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This book offers a comprehensive overview of Japan's national
security institutions and policy today, including a detailed
discussion of Japan's regional security environment and its
alliance with the United States in the context of the Democratic
Party of Japan's rise to power in August 2009. 2010 marks the 50th
anniversary of the revision of the U.S.-Japan Security Treaty,
making Japan one of the United States's longest and most important
military allies. Over 40,000 US troops are based in Japan, as is
the only U.S. aircraft carrier based outside the United States, the
USS George Washington. Japan possesses one of the world's largest
economies and strongest military forces, and as a result, its
national security policies and institutions are highly
significant—not just to America, but to the rest of the global
community as well. This book provides an overview of Japan's
transformation into one of the world's most capable military powers
over the past 150 years. Particular attention is paid to
developments in the past decade, such as the 2009 change in the
controlling political party and Japan's responses to new global
security threats.
The Neolithic Cemetery at Tell el-Kerkh is the second volume of the
final reports on the excavations at Tell el-Kerkh, northwest Syria.
The 12-year field campaigns at Tell el-Kerkh yielded several
unexpected archaeological findings. The existence of the oldest
cultural deposits from the early Pre-Pottery Neolithic B period (c.
8700-8300 BC) in northwestern Syria was revealed. The
investigations also revealed that several large and complex
societies had existed from the late Pre-Pottery Neolithic B to the
middle Pottery Neolithic periods (c. 7600-6000 BC). One of the most
conspicuous findings of the excavations at Tell el-Kerkh was the
discovery of a Pottery Neolithic cemetery dating between c. 6400
and 6100 BC, which makes it one of the oldest outdoor communal
cemeteries in West Asia. This book focuses specifically on this
cemetery. It reports the discovery of over 240 burials and
discusses the process of the formation and development of the
cemetery. Initially used for traditional house burials in a corner
of the settlement, the cemetery eventually became a graveyard that
was physically separated from the residential buildings and
consisted only of graves. In other words, burials that were deeply
related to each house developed into an outdoor communal cemetery
of the settlement. The Kerkh Neolithic cemetery was a precursor to
the wider development of communal cemeteries in West Asia, and its
investigation provides us with a deeper understanding of Neolithic
society in West Asia.
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Paperback
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R398
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