Japan's foreign policy
Material type:
- 9780415032346
- 327.52 DRI
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Gandhi Smriti Library | 327.52 DRI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 52541 |
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327.51047 MED China and the superpowers | 327.51054 DEV Develolpment experiences in China and India | 327.51054 SIN Sino Indian relations. | 327.52 DRI Japan's foreign policy | 327.538 ABU International boundaries of Saudi Arbia | 327.54 AHM State and foreign policy | 327.54 DEM Democratic peace; Foreign policy implications / edited by M. L. Sondhi |
In political terms, Japan still maintains a relatively low profile. Its economic success has provoked from its partners increasingly impatient demands that it accept broader international responsibility. Japan is no longer able to limit itself to merely adapting to the international environment; a more accentuated political - or military - role, however, remains controversial both within and outside the country. This paper analyses the domestic context of foreign policy-rnakinq and the interplay between the economic, political and security factors. Interwoven is an examination of Japan's complex relationships with the two superpowers, its Asian neighbours and the Europeans, and the paper concludes by suggesting likely foreign policy priorities for Japan as it approaches the 1990s.
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