that Sino-Japanese cooperation is more likely in both the energy and environmental areas when common risks are perceived and relative gains are minimized. Despite their many conflicting strategic, political, and economic interests, as energy importers who are vulnerable to supply interruptions in the Middle East and competitors for global energy supplies, China and Japan share common risks to their energy security. Consequently, there actually may be increasing opportunities for China and Japan to address their common concerns through bilateral and multilateral cooperative practices, such as common positions on pricing or energy conservation initiatives. Although one would expect China and Japan to highlight their mutual interests in tackling environmental problems such as air pollution, in fact relative gains often impede cooperation. Japan increasingly views China as an economic competitor and is reducing environmental aid, while China continues to set a priority on economic growth, which sets limits on the use of costlier Japanese green technologies. By examining a selection of scholarly articles, reports and newspaper articles by Chinese and Japanese analysts, as well as material from interviews in Beijing and Tokyo in May-June 2007, the paper shows how environmental and energy issues in Sino-Japanese relations may be framed as threats, requiring counter-measures, or common risks, which can be addressed through cooperative practices. Lastly, the paper discusses the possibility of the development of an energy security 'risk community' as cooperative practices develop between China and Japan. Nonetheless, conflicting political interests, strategies, and self-images, accentuating relative gains, may provide obstacles to their cooperation in both energy security and environmental protection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. China, Japan and Regional Organisations: The Case of the Asian Development Bank.
- Author
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Rathus, Joel
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC development , *CASE studies , *BANKING industry , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *INSTITUTIONALISM (Religion) - Abstract
This paper examines the impact of 'the rise of China' on the Asian Development Bank (ADB), and its implications for Japan. Japan has traditionally enjoyed a dominant position in the Bank, as it has enjoyed a dominant position in Asia. However, with the balance of power in the region tipping in China's favour, one might expect that this would be reflected in the ADB as well. This paper argues that despite the worsening Sino-Japanese relationship, the ADB has facilitated the development and maintenance of shared expectations between the two parties over the future direction of development assistance, representing an oasis of liberal institutionalism in a relationship increasingly characterised in realist terms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Dissociative Experiences in the Peoples' Republic of China: An Empirical and Cross-Cultural Study.
- Author
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Kleindorfer, Stephanie Olen
- Subjects
- *
DISSOCIATION (Psychology) , *COLLEGE students , *GENDER differences (Psychology) , *CROSS-cultural differences - Abstract
This paper discusses the qualitative differences in dissociative experiences among normal college-age subjects in China and Japan. The paper first describes the process used to prepare the Mandarin version of the Dissociative Experiences Scale (DES). Baseline statistics comparing the two populations of interest are then presented. These results show fundamental differences across these two Asian cultures in terms of the mean DES scores obtained as well as the shape of the overall distribution of these scores. The results of a factor analysis of the DES responses corroborate both gender and cultural differences across the Japanese and Chinese data. Interestingly, the structure of the factors derived shows little relationship to factors from analyses of normal college-age subjects in North America. These contrasting results suggest that the DES can be a useful addition to other instruments and methods for exploring cross-cultural psychological differences, and that prior to clinical use baseline DES norms for each culture need to be established. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The rise of china and the future of east asian integration.
- Author
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Ahn, Byung-Joon
- Subjects
- *
INTERNATIONAL relations , *INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,ECONOMIC conditions in China - Abstract
China is rising as the fastest growing largest economy and thereby leading a market-driven economic integration in East Asia. At the same time, nationalism is also rising and constraining East Asian countries from forming a state-driven regional community. This paper examines the political economy of interdependence and nationalism that is taking place in East Asia. Simply put, its central theme is that the degree of interdependence, especially between China and other countries, is deepening, and as a result, is pulling East Asia toward regional integration, but due to the rising tide of nationalism, it is far short of forming an actual community. In order to build a community, therefore, such economic trend must be propelled by political leadership and will. In elaborating on this thesis, the paper analyzes the trade and production networks centered on China, the efforts to promote regional integration in ASEAN + 3, the nationalist rivalry between Japan and China in negotiating FTAs, and the difficulties in achieving Sino-Japanese reconciliation. Finally, the paper proposes a Northeast Asian Forum among Japan, South Korea and China while the US remains as a stabilizing force in East Asia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Analysis of Japanese influence on the three major historiographical trends in early modern China.
