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ID194342
Title ProperSecuritizing Beijing through the maritime commons
Other Title Information the ‘China threat’ and Japan’s security discourse in the Abe era
LanguageENG
AuthorDell'Era, Alice
Summary / Abstract (Note)The ‘China threat’ has been identified as an important driver of Japan’s security agenda and discourse. The threat posed by China has been discussed either as a given factor determining the trajectory of Tokyo’s security approach, as a product of identity construction, or as an expression of securitizing processes that facilitate institutional and policy change. This paper contributes to this debate by offering an alternative explanation of the process through which the Abe government constructed China as a threat. Building on securitization theory, the paper examines the modes and strategies employed by the Abe Administration to successfully securitize China. The paper argues that, while Beijing was labeled a ‘concern’ rather than an ‘existential threat,’ it was still securitized through a process of securitization that involves an association with those domains in which China engages assertively, namely the maritime commons. The paper suggests calling this type of securitizing pattern ‘transversal securitization’ and explores how this indirect strategy allowed the Abe government to pragmatically pursue its objectives both domestically and at the international level.
`In' analytical NotePacific Review Vol. 37, No.1; Jan 2024: p.147-180
Key WordsJapan ;  China ;  China Threat ;  Securitization Theory ;  Security Discourse