ABSTRACT

Britian and Japan in the Contemporary World provides up-to-date analyses of these two countries in terms of economics, politics, security and identity on the global, regional, subnational and civic levels.
The book moves beyond an analysis of state-to-state relations between Britain and Japan by examining the role of civil society in the relationship and analyzing the way the two countries deal with common issues, such as the 'special relationship' both maintain with the US; the relationship with the continents that both of these island nations border; the question of the degree of decentralization to allow within their contested borders. Both countries also face the pressures of globalization, as seen by the responses of the global cities of London and Tokyo.
The editors have brought a selection of top scholars in a collection of chapters aimed at examining the similarities and differences in the way Britian and Japan respond to issues of common concern on these different levels.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

Japan and Britain – Similarities, Differences, and the Future

chapter |12 pages

The Future of Anglo-America

The Changing Relationship Between the United Kingdom and the United States

chapter |27 pages

Japan–United States Relations in the Postwar Years

The Dilemma and Problems of Postwar Japanese Diplomacy and Their Implications for the East Asian Order

chapter |13 pages

Britain and Germany

Defining the European Order in the Contemporary Era

chapter |16 pages

Japan and China

New Regionalism and the Emerging East Asian Order

chapter |16 pages

The United Kingdom and the Euro

Exchange Rate Stability but at What Price?

chapter |18 pages

The East Asian Economies After the Financial Crisis

A Role for the Japanese Yen?

chapter |16 pages

A Braveheart Renaissance?

Scottish Identity and Politics at the Beginning of the Twenty-First Century

chapter |16 pages

Beyond Hondo

Devolution and Okinawa

chapter |10 pages

London as a Global Financial Centre

Problems and Prospects in the New Era

chapter |15 pages

Narrating a ‘Global City' for ‘New Tokyoites'

Economic Crisis and Urban ‘Boosterism' in Tokyo

chapter |11 pages

Conclusion

Japan and Britain – a Common Agenda for the Twenty-First Century?