The End of the Postwar? The Abe Government, Okinawa, and Yonaguni Island

Date

Authors

McCormack, Gavan

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus On-line journal ISSN 1557-4660 http://japanfocus.org/site/view/1103#

Abstract

Few if any commentators link these three consecutive events, different as they are in character and scale. Yet this paper suggests that all � from one small Okinawan island to the Japanese nation state and the US-Japan relationship � may profitably be considered within a single frame. It rests on the premise that it is profoundly mistaken to think in terms of the �Okinawa Problem� (and �Yonaguni problem�) as distinct, self-contained and therefore relatively minor in significance. The three superficially distinct events of November 2014 all involve the democratic process, and may be seen as manifestations of a complex struggle whose nature is best perceived at the periphery, in Okinawa and Yonaguni, but which is deeply rooted in the nature of the Japanese state in Tokyo. Through their prism, much is to be learned of Japan itself � state, democracy, law, constitution, and diplomacy. This paper addresses first the �Japan problem,� then the �Okinawa problem,� and finally the �Yonaguni problem.�

Description

Keywords

Citation

Source

The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

DOI

Restricted until