ABSTRACT

The volume opens with a detailed autobiographical sketch of the author's original 'meeting with Japan', which began in 1961after taking up a post at ANU, Canberra (the result of a successful response to an advert in the Manchester Guardian). After twenty-one years in Australia, Arthur Stockwin moved back to the UK to take the chair of the then recently-established Nissan Institute of Japanese Studies. He was to be in post there also for twenty one years, his retirement coinciding with publication of his Dictionary of the Modern Politics of Japan (Routledge, 2003).

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

part |2 pages

Part II Japanese Political Parties and Political Activism

chapter 10|4 pages

Japan Dissent, 1968

chapter 14|10 pages

The Rights and Lefts of Japanese Politics

chapter 16|18 pages

Political Parties and Political Opposition

part |2 pages

Part III The Japanese Political System and Political System Reform

chapter 22|8 pages

Perceiving Japanese Politics Dissent, 1967

chapter 30|12 pages

Japan as a Political Model? East Asia, 1984

part |2 pages

Part IV Political Factionalism