- Author
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Peng, Yang
- Subjects
- *
MARXIAN historiography , *HISTORIOGRAPHY ,CHINESE history - Abstract
This paper examines the intrinsic relationships between Japanese historiography and the three great historiographical trends of New Historiography, Debates on Ancient History, and Marxist historiography, from the macroscopic perspective of the transformation, development, and early modern growth of modern and early modern Chinese historiography, exploring how Chinese historical researchers selected, deviated from, and assimilated Japanese historiography, while also particularly focusing on how the recipients utilized Japanese historiographical methods and concepts as well as the achievements of Japanese scholars in researching Chinese history to construct their own interpretation of Chinese historiography, in a study of the academic trend of indigenization. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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22. Japan’s New Security Legislation: What Does This Mean to East Asian Security?
- Author
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Hosoya, Yuichi
- Subjects
- *
NATIONAL security , *NATIONAL security laws , *BOUNDARY disputes , *TWENTY-first century , *INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
It is obvious that the security environment in East Asia is more unstable and unpredictable. In the South China Sea, tensions over disputed islands initiate a more severe Sino–American rivalry. In the East China Sea, China disputes the control over the Senkaku Islands, and is escalating military activities around those islands. North Korea continues provocative activities including launching of ballistic missiles and nuclear weapons tests. This naturally leads to the idea that Japan needs to play a larger role to restore stability in the international order. This paper explores the challenges facing East Asian security in the face of the passage of Japan's new security bills in 2015 and how they impact the future of Japanese security policy. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. The textbook issue: domestic sources of Japan's foreign policy.
- Author
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Rose, Caroline
- Subjects
- *
INTERNATIONAL relations , *TEXTBOOKS ,JAPANESE foreign relations - Abstract
The content of Japanese history textbooks became the focus of much media and academic attention after the internationalization of the issue in 1982 when Japan was accused by the Chinese government of attempting to re-write its wartime invasion of China in school textbooks. The issue threatened to disrupt the celebrations for the tenth anniversary of Sino-lapanese normalization and, according to some observers, set back Sino-Japanese relations by ten years. In recent years Japanese textbooks have been seen in a more positive light, with progress being made on the inclusion of references to the comfort women and, more recently, Ienaga Saburō's partial victory in his long-standing legal battle with the government. Some have argued that it was the events of 1982 which sparked off the movement to 'liberalize' Japanese textbooks, and that after that date descriptions of Japanese wartime activities in Asia became more 'truthful'. This paper examines the events of the 1982 textbook issue, focusing on the response of the Japanese government to Chinese (and Korean) protests and assessing Japan's foreign policy making vis-à-vis China. Japanese governments are often considered to adopt a 'grovelling' foreign policy with respect to China, giving in to Chinese demands whenever the issue of 'history' is raised. This paper assesses the validity of this claim, using the textbook issue as a case study, and questions whether the textbooks really were radically altered as a result of this diplomatic controversy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. 'Place making' in Kawakami: aspirations and migrant realities of Chinese 'technical interns'.
- Author
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Liang, Meng
- Subjects
- *
MIGRANT agricultural workers , *MIGRANT labor , *SOCIAL networks - Abstract
In this paper, I examine Chinese agricultural labor migrants' experiences in rural Japan. The research is based on multi-sited ethnography, mainly in Kawakami, a village located in central Japan, from July to November 2012. I go beyond the labeling of Chinese migrants as passive victims of difficult work conditions and exploitation, which pervades much of the literature on international migration, and argue that Chinese peasant workers possess an agency to negotiate, navigate, and survive in the village. The strategy they take is to contest over local institutions to build up their own 'places,' where they can find provisional security, a sense of relief, and mutual support. These 'places' further facilitate the formation of the social networks among the workers, although this is officially repressed by the dominant society. A functioning social network plays a significant role to help workers adapt, overcome difficulties, and exercise their agency in a more effective way. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Introduction.
- Author
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Dale, Roger
- Subjects
- *
HIGHER education , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
The article discusses several papers published within the issue including one on the challenges for higher education in Japan of global neoliberalism, another regarding the issues surrounding Chinese higher education and a paper on the relationship between neoliberal globalisation and New Zealand universities.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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26. Which country should be the monetary anchor for East Asia: the US, Japan or China?
- Author
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Quah, Chee-Heong and Crowley, PatrickM.
