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ID157818
Title ProperSouth Korean views on Japan's constitutional reform under the Abe government
LanguageENG
AuthorCho, E J R ;  Shin, Ki-young
Summary / Abstract (Note)In this Special Section, this article reviews South Korean views on Japan's ‘peace’ Constitution and the Abe government's attempts at constitutional reform. It identifies three different understandings among South Korean academics on why Japan is escalating attempts to revise the Constitution under the Abe government. An in-depth analysis demonstrates that all three perspectives pay specific attention to Japan's constitutional reform in relation to security policy changes. However, they differ in assessing the impact of Japan's constitutional reform on South Korea as well as how South Korea should deal with such a change. A minority opinion considers Japan's ‘remilitarisation’ through constitutional revision as conducive to South Korean security interests by increasing deterrence against North Korea, whereas the dominant opinion is that any attempt to revise the Constitution could be in and of itself a potential threat to South Korea's security due to a lack of trust attributed to unresolved historical conflicts between Korea and Japan. However, all three approaches pay hardly any attention to the positive role of Japan's peace Constitution while Japan's peace Constitution might provide a regional peace model in Northeast Asia.
`In' analytical NotePacific Review Vol. 31, No.2; Mar 2018: p.256-266
Journal SourcePacific Review Vol: 31 No 2
Key WordsNortheast Asia ;  Constitutional Reform ;  Article 9 ;  Japanese Peace Constitutio ;  South Korean–Japanese Relations


 
 
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