Japan and Africa : big business and diplomacy
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Japan and Africa : big business and diplomacy
Hurst, c1997
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 283-293) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This study analyzes Japan's "dual policy" towards Africa: an often surreptitious "White Africa" policy that is very supportive of South Africa - despite public pronouncements to the contrary - and a separate "Black Africa" policy. In particular, the author demonstrates how, since the 1950s, government, business interests and the ruling Liberal Democratic Party have co-operated in formulating and implementing these policies. It deals also with the "honorary white" status afforded Japanese in South Africa, Japanese racism and anti-racism, Japan's foreign policy and the banking, industrial and trading interests of Japanese multi-national corporations in Africa.
Table of Contents
- Japan's historical relationship with Africa
- the basic framework of Japan's overall African diplomacy
- the development of Japan's post-war African diplomacy, 1952-1991
- actors in the external decision-making of Japan's African diplomacy
- a case study of big business' involvement in the dual diplomacy with Africa
- Japan's diplomacy and racism
- Japan and Africa at the crossroads.
by "Nielsen BookData"