Identity Change and Foreign Policy

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Abduction Issue
Abe Administration
Asahi Shimbun
boundary making processes
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Chinese Government
constructivism
constructivist international relations
Diplomatic Bluebook
emotional politics
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foreign policy
identity change
Identity Entrepreneurs
international relations
Japan
Japan National Security Council
Japan's China Policy
Japan's Identity
Japan's International Relations
Japan's Security Identity
Japanese Foreign Policy
Japanese foreign policy identity change
Japanese Identity
Japanese Left
Japanese Policy Makers
Japan’s China Policy
Japan’s Identity
Japan’s International Relations
Japan’s Security Identity
LDP
national identity formation
nationalism
norm diffusion
Northern Territories Dispute
NSS
pacifism
political theory
regional identity
security
Security Identity
security policy transformation
Shimane Prefectural Assembly
Shimane Prefecture
Sino-Japanese relations
Takeshima Day
Takeshima Issue
Yokota Megumi

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138931602
  • Weight: 408g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Aug 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Identity has become an explicit focus of International Relations theory in the past two to three decades, with one case attracting and puzzling many early identity scholars: Japan. These constructivist scholars typically ascribed Japan a ‘pacifist’ or ‘antimilitarist’ identity – an identity which they believed was constructed through the adherence to ‘peaceful norms’ and ‘antimilitarist culture’. Due to the alleged resilience of such adherences, little change in Japan’s identity and its international relations was predicted.

However, in recent years, Japan’s foreign and security policies have begun to change, in spite of these seemingly stable norms and culture. This book seeks to address these changes through a pioneering engagement with recent developments in identity theory. In particular, most chapters theorize identity as a product of processes of differentiation. Through detailed case analysis, they argue that Japan’s identity is produced and reproduced, but also transformed, through the drawing of boundaries between ‘self’ and ‘other’. In particular, they stress the role of emotions and identity entrepreneurs as catalysts for identity change. With the current balance between resilience and change, contributors emphasize that more drastic foreign and security policy transformations might loom just beyond the horizon. This book was originally published as a special issue of The Pacific Review.

Linus Hagström is East Asia Programme Director at the Swedish Institute of International Affairs and Professor of Political Science at the Swedish Defence University, Stockholm, Sweden. The author of Japan’s China Policy: A Relational Power Analysis (Routledge, 2005), he recently published articles in the European Journal of International Relations and The Pacific Review.