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HATAKEYAMA, KYOKO (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   084531


Japan's aid to vietnam: becoming an intellectual leader? / Hatakeyama, Kyoko   Journal Article
Hatakeyama, Kyoko Journal Article
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Publication 2008.
Summary/Abstract Japan's strong economic performance and its disproportionately low profile in international affairs up to the 1990s led many observers to reasonably conclude that the country's foreign policy, including its aid policy, was organized to advance national economic interests. But Japan responded to new international approaches to aid that ran counter to its own by modifying its approach and seeking to establish itself as a leader in the aid field. The formation of an economic development program for Vietnam presented Japan with a test for its newly adopted strategy. This article examines Japan's new aid approach to the world and its goals through a case study of its involvement in Vietnam's economic development program.
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2
ID:   135069


Japan's peacekeeping policy: strategic calculation or internalization of an international norm? / Hatakeyama, Kyoko   Article
Hatakeyama, Kyoko Article
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Summary/Abstract With the Gulf War as a trigger, Japan began to make a humanitarian contribution by dispatching the Self Defense Forces to United Nations peacekeeping operations. Given Japan's strong hesitation for participation in the past, Japan's peacekeeping policy presents an intriguing challenge to examine the factors for a preference change and sustained compliance. By investigating Japan's peacekeeping policies towards East Timor and Haiti, this article examines how Japan's behavior and preferences were influenced by either internalized norms or cost/benefit calculations. While norm-driven behavior is considered to be incompatible with strategic calculated behavior, the article demonstrates that these two factors can co-exist.
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