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Globalization of Japan; Japanese Sakoku Mentality and U.S. Efforts to Open Japan,9780312177089
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Globalization of Japan; Japanese Sakoku Mentality and U.S. Efforts to Open Japan


Edition: 1st
Author(s): Itoh, Mayumi
ISBN10:  0312177089
ISBN13:  9780312177089
Format:  Trade Book
Pub. Date:  5/15/1998
Publisher(s): Palgrave Macmillan


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SummaryTable of ContentsAuthor Biography
In The Globalization of Japan, Mayumi Itoh examines the various aspects of Japan’s resistance to internationalization. She shows how the opening up of Japan involves not only the accessibility of Japanese markets to foreign goods, but also the liberalization of the Japanese psyche from the sakoku (secluded nation) mentality. Itoh unearths the roots of the sakoku mentality and reveals it as the fundamental impediment to Japan’s internationalization, examining various Japanese sakoku policies. She also analyzes the three open-door policies that Japan has undertaken in the past and demonstrates how the United States played a crucial role in each one. Concluding with a thorough assessment of prospects for Japan’s internationalization in the twenty-first century, The Globalization of Japan offers new insights into this important and often misunderstood country.


Political scientist Mayumi Itoh examines the various aspects of Japan's resistance to internationalization and shows how the opening up of Japan involves not only the accessibility of Japanese markets to foreign goods, but also the liberalization of the Japanese psyche from a "secluded nation" mentality.
Acronyms vii
List of Figures
ix
List of Tables
xi
Acknowledgments xiii
A Note on the Text xv
Introduction 1(22)
Part 1 The Japanese Sakoku Mentality
Historical Background
23(12)
The Sakoku Mentality and Japanese Perceptions of Kokusaika
35(12)
Japanese Perceptions of the United States
47(20)
Japanese Perceptions of Asia
67(22)
Japanese Perceptions of ASEAN and Japan's Economic Diplomacy
89(20)
Part 2 Japan's Sakoku Policy: Case Studies
Japan's Immigration and Foreign Labor Policies
109(10)
Okinawa and the Sakoku Mentality
119(14)
Kome Kaikoku: Japan's Rice Market Liberalization
133(14)
The Japanese Constitution and Military Kokusaikoken
147(14)
Japan and the United Nations: Peacekeeping Operations and Permanent Security Council Seat
161(16)
Conclusion: Prospects for Japan's Kokusaika 177(10)
Notes 187(20)
Selected Bibliography 207(10)
Index 217
Mayumi Itoh is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV).

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