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The Japanese Challenge to the American Neoliberal World Order
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29 February 2008

The first academic publication to explicitly link capitalism to Japan's particular foreign economic policy choices, this book offers a historically informed account of the nature and evolution of the Japanese challenge to neoliberalism. Central to this book's analysis are the historically and socially constructed Japanese conceptions of Japan's economic identity—conceptions that have shaped Japan's interest in challenging the American-led neoliberal world order. With historical analysis beginning in the 1870s, this book explicates several of Japan's key foreign policy choices, including the Asian Monetary Fund decision in 1997, and draws out the future policy implications of these choices.
— Rodney Bruce Hall
"[This book] presents a historically informed account of the nature and evolution of the Japanese challenge to neoliberalism."
— Journal of Economic Literature
"This contribution...provides not only an empirically rich case study of Japan's foreign economic policy but also gives a necessary push forward to the constructivist theoretical debate . . . This is an ambitious and largely successful book."
— Asian Affairs
"Distinguished by a sophisticated theoretical framework, this book offers new insights into Japanese foreign policy and economic diplomacy. It is a significant advance on standard constructivist approaches and a strong contribution to the field."
— Chris Hughes
"This is an outstanding first book."
— Charles John Rowe
"This book makes both theoretical/methodological and empirical contributions, and thus should be read by both constructivists and Japanese experts . . . [It] is significant because it adds a new dimension to the scholarly debate over the role of identity in Japanese diplomacy."
— Hiro Katsumata
"The Japanese Challenge to the American Neoliberal World Order is an ambitious piece of work. In it, Young Lee seeks not only to describe and explain what he sees as the 'Japanese challenge" to the U.S-dominated international economic order but also to issue his own challenge to the field of international relations by developing and applying a sophisticated theoretical framework."
— William W. Grimes
"Lee's book is a timely and important contribution."
— Brian J. McVeigh