Transnationalism and the Evolution of Post-National Citizenship in Japan
Abstract
This article argues that transnational activism has been an important
factor in both the evolution of Japanese civil society and the identity formation of
civil society actors over the past half century. It reconsiders the Japanese experience
in light of recent theorisations on deterritorialised and transnational citizenships
which challenge the monopoly of the national state in defining civic identity
by proposing novel alternatives based on cross-border affiliations among nonstate
actors. Different from existing endogenous and institutional explanations of
the emergence and development of civil society in Japan, the article highlights
the transformative impact of activists’ transnational activities. Until around the
late 1960s Japanese activists tended to imagine their situation within a
framework of victimised citizens versus a pernicious alliance of the state and
industry. The state and corporations were the aggressors and citizens were
always the victims. But transnational engagements in the anti-Vietnam War and
environmental movements disrupted such assumptions, forcing activists to rethink
their victimisation status and consider their complicity in the actions of the
Japanese state and industry abroad. The result was an enriched and more
broad-minded conceptualisation of post-national citizenship in which victim consciousness
was tempered by a concern for those beyond the borders of Japan.
This transnational sensitivity in turn contributed to the maturation of Japanese
civil society.
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Asian Studies Review