- Subjects
- *
MONETARY policy , *FOREIGN exchange rates , *MONETARY unions , *FINANCIAL crises , *INTERNATIONAL economic integration - Abstract
In this paper, we apply the optimum currency area (OCA) criteria to assess the suitability of whether the US, Japan or China would best serve as the monetary anchor country for East Asian countries. The OCA criteria used are trade openness, business cycle synchronisation, real exchange rate volatility, inflation convergence and real interest rate cycle synchronisation. The ‘performance’ of these potential anchor countries is compared before and after the Asian financial crisis. The findings suggest an increase in the potential for China as a monetary anchor in the future but the US dollar likely still is the most obvious choice of anchor currency. From an endogenous OCA perspective, the findings also broadly support the existing currency boards in Hong Kong and Macau and the monetary union between Singapore and Brunei. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Delaying repatriation: Japanese technicians in early postwar China.
- Author
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Ward, Rowena
- Subjects
- *
REPATRIATION , *RAILROADS , *PRAGMATISM , *EMPLOYMENT in foreign countries , *JAPANESE people , *EMPLOYMENT ,EMIGRATION & immigration in China ,IMMIGRATION & emigration in Japan - Abstract
Research on the Japanese living in Manchukuo in August 1945 has generally fostered the assumption that all Japanese there wanted to return to Japan as soon as possible. Yet, some made the conscious and voluntary decision to stay, at least for the short to medium term. Among those who chose to delay repatriation were a number of technicians employed by Mantetsu's (South Manchurian Railroad Company) Chūo Shikenjo. This paper looks at the political and personal realities faced by these technicians when making their decisions as whether to stay or leave in terms of the concepts of voluntary and involuntary repatriation. It shows that the circumstances faced, and consequently the decisions made by the technicians, differed over time. It argues that there were three main reasons behind any decision to stay: pragmatism, a sense of responsibility for Japan's activities during the war and a sense of loyalty. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. China's Defense Technology and Industrial Base in a Regional Context: Arms Manufacturing in Asia.
- Author
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Bitzinger, RichardA.
- Subjects
- *
DEFENSE industries , *HIGH technology industries , *DEVELOPMENT economics , *MILITARY budgets - Abstract
This paper examines defense industrialization in three leading arms-producing states in Asia - India, Japan, and South Korea - and how their experiences compare to China's recent defense industrial developments. It argues that despite decades of considerable effort and investments in pursuit of a techno-nationalist self-arming strategy, these countries have experienced only modest success when it comes to achieving such self-reliance. Most regional defense industrial bases lack the necessary design skills and technological expertise in order to truly innovate, and at best these countries act as 'late innovators' when it comes to armaments production. The experiences of these countries have lessons for China as it attempts to move into the first tier of arms-producing states. China has over the past 15 years made significant progress in modernizing its defense technological and industrial base. At the same time, China faces the same long-term challenges that currently confront other regional arms industries - that is, making techno-nationalism work at the later stages of innovation. This is particularly critical as China's defense industry strives to move from a basically platform-centric to an increasingly network-centric technological-industrial process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Making Careers in the Occupational Niche: Chinese Students in Corporate Japan's Transnational Business.
- Author
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Liu-Farrer, Gracia
- Subjects
- *
CAREER development , *CHINESE people , *OCCUPATIONS , *LABOR mobility , *GLOBAL studies , *LABOR market , *SKILLED labor , *FOREIGN study , *HOST countries (Business) - Abstract
Expanding international education and economic globalisation have changed both the make-up of international labour migrants and the patterns of immigrant economic adaptation. Chinese student migrants' employment experiences and economic mobility in Japan suggest that an immigrant occupational niche has emerged among Japanese firms characterised by a set of corporate positions that specifically deal with businesses in China. These firms preferentially recruit Chinese student migrants to fill these positions. This paper discusses the mechanisms that shape such an immigrant occupational niche and the opportunities and constraints presented to Chinese students in Japan. It discusses the paradoxical effects the existence of an occupational niche has on Chinese students, and argues that it provides a pathway for immigrants to enter a previously inaccessible labour market. However, the existence of an immigrant occupational niche itself is a product of prevailing institutional, structural and cultural barriers in the host society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. China, the United States, and Prospects for Asian Space Cooperation.
- Author
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Moltz, James Clay
- Subjects
- *
SPACE exploration , *INTERNATIONAL cooperation - Abstract
With the rapid rise of competitive space activities within Asia, this study examines the prospects for increasing international cooperation. After discussing relevant conceptual issues, it surveys the space policies particularly of China, India, Japan, and South Korea and examines the skewed patterns of cooperation seen at the international, regional, and bilateral levels. It then analyzes the historical, technology, and political factors that have impeded, especially regional, space cooperation in Asia to date. The study concludes that expanded regional space cooperation is an unlikely near-term outcome, but the paper also argues that the risks entailed in the current situation are growing and that US policy initiatives could make a difference in helping to lead countries out of this dead-end. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Political survival and the Yasukuni controversy in Sino-Japanese relations.
