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An analysis of Japanese foreign policy since the end of World War II. Lectures will be mainly given along the historical development, but along the issues in some cases as shown below.
Much attention will be paid to the domestic constraints particularly of power politics among the politicians and foreign policy leaders. It is desirable to have basic understanding of Japanfs prewar diplomacy since Mathew Perry and of domestic politics of Japan after the war.

Topics:
1. American Occupation, New Constitution and the Tokyo International Military Tribunal.
2. Rearmament and the Independence.
3. After Independence: China, South East Asia, and the Soviet Russia.
4. Diplomacy during the Era of Rapid Economic Growth.
5. Okinawa Reversion.
6. Facing the New Challenges: gNixon Shocksh and the Oil Crisis.
7. Japan in the G7 Summit.
8. After Vietnam: Approaches to the South East Asia.
9. The New Cold War and the Trade Disputes with the US.
10. New Challenges in Security Policy.
11. Changing ODA Policy.
12. Historical Memory and Reconciliation.
13. Policy toward the United Nations.

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Glenn D. Hook, et. al., Japanfs International Relations: Politics, Economics, and Security, 2nd ed., Routledge, 2003., Yutaka Kawashima, Japanese Foreign Policy at the Crossroads: Challenges and Options for the Twenty-First Century, Brookings Institution Press, 2003., etc.

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