Japan's security identity : from a peace state to an international state

書誌事項

Japan's security identity : from a peace state to an international state

Bhubhindar Singh

(The Sheffield Centre for Japanese Studies/Routledge series, 45)

Routledge, 2017, c2013

  • : pbk

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注記

"First issued in paperback 2017"--T.p. verso

"Asian politics/Japanese politics/security studies"--Backcover

Includes bibliographical references (p. [188]-206) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Since the end of the Cold War, there has been a significant change in Japanese security policy, as Japan's security identity has shifted from a peace state, to an international state. In this book, Bhubhindar Singh argues that from the 1990s onwards, the Japanese security policymaking elite recognized that its earlier approach to security policy which was influenced by the peace-state security identity was no longer appropriate. Rather, as a member of the international community, Japan had to carve out a responsible role in regional and international security affairs, which required greater emphasis on the role of the military in Japan's security policy. To explore the change in Japan's security identity and its associated security behaviour, this book contrasts the three areas that define and shape Japanese security policy: Japan's conception (or definition) of national security; the country's contribution, in military terms, to regional and international affairs; and the changes to the security policy regime responsible for the security policy formulation. Further, it seeks to challenge the dominant realist interpretation of Japanese security policy by adopting an identity-based approach and showing how whilst realist accounts correctly capture the trajectory of Japanese post-Cold War security policy, they fail to explain the underlying causes of the change in Japanese security behaviour in the post-Cold War period. This book is an important addition to the current literature on Japanese security policy, and will be of great use to students and scholars interested in Japanese and Asian politics, as well as security studies and international relations more broadly.

目次

1. Introduction 2. Realism, Mercantilism and Constructivism 3. Security Identity and Japan's Security Policy 4. Territorial Conception of National Security 5. Regional and International (Global) Security 6. Security Policymaking Regime 7. Conclusion

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