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The foreign policies of presidents, prime ministers and their
foreign secretaries can be influenced by the preferences of
domestic and international nongovernmental actors, as well as those
of other governments. Representative democracy, media power,
citizen activism and the globalization of politics and
telecommunications, for example, have accelerated changes in the
sharing of power. This book focuses on the Philippines and Japan
where, willingly and unwillingly, foreign policy executives share
power with individuals and groups inside and outside of government
bureaucracies and their societies. The book retells the foreign
policy narratives of regional cooperation, military relations and
official development assistance (foreign aid), revealing how
executive foreign policy makers and civil society organizations
share power - and succeed or fail - in a globalizing, democratizing
world. A variety of published, unpublished and declassified sources
provide journalists, scholars, government practitioners and global
citizens with a sophisticated understanding of the domestic
politics of foreign policy making, as well as its intergovernmental
and transnational side.
The foreign policies of presidents, prime ministers and their
foreign secretaries can be influenced by the preferences of
domestic and international nongovernmental actors, as well as those
of other governments. Representative democracy, media power,
citizen activism and the globalization of politics and
telecommunications, for example, have accelerated changes in the
sharing of power. This book focuses on the Philippines and Japan
where, willingly and unwillingly, foreign policy executives share
power with individuals and groups inside and outside of government
bureaucracies and their societies. The book retells the foreign
policy narratives of regional cooperation, military relations and
official development assistance (foreign aid), revealing how
executive foreign policy makers and civil society organizations
share power - and succeed or fail - in a globalizing, democratizing
world. A variety of published, unpublished and declassified sources
provide journalists, scholars, government practitioners and global
citizens with a sophisticated understanding of the domestic
politics of foreign policy making, as well as its intergovernmental
and transnational side.
State capitalism is a normal form of capitalist development. Its
extremes vary, but it has been and remains central to the
understanding of modern capitalism. This is especially the case in
the so called communist spheres of Russia and China and for
alternative economies like those of India and the Philippines,
which are the focus of this timely and challenging book.
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