- Author
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Cheung, Mong
- Subjects
- *
NATIONALISM , *WAR crimes , *PRACTICAL politics , *CONSERVATIVES ,CHINA-Japan relations - Abstract
This article presents a reinterpretation of Japan's responses toward China's pressure over the Yasukuni issue. It is generally taken for granted that Japan's official responses to China's pressure over the issue are determined by the personality of individual leaders, the emergence of Japanese conservative nationalism and the calculations of Japan's national interests with regard to China's strategic role. With the examination of two cases during the Koizumi and Abe administrations between 2001 and 2007, this paper offers an alternative interpretation by highlighting the rationality of individual political actors and the primacy of domestic political survival. The article suggests domestic political legitimacy of individual leaders is a vital factor that affects Japan's official responses to China's pressure over the Yasukuni issue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The Role of Occupation in an Integrated Boycott Model: A Cross-Regional Study in China.
- Author
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Smith, Malcolm and Li, Qianpin
- Subjects
- *
CONSUMER behavior , *CONSUMER preferences , *BOYCOTTS , *MILITARY occupation - Abstract
The study examines the role of occupancy status in an integrated boycott model, which synthesizes related theories that involve consumer animosity and five other constructs. The status of occupancy introduced in this paper is determined by the real-life incidence of military occupation imposed on China by Japan in the 1940s. The findings suggest that, regardless of the status of the occupancy condition, the tendencies of animosity, efficacy, and prior purchase behavior play important roles in attitudes toward participating boycott activities. The findings offer implications for marketing practice in that the management of multinational corporations that are concerned with increasing their share in any specific country must be aware of that country's history. In this regard, large companies need to pay much more attention to the ingrained and explosive emotion derived from the legacy of past conflicts (i.e., war, economic, political, etc.) between their host and home nations, regardless of a difference in the status of past occupation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Marketing Japanese Products in the Context of Chinese Nationalism.
- Author
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Li, Hongmei
- Subjects
- *
NATIONALISM , *ADVERTISING campaigns , *INTERNATIONAL relations -- Psychological aspects , *CONSUMER attitudes , *MASS media research , *MASS media & politics ,SOCIAL aspects ,CHINA-Japan relations - Abstract
This paper examines the rise of consumer nationalism in China through an in-depth analysis of two recent controversial Japanese ad campaigns. I situate the analysis in the sociopolitical and cultural contexts of contemporary China. I argue that Japanese producers shoulder a particular burden of history as expressed in consumer nationalism, which is a combination of the production and reproduction of Japanese imperial history, the construction of Chinese identity, the expression of dissatisfaction toward the Chinese government and consumerist ethos in the context of globalization. The Internet has become a crucial space that organizes Chinese consumer nationalism and enables consumers to feel a sense of empowerment when they express complaints with the controversial ads. Consumer nationalism in China can also be understood as what Benedict Anderson (1991) calls an “imagined community” that attempts to unite the Chinese in a problematic way. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Youth locked in time and space? Defining features of social withdrawal and practice implications.
- Author
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Wong, Victor
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL status , *POWER (Social sciences) - Abstract
This paper is vested with the purpose of critically discussing the defining features of social withdrawal by drawing references from studies in Hong Kong and Japan in particular. With the use of empirical data, the practice implications for working with young people in acute social withdrawal are examined with specific reference to the four defining features, namely, time, place, social relations and social status. It is argued that unless the defining features and the implied directions for measures and practice are thoroughly addressed, personal troubles and social ills that give rise to the downward spiral of withdrawal as a personal experience and social phenomenon cannot be broken. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. A Crisis is Looming: China's energy challenge in the eyes of university students.
- Author
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Zweig, David and Ye, Shulan
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC activity , *COMMUNITY & college , *COLLEGE students , *ENERGY policy , *POWER resources , *BUSINESS enterprises - Abstract
This paper uses a survey at six universities in China to analyze university students' views on China's energy problems. It finds that gender, the nature and location of a student's original community, and their level of education affects students' views about China's energy problems, as well as the types of solutions that are deemed to be most appropriate to manage this looming crisis. University students are quite concerned about China's energy situation. For them, it is already a crisis. They fear China will be controlled due to resource dependency, see the US as China's primary energy competitor, all the while advocating a more hawkish attitude towards Japan in the East China Sea. But, they look foremost to domestic solutions to this crisis, such as enhanced conservation, more efficient use of energy, new technologies, enhancing China's strategic reserve, and increased government taxation, particularly of large enterprises. When they look abroad, they support diversifying energy sources, increasing energy cooperation, particularly with Russia and Central Asia (but not with Japan), and some increase of the navy's role in enhancing sea lane and energy security. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Australia and Japan: Towards a New Security Partnership?
