Cultural Norms and National Security: Police and Military in Postwar Japan / Edition 1

Cultural Norms and National Security: Police and Military in Postwar Japan / Edition 1

by Peter J. Katzenstein
ISBN-10:
0801483328
ISBN-13:
9780801483325
Pub. Date:
07/29/1998
Publisher:
Cornell University Press
ISBN-10:
0801483328
ISBN-13:
9780801483325
Pub. Date:
07/29/1998
Publisher:
Cornell University Press
Cultural Norms and National Security: Police and Military in Postwar Japan / Edition 1

Cultural Norms and National Security: Police and Military in Postwar Japan / Edition 1

by Peter J. Katzenstein

Paperback

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Overview

Nonviolent state behavior in Japan, this book argues, results from the distinctive breadth with which the Japanese define security policy, making it inseparable from the quest for social stability through economic growth. While much of the literature on contemporary Japan has resisted emphasis on cultural uniqueness, Peter J. Katzenstein seeks to explain particular aspects of Japan's security policy in terms of legal and social norms that are collective, institutionalized, and sometimes the source of intense political conflict and change. Culture, thus specified, is amenable to empirical analysis, suggesting comparisons across policy domains and with other countries. Katzenstein focuses on the traditional core agencies of law enforcement and national defense. The police and the military in postwar Japan are, he finds, reluctant to deploy physical violence to enforce state security. Police agents rarely use repression against domestic opponents of the state, and the Japanese public continues to support, by large majorities, constitutional limits on overseas deployment of the military. Katzenstein traces the relationship between the United States and Japan since 1945 and then compares Japan with postwar Germany. He concludes by suggesting that while we may think of Japan's security policy as highly unusual, it is the definition of security used in the United States that is, in international terms, exceptional.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801483325
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 07/29/1998
Series: Cornell Studies in Political Economy
Edition description: REPRINT
Pages: 328
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.75(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Peter J. Katzenstein is Walter S. Carpenter, Jr., Professor of International Studies at Cornell University. The author of several books, he is also editor of Tamed Power: Germany in Europe and, with Takashi Shiraishi, Network Power: Japan and Asia.

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From the Publisher

Katzenstein wishes... to explore the relationship between culture and national security, using Japan as a case in point. He contends that, since World War II, Japan has developed a distinctive, comprehensive, and generally nonviolent definition of security that is different from that of the United States. To make his argument he follows a discussion of Japanese cultural norms with chapters on the police and the Japanese Self-Defense Forces, before exploring the U.S.-Japanese relationship and drawing an extended comparison between Japan and Germany.... An intriguing work well worth reading.

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