What do the Japanese really want their diplomacy to achieve for
them? Are they content to be subordinate partners in alliance with
the US? What is behind all of their disputes about the nature of
their 'international contribution'? What do they mean by a
'UN-centred foreign policy'? Why is the miserably traduced Article
9 of the "Peace Constitution" such a central symbol in contemporary
politics? Ronal Dore gives his answers to these questions in what
was originally a contribution to Japanese debate, first written in
Japanese and now supplemented in this English edition by comments
from a number of leading Japanese thinkers. Japan, Internationalism
and the UN provides a unique insight into Japan's foreign policy
and its related domestic politics. It is the product of nearly half
a century of study and discussion with the Japanese themselves
about their place in the world.
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