Japan and the Third World : patterns, power, prospects
著者
書誌事項
Japan and the Third World : patterns, power, prospects
Macmillan Academic and Professional, 1992
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注記
Bibliography: p. 298-320
Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Since 1945, Japan's policymakers have viewed geoeconomic rather than geopolitical influence as the most important source of power in an increasingly interdependent world political economy. Japanese policy toward the Third World is a vital part of Tokyo's neomercantilist drive to transform Japan into an economic superpower and ensure Japan's comprehensive security. Essentially, Tokyo's Third World policy attempts to diversify Japan's foreign sources of markets, energy, and raw materials as widely as possible while making these sources dependent on Japanese goods, services, technology, and capital. "Japan and the Third World" analyzes how Tokyo entangles strategic countries and regions in an integrated overseas political economic web generating enormous wealth and power for Japan.
目次
- Part 1 Japan and the Third World - ends and means: Japanese foreign policy and policymaking
- Japanese trade policy toward the Third World
- Japanese investment policy toward the Third World
- Japanese aid policy toward the Third World. Part 2 The greater East Asian co-prosperity sphere: Japan and the Far East
- Japan and Southeast Asia
- Japan and the "Two Chinas"
- Japan and the two Koreas. Part 3 The whole world under one roof: Japan and the Middle East
- Japan and Africa
- Japan and Latin America
- Japan, South Asia, and the South Pacific.
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