ABSTRACT

The Internationalization of Japan provides the English-speaking reader with the opportunity to hear what some of Japan's leading social scientists and other commentators have to say about the internationalization of their country as well as their country's impact overseas.
The topic is of extreme importance now as the international community demands a greater Japanese contribution to international society as well as changes in Japan to facilitate foreign access. The book discusses the internationalization of politics, economy and society. Topics of special interest include the internationalization of Japanese capital, the response of Japanese society to foreign workers, local level initiatives for internationalization and the internationalization of education.
To place the internationalization of Japan in comparative perspective there are chapters on Britain and the United States from a leading British and a leading American political scientist respectively. These two and the editors aside, all the contributors are highly regarded Japanese scholars or commentators.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

part I|48 pages

Comparison

chapter 1|17 pages

Internationalization and the national economy

The British case

part II|56 pages

Meanings and implications

part IV|32 pages

National and local politics

chapter 9|17 pages

Japan's political change towards internationalization

Grafted democracy and political recruitment

part V|64 pages

Labour markets and migrant workers

chapter 11|24 pages

Migrant workers

The Japanese case in international perspective

chapter 12|17 pages

Reciprocity and migrant workers

part VI|32 pages

Education and the individual

part VII|18 pages

The future

chapter 16|9 pages

Towards a new departure

Alternatives for Japan

chapter 17|7 pages

The internationalization of Japan