The Japanese Challenge to the American Neoliberal World Order: Identity, Meaning, and Foreign Policy
The first academic publication to explicitly link capitalism to Japan's particular foreign economic policy choices, this book offers a historically informed account of the nature and evolution of the Japanese challenge to neoliberalism. Central to this book's analysis are the historically and socially constructed Japanese conceptions of Japan's economic identity—conceptions that have shaped Japan's interest in challenging the American-led neoliberal world order. With historical analysis beginning in the 1870s, this book explicates several of Japan's key foreign policy choices, including the Asian Monetary Fund decision in 1997, and draws out the future policy implications of these choices.

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The Japanese Challenge to the American Neoliberal World Order: Identity, Meaning, and Foreign Policy
The first academic publication to explicitly link capitalism to Japan's particular foreign economic policy choices, this book offers a historically informed account of the nature and evolution of the Japanese challenge to neoliberalism. Central to this book's analysis are the historically and socially constructed Japanese conceptions of Japan's economic identity—conceptions that have shaped Japan's interest in challenging the American-led neoliberal world order. With historical analysis beginning in the 1870s, this book explicates several of Japan's key foreign policy choices, including the Asian Monetary Fund decision in 1997, and draws out the future policy implications of these choices.

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The Japanese Challenge to the American Neoliberal World Order: Identity, Meaning, and Foreign Policy

The Japanese Challenge to the American Neoliberal World Order: Identity, Meaning, and Foreign Policy

by Yong Wook Lee
The Japanese Challenge to the American Neoliberal World Order: Identity, Meaning, and Foreign Policy

The Japanese Challenge to the American Neoliberal World Order: Identity, Meaning, and Foreign Policy

by Yong Wook Lee

Hardcover(New Edition)

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Overview

The first academic publication to explicitly link capitalism to Japan's particular foreign economic policy choices, this book offers a historically informed account of the nature and evolution of the Japanese challenge to neoliberalism. Central to this book's analysis are the historically and socially constructed Japanese conceptions of Japan's economic identity—conceptions that have shaped Japan's interest in challenging the American-led neoliberal world order. With historical analysis beginning in the 1870s, this book explicates several of Japan's key foreign policy choices, including the Asian Monetary Fund decision in 1997, and draws out the future policy implications of these choices.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780804758123
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Publication date: 02/29/2008
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 304
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Yong Wook Lee is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science and the School of International and Area Studies at the University of Oklahoma. He previously taught and researched as a Freeman Fellow in the Department of East Asian Studies and the Thomas J. Watson Institute for International Studies at Brown University. This is his first book.

Table of Contents

List of Tables     ix
Acknowledgments     xi
List of Abbreviations     xv
The Japanese Challenge to the American Neoliberal World Order     1
Alternative Explanations     23
Identity and Intention Framework     43
Who and What Is Normal in the History of the World Economy? Marxism, Economic Liberalism, and Developmentalism     63
Binarization of Economic Development Identities: Japan and the East Asian Miracle     108
Japan and the Asian Monetary Fund     136
Conclusion: After the Asian Monetary Fund     168
Notes     183
Select Bibliography     241
Index     271

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