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Beyond Bilateralism: U.S.-Japan Relations in the New Asia-Pacific

โœ Scribed by Ellis S. Krauss (editor); T. J. Pempel (editor)


Publisher
Stanford University Press
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Leaves
440
Category
Library

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โœฆ Synopsis


This is the first comprehensive analysis of the ways in which changes in the geopolitical context have altered the nature of the long-stable U.S.-Japan relationship: much of what had once been a bilateral and relatively exclusive relationship has been transformed in the past two decades. The authors present eleven case studies of important domainsโ€”ranging from increased flows of private capital to international security concerns to the growing importance of multilateral organizationsโ€”in which the relationship has been altered to a greater or lesser degree. Individual chapters present new ways of understanding international financial flows, U.S.-Japan trade relations, and U.S.-Japan manufacturing rivalry. Others present very cogent synthetic analyses of the changing context of U.S.-Japan relations. Together they provide an account of the bilateral, regional, and global institutionsโ€”political, military, and financialโ€”that dominate the geopolitics of U.S.-Asia relations. Although written to a consistently high intellectual level, the chapters in this timely volume are intended for a nonspecialist audience and will be useful to practitioners in business and government, as well as to students and teachers.


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