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The Challenge of Change

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This volume is a festschrift for Chalmers Johnson by those inspired by his insight into East Asian affairs, his attention to context, and his academic rigor and integrity. It is a collection of ess...
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  • 01 January 2003
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This volume is a festschrift for Chalmers Johnson by those inspired by his insight into East Asian affairs, his attention to context, and his academic rigor and integrity. It is a collection of essays organized around a fundamental premise in contemporary political affairs: the uncompleted East Asian project of modernity. 
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Price: $25.00
Pages: 406
Publisher: Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California, Berkeley
Imprint: Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California, Berkeley
Series: Research Papers and Policy Studies
Publication Date: 01 January 2003
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781557290793
Format: Paperback
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David Arase is currently resident professor of international politics at the Johns Hopkins University-Nanjing University Center for Chinese and American Studies, Nanjing University. Before that, he was professor of politics at Pomona College, Claremont, CA. He is the author of Buying Power: The Political Economy of Japan's Foreign Aid (1995), co-editor of The US-Japan Alliance: Balancing Soft and Hard Power in East Asia (2009), and editor of The Challenge of Change: East Asian in the New Millennium (IEAS, 2003). Education: B.A. in Liberal Arts, Cornell University; M.A. in International Relations, Johns Hopkins School of International Studies; Ph.D. in Political Science, University of California, Berkeley.

Preface 
Contributors

Introduction 

SECTION ONE: Postsocialist China 

1. Present Nationalism and Communist Power 
    Richard Baum

2. The Revival of Chinese Millenarian Movements: The Case of Falun Gong 
    Maria Hsia Chang

SECTION TWO: The Demise of the East Asian Developmental State 

3. The Heuristic Value of the Developmental State Model as Applied to Southeast Asia 

    Danny Unger

4. The "Free Economy" and the Developmental State: The Changing Ideology and Politics of Japanese Organized Business, 1965–1980 
    Lonny E. Carlile

5. Japan's Developmental State in the 1990s and Beyond: Has Industrial Policy Outlived Its Usefulness? 
    Marie Anchordoguy

6. Japan: From Miracle to Mediocrity 
    Teruo Gotoda

7. How Japan Can Move toward a Third Major Reform 
    Peggy K. Takahashi and Toshiya Kitayama

SECTION THREE: The Normalization of East Asian Relations? 

8. Hong Kong and the Challenge of Chinese Reunification for U.S.-China Policy 

    Suzanne Pepper

9. Civil Society in South Korean Democratization 
    Mikyung Chin

10. South Korea's Foreign Policy: A Dolphin among Whales? 
    Kongdan (Katy) Oh

11. Sino-Japanese Relations in Transition 
    David Arase

SECTION FOUR: History Restarted, or Deferred? The U.S. Role in Asia 

12. The Continuation of the Cold War and the Advent of American Militarism 

    Chalmers Johnson

13. The Okinawa Factor in U.S.-Japan Relations 
    Koji Taira

14. In Search of Emperor Hirohito: Decision Making and Ideology in Imperial Japan 
    Herbert P. Bix

15. Occurrence at No Gun Ri Bridge: An Inquiry into the History and Memory of a Civil War 
    Bruce Cumings

SECTION FIVE: A Final Tribute to Chalmers Johnson 

16. Functional Stories: Uses for Communist, Developmental, Military, and Individualist Ideologies 

    Lynn T. White III

Chronological Bibliography of Chalmers Johnson's Published Works