Carroll | The Making of Modern Japan | Buch | 978-90-04-46651-7 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, Band 191/07, 266 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 238 mm, Gewicht: 518 g

Reihe: Studies in Critical Social Sciences / New Scholarship in Political Economy

Carroll

The Making of Modern Japan

Power, Crisis, and the Promise of Transformation
Erscheinungsjahr 2021
ISBN: 978-90-04-46651-7
Verlag: Brill

Power, Crisis, and the Promise of Transformation

Buch, Englisch, Band 191/07, 266 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 238 mm, Gewicht: 518 g

Reihe: Studies in Critical Social Sciences / New Scholarship in Political Economy

ISBN: 978-90-04-46651-7
Verlag: Brill


In The Making of Modern Japan, Myles Carroll offers a sweeping account of post-war Japanese political economy, exploring the transition from the post-war boom to the crisis of today and the connections between these seemingly discrete periods.

Carroll explores the multifarious international and domestic political, economic, social and cultural conditions that fortified Japan’s post-war hegemonic order and enabled decades of prosperity and stability. Yet since the 1990s, a host of political, economic, social and cultural changes has left this same hegemonic order out of step with the realities of the contemporary world, a contradiction that has led to three decades of crisis in Japanese society. Can Japan make the bold changes required to reverse its decline?

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

LIST OF TABLE AND FIGURES

1. Introduction

Analytical approach

Outline of the argument

Outline of chapters

2. Lineages of Japanese political economy

Creative conservatism and the developmental state: Japan’s post-war boom

Institutional approaches to the study of Japanese politics

The long decline: Theorizing crisis in Heisei Japan

The welfare state and social reproduction in post-war Japan

Conclusion

3. Towards a Gramscian understanding of Japanese political economy

Historical materialist methodology

Hegemony

Hegemony and hegemonic order

Social reproduction

Conditions for hegemonic order

Historic bloc

Explaining change: Conjunctural and organic

Organic crisis

World order, forms of state, social forces

Relations of force

Caesarism, passive revolution and trasformismo

Political ecology

Towards a Gramscian feminist approach to the Japanese post-war order

Conclusion

4. The post-war hegemonic order

The post-war hegemonic order

Conditions of post-war hegemonic order

Geopolitics: The Yoshida Doctrine and the US-Japan Security Treaty (Anpo)

Global political economy: The Bretton Woods System

The electoral and party system: The rise of LDP dominance

The state form: The rise of bureaucracy-driven governance

Production and capital: Japanese developmentalism and the keiretsu

Production and labour: Enterprise unionism and lifetime employment

Production and the petit bourgeoisie: Clientelism and the old middle class

Gender and the family: Extended families and the gender division of labour

Demography and welfare: Young society, small welfare state

Nation and ideology: The pacifist nationalism of the post-war era

Environment and national resources: Cheap oil

The post-war Japanese historic bloc

Conclusion

5. Contradictions and transitions of the Showa era

Structural changes to world order

The Nixon shocks

The oil shocks

American trade frictions and the Plaza Accord

Structural demographic changes

The beginning of an aging society

The decline of extended families

The rise of women in the workforce

Political changes

Institutional changes

The heyday of the koenkai

The rise of factions and the PARC

Institutional changes and continuities in Japanese business relations

Lifetime employment and the dual system

Clientelism and the construction state

Implications of these changes for hegemonic order

Economic implications

Political implications

Social implications

Conclusion

6. The organic crisis of the Heisei era

Historical background to the crisis

1989-1993: Two electoral shocks

1993-1996: Coalition governments, political reform

1996-2001: LDP’s return to power, administrative and financial reform

2001-2006: Rise of Koizumi, postal privatization

2006-2009: LDP impasse

2009-2012: Rise and fall of the DPJ

Conditions of the crisis

Geopolitics: Security Alliance in a post-Cold War world

Global political economy: Japan in a global neoliberal era

The electoral and party system: Crisis, reform, and the end of LDP rule

The state form: Institutional decay and administrative reform

Production and capital: The Americanization of Japanese capitalism?

Production and labour: Deregulation and the rise of the working poor

Production and the petit bourgeoisie: End of the pork-barrel system?

Gender and the family: The end of the male breadwinner model and shoshika

Demography and welfare: The rise of the ‘pension state’

Nation and ideology: ‘Normal country’ or tan’itsu minzoku?

Political ecology: Climate change, the nuclear turn and 3/11

Implications of the crisis

Summary of the economic accumulation crisis

Summary of the political legitimation crisis

Summary of the social reproduction crisis

Conclusion

7. Caesarism, passive revolution and the return of the LDP under Abe

Abe’s political comeback

Breaking the deadlock: The Caesarism of “Abenomics”

Breaking the deadlock through expansionary Keynesian policy

Breaking the deadlock through neoliberal economic reform

Breaking the deadlock through welfare state expansion

Implications of Caesarism under Abe

The real Abe? Passive revolution, militarism and soft authoritarianism

Asserting control over the LDP

Passive revolution in administrative reform

Passive revolution in domestic security policy

Abe’s passive revolution

Consequences of Abe’s reign for the hegemonic order

Capital accumulation

Political legitimation

Social reproduction

Conclusion

8. Whither post-Abe Japan? Four scenarios for the future

The neo-conservative option

Overview

Relations of force behind neo-conservatism

The neo-conservative solution to organic crisis

Challenges and contradictions of neo-conservatism

The neo-liberal path

Overview

Relations of force behind neo-liberalism

The neo-liberal solution to organic crisis

Challenges and contradictions of neo-liberalism

Back to the future? Neo-communitarianism

Overview

Relations of force behind neo-liberalism

The neo-liberal solution to organic crisis

Challenges and contradictions of neo-liberalism

Counter-hegemony and a democratic socialist future

Overview

Relations of force behind democratic socialism

The democratic socialist solution to organic crisis

Challenges and contradictions of democratic socialism

Conclusion

9. Conclusion

Contradictions for hegemonic order: Political legitimation

Contradictions for hegemonic order: Capital accumulation

Contradictions for hegemonic order: Social reproduction

Overarching theoretical implications of the argument

BIBLIOGRAPHY

INDEX


Myles Carroll is Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Core Research at Ochanomizu University, with a Ph.D. in Political Science (2020) from York University. He has published many articles on social reproduction and political economy in post-war Japan



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