Japan as an Active Agent for Global Norms: The Political Dynamism Behind the Acceptance and Promotion of "Human Security"

Date

2011

Authors

Kurusu, Kaoru
Kersten, Rikki

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor and Francis

Abstract

Japan has shaped a distinct human security policy based on evolving policy preferences of successive domestic political leaders and the gradual assimilation of external norms into its own foreign policy. Independent experts have played a particularly significant role in advising Japanese policy elites on how human security could be used by Japan to become an “intellectual leader” within the United Nations and other relevant institutions. This article explores those processes that occurred in the early phase of norm acceptance on the part of key Japanese policy actors and change agents in Japan from the late 1990s through 2003. It argues that human security has served as an effective approach for Japan to establish itself as a more independent foreign policy actor in contemporary international politics.

Description

Translated by Rikki Kersten

Keywords

Citation

Source

Asia-Pacific Review

Type

Translation

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2099-12-31