ID | 106466 |
Title Proper | Japan's reconceptualization of national security |
Other Title Information | the impact of globalization |
Language | ENG |
Author | Singh, Bhubhindar ; Shetler-Jones, Philip |
Publication | 2011. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Japan has steadily extended its military reach from a domestic zone of defense against territorial invasion in the late 1950s, through regional security policy in the late 1970s to what has now become a globally scaled military role. This re-expansion is perceived by some as evidence of revived militaristic ambitions, and by others as subservience to the US global strategy. However, taking the cue from Japan's 2004 National Defence Programme Guideline (New Taiko), this paper assesses the role globalization has played in this territorial expansion. The impact of globalization is evident in the double expansion of Japan's national security conception in geographical terms and self-defense forces roles in global security. These 'expansions' are studied through two key elements of globalization - the deterritorialization of complex relations of interdependence between states (security globality) and the inter-penetrating nature of these relations blur the boundary between foreign and domestic spaces (intermestic space). |
`In' analytical Note | International Relations of the Asia-Pacific Vol. 11, No. 3; 2011: p.491-530 |
Journal Source | International Relations of the Asia-Pacific Vol. 11, No. 3; 2011: p.491-530 |
Key Words | Japan ; Globalization ; Reconceptualization of National Security ; National Security ; US Global Strategy |