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This study examines the security-related aspects behind Japan's
emerging internationalism. Japan has for some time been projecting
a higher international profile, of which the Diet's (Parliament)
approval to allow Japanese armed forces to operate abroad is but
one manifestation.;The book's scope is not limited to military
issues - it embraces a spectrum of security-related topics such as
constitutional amendment, international re-alignment and
co-operation, defence industrialization, Japan-US relations and
technology leakage, and Japan's role in the new international
order. Ron Matthews has also written "European Armaments
Collaboration".
* divergencies between practice and policy in NATO US-European
positions
* the high costs of collaborative ventures
* competition versus concentration
* the complexities of adopting a European defence consensus within
NATO
At a time when the diminution of NATO's defence-industrial base
goes hand in hand with product reorientation and specialisation,
this book provides concise, critical and contemporary assessment of
European and NATO collaborative issues.
This book identifies, explains and analyses the key issues involved
in Europe's defence-industrial reorganisation progress. It tackles
head-on controversial issues such as:
First published in 1992. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
Defence is the ultimate public good, and it thus falls to
government to determine the appropriate amount of public revenue to
commit to the defence of the realm. This will depend on history,
strategic threat, international security obligations, entreaties
from allies and, of course, the threat faced. The Political Economy
of Defence is structured to identify, explain and analyse the
policy, process and problems that government faces from the
starting point of national security through to the ultimate
objective of securing a peaceful world. Accordingly, it provides
insights into how defence budgets are determined and managed,
offering relevant and refreshingly practical policy perspectives on
defence finance, defence and development trade-offs, sovereignty vs
globalisation debates, and many other pertinent issues. It will
appeal to policymakers, analysts, graduate students and academics
interested in defence economics, political economy, public
economics and public policy.
The purpose of this book is to examine the security-related aspects
behind Japan's emerging internationalism. Japan has for some time
been projecting a higher international profile, which the Diet's
approval to allow Japanese armed forces to operate abroad is but
one manifestation. The book's scope is not limited to military
issues; it embraces a spectrum of security-related topics such as
constitutional amendment, international re-alignment and
cooperation, defence industrialisation, Japan-US relations and
technology leakage, and Japan's role in the new international
order.
Defence is the ultimate public good, and it thus falls to
government to determine the appropriate amount of public revenue to
commit to the defence of the realm. This will depend on history,
strategic threat, international security obligations, entreaties
from allies and, of course, the threat faced. The Political Economy
of Defence is structured to identify, explain and analyse the
policy, process and problems that government faces from the
starting point of national security through to the ultimate
objective of securing a peaceful world. Accordingly, it provides
insights into how defence budgets are determined and managed,
offering relevant and refreshingly practical policy perspectives on
defence finance, defence and development trade-offs, sovereignty vs
globalisation debates, and many other pertinent issues. It will
appeal to policymakers, analysts, graduate students and academics
interested in defence economics, political economy, public
economics and public policy.
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