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Risk State Japan's Foreign Policy in an Age of Uncertainty Rethinking Asia and International Relations Series

Langue : Anglais

Auteurs :

Couverture de l’ouvrage Risk State
The increase of new complex security challenges and the heightening significance of a diverse array of actors has simultaneously posed a challenge to traditional perspectives on international relations and foreign policy and created an opportunity for new concepts to be applied. Conventional explanations of Japan?s foreign policy have provided us with theoretically predetermined understandings and fallacious predictions. Reformulating risk in its application to the study of international relations and foreign policy, this volume promises new insights into the analysis of contemporary foreign policy in East Asia and Japan?s post-Cold War international relations in particular.
Part I Introduction; Chapter 1 Risk Recalibration in Japan’s Foreign Policy-Making, RaMason, PaulO’Shea, SebastianMaslow; Part II Risks and Responses; Chapter 2 Internal and External Risks to Japan’s Northern Territories Policy, PaulO’Shea; Chapter 3 North Korea and the Politics of Risk-Framing in Japan, RaMason, SebastianMaslow; Chapter 4 Risk in Japan’s Militarization of Okinawa against China, Key-youngSon, RaMason; Chapter 5 Redirecting Security Narratives and Institutions in Japan’s Response to 9/11, LorenzDenninger; Chapter 6 Risks of Sameness, the ‘Rise of China’ and Japan’s Ontological Security, KaiSchulze; Chapter 7 Japan’s Foreign Policy and Transnational Environmental Risks, AsamiMiyazaki; Chapter 8 Risk Management, Disaster Diplomacy and the Struggle for National Identity in Japan, YoshikoYamada, DanielClausen; Part III Conclusions; Chapter 9 Risking Change in Japan’s Foreign Policy, PaulO’Shea, RaMason, SebastianMaslow;
Sebastian Maslow is a doctoral student at Tohoku University’s Graduate School of Law where he is completing research on North Korea’s impact on Japan’s foreign and national security policy process. Previously, he taught at the Centre for East Asia Studies at the University of Heidelberg, Germany. Ra Mason is lecturer in Asia-Pacific Studies at the University of Central Lancashire, visiting research fellow with the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science at the University of the Ryukyus and an Honorary Fellow of the White Rose East Asia Centre, University of Sheffield. Paul O’Shea is assistant professor at the Department of Culture and Society, Aarhus University, and an honorary research fellow at the White Rose East Asia Centre.