When discussing Japanese politics or the Japanese legal system,
many scholars point to the peculiarities of the country's culture -
its need for consensus, its rejection of individualism, its
Confucian fascination with loyalty. Other scholars simply invent
new theories ad hoc to explain what they see. But is Japan really
so different that general social scientific theories don't apply?
Ramseyer and Rosenbluth don't think so, and in this book they show
how rational-choice theory can be applied to Japanese politics,
with telling results.
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