- Author
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Walton, David
- Subjects
- *
NATIONAL security , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *GOVERNMENT policy , *PRIME ministers - Abstract
This paper assesses the impact of recent upgrades in security ties between Australia and Japan and their implications for the bilateral relationship. In particular, the development and future of the Joint Declaration on Security Cooperation (JDSC) is assessed. It is argued that former Prime Ministers Abe and Howard encouraged the enhancement of security ties to unprecedented new highs, but that the rise of China and leadership change in Japan and Australia in 2007 will make the prospects of a full security treaty unlikely. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Northeast Asian Economic Integration: A Region in Flux.
- Author
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Pempel, T.J.
- Subjects
- *
INTERNATIONAL economic integration , *INTERNATIONAL economic relations , *INTERNATIONAL trade , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *ECONOMIC development , *ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
Over the last decade, essentially since the Asian crisis of 1997-98, the economic integration of Northeast Asia has been marked by three overarching trends. Economic relations have become: 1) more institutionalized; 2) more "Asian;" and 3) more China-centric. These macro-trends are demonstrated and analyzed in the paper. But by way of anticipation, numerous counter-cutting facts need also to be kept in mind. In essence, recent trends, notable as they are, have by no means reversed three counter-realities: 1) economic ties are still largely driven, less by governments and formal arrangements, than by corporations in search of profits and production efficiencies; 2) despite growing economic interdependence across Northeast Asia and between that sub-region and Southeast Asia, Japan, China and South Korea remain heavily linked to global, and particularly US, markets; and 3) though China is an ever important hub in Northeast Asian trade and investment, Japan remains by far the most powerful economic player in the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The United States, Japan, and the European Union: comparing political economy approaches to China.
- Author
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Wan, Ming
- Subjects
- *
INTERNATIONAL economic integration , *GREAT powers (International relations) , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper examines US, Japanese, and European political economy approaches to China, and their effect on US-Japan and US-EU relationships. Great powers with a greater security concern in dealing with another major country care more about power while those with less of a concern are preoccupied with calculations for wealth. China's rise and its actions have posed a far greater security challenge to the United States and Japan and are driving the two countries closer together. The political economy game involving China reveals a dominant welfare motive among the advanced market economies. The ambition to transform China politically has diminished. China's integration into the global market makes a relative gains approach difficult to implement. Globalization simply limits the ability of a state to follow a politics-in-command approach in the absence of actual military conflict, which explains why the political economy approaches of the United States, Europe, and Japan are not that different in the scheme of things. China's own grand strategy to reach out to the world to outflank the US-Japan alliance has also contributed to a divergent European policy toward China although there are severe limitations to Beijing's ability to drive a wedge between the United States and Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Government Policy, Continental Collaboration and the Diffusion of Open Source Software in China, Japan, and South Korea.
- Author
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Kshetri, Nir and Schiopu, Andreea
- Subjects
- *
OPEN source software , *COMPUTER software development , *COMPUTER software industry , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The scale of development and deployment of open source software (OSS) in the three Northeast Asian countries-China, Japan, and South Korea-is large enough to be noticed at the global level. OSS has redefined the dynamics of software markets in the three countries and has brought significant structural changes in their software industries. Governments have played a pivotal role in the development of OSS industry in the region. Governments in the three countries have also created impetus for continental collaborations in OSS projects. This paper examines the roles and contributions of governments to the OSS initiative in the three countries in terms of a number of technology visions and goals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Where is the ‘Economic Centre’ of the Asia Pacific Region?
- Author
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Albrecht, Thomas
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMICS , *ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
The paper examines if the ‘economic centre’ of Asia is likely to shift over the next 20 years. In this context, it addresses the widely held notion that a deterioration of Southeast Asia's geographic centrality within the Asia Pacific region is likely to occur due to the rise of China. GNP-weighted centrality indices are calculated for major Asian cities, and it is shown that the changing economic map of Asia is unlikely to lead to geographic marginalization of Southeast Asia: even if the economic importance of China increases significantly, this will be more than offset by the corresponding decline of Japan. As a consequence, the total economic weight of Northeast Asia is likely to decrease slightly compared to Southeast Asia and Greater India over the next 20 years, with the economic centre of Asia moving further to the southwest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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