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MIYAGI, YUKIKO (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   091485


Foreign policy making under Koizumi: norms and Japan's role in the 2003 Iraq war / Miyagi, Yukiko   Journal Article
Miyagi, Yukiko Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract Japan's policy toward the 2003 Iraq War is a test of the constructivist argument about the weight of norms as opposed to material systemic factors in foreign policy making. Constructions of external threats and interests were contested between a largely realist-minded elite around prime minister Koizumi bent on Japan's remilitarization and those still holding to antimilitarist norms. This contest is traced in an analysis of the policy-making process, including the role of bureaucratic and political institutions, the opposition parties and the public. Indicative of the power of norms, Koizumi was forced to compromise his ambition to use the Iraq crisis to help make Japan a "normal" great power.
Key Words Japan  Iraq War  Koisumi  Foreign Policy 
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2
ID:   113184


Japan's Middle East policy: still mercantile realism / Miyagi, Yukiko   Journal Article
Miyagi, Yukiko Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Japan's vital interests, both its energy security and US alliance, are at stake in the Middle East. Change in Japan's Middle East policy is charted over three periods, from a stance independent of the United States to one increasingly aligned with US policy. This is explained in terms of four variables: level of US hegemony, threats in East Asia, energy vulnerabilities in the Middle East, and normative change inside Japan. Japan's policy in Middle East/North Africa reflects its general move toward a more militarily enhanced version of mercantile realism.
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