|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
This book explores the discussions on Japanese-U.S. relations,
security in Northeast Asia, political and economic development in
Southeast Asia, transformation in Japanese domestic politics, and
world economy, from the Fourth Shimoda Conference held in 1977.
The United States and Japan are the two largest democracies in
today's world. The United States is still a superpower
economically, militarily, and intellectually, but its traditional
independence has changed to a position that requires cooperation
and mutual understanding with its major allies and especially with
Japan. Japan, also an economic super-power, enormously rich in
human, economic, and intellectual resources, but very weak in
natural resources, has an equal need for cooperation, military
support, and teamwork on all levels. Both nations accept an
obligation to contribute their resources fully toward the solution
to the world's problems. Consequently, new forms of dialogues and
new instruments of cooperation must be devised based on a
sophisticated, mutually agreed upon data base. These discussions
from the Fourth Shimoda Conference (September 1-4, 1977) explore
some of those new directions.
Additional Contributing Authors Include Murray Emeneau And Stith
Thompson.
|
You may like...
The Party
Elizabeth Day
Paperback
(1)
R323
R263
Discovery Miles 2 630
Mimic
Daniel Cole
Paperback
R355
R280
Discovery Miles 2 800
|