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ID145142
Title ProperJapanese perceptions of territorial disputes
Other Title Informationopinion poll surveys in the southwestern part of Japan
LanguageENG
AuthorKim, Mikyoung
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article examines the causal associations between domestic Japan’s socio-psychological indices and people’s perceptions toward territorial disputes with China and South Korea. The triangulation analyses do not support most of the hypotheses except the explanatory variables of age, level of educational attainment, and Japan’s future projection: The higher the age group, the stronger the territorial sovereignty conviction; the higher the level of education, the weaker the support for the Japanese government’s hawkish policy; and the more pessimistic the future confidence of Japan, the bigger the threat perception of China. The causality could be established only when the probability level was relaxed from 0.05 to 0.10. This research finds a weak overall causal association between domestic state of affairs and territorial perceptions. The public opinion on territorial claims remains more or less the same largely independent of domestic socio-economic conditions. This observation leads to a call to revise the conventional conflict cycle theory (i.e., status quo > provocation > rise of tension > conflict relaxation) in order to reflect more of simultaneous and interactive nature of inter-state conflict (i.e., action [tension/status quo/reconciliation] > reaction [tension/status quo/reconciliation]). The intra-state affairs have become more vulnerable to unexpected and hard-to-control contingencies which defy the procedural progression of conflict management. This implies that the elites can no longer monopolize the decision on foreign affairs.
`In' analytical NoteEast Asia: An International Quarterly Vol. 32, No.4; Dec 2015: p.341–360
Journal SourceEast Asia: An International Quaterly Vol: 32 No 4
Key WordsReconciliation ;  Public Opinion ;  Territorial Disputes ;  Provocation ;  Status Quo ;  Conflict Cycle ;  Tension ;  Socio-Psychological Indices


 
 
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