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Partners for Democracy Ray A. Moore (Professor of History and Asian Studies, Professor of History and Asian Studies, Amherst College)

Partners for Democracy By Ray A. Moore (Professor of History and Asian Studies, Professor of History and Asian Studies, Amherst College)

Summary

Takes a controversial stand that the Constitution of Japan was not 'imposed', as conventional opinion has it, as a document of defeat by the Allied occupying forces under General MacArthur. This work tells the story of American initiative and Japanese response, and also offers an account of postwar democratization and reform.

Partners for Democracy Summary

Partners for Democracy: Crafting the New Japanese State under MacArthur by Ray A. Moore (Professor of History and Asian Studies, Professor of History and Asian Studies, Amherst College)

In 1945, Japan surrendered unconditionally to the United States and its allies, thereby planting the seed from which would spring one of the world's most successful and stable democracies. In an age when democracy is often pursued, yet rarely accomplished, in which failed democracies are found throughout Africa, Latin America, and Asia, Japan's transformation from an utterly defeated military power into a thriving constitutional democracy commands attention. It has long been assumed that postwar Japan was largely the making of America, that democracy was simply imposed on a defeated land. Yet a political and legal system cannot long survive, much less thrive, if resisted by the very citizens it exists to serve. The external imposition of a constitution does not automatically translate into a constitutional democracy of the kind Japan has enjoyed for the past half-century. Apparently Japan, though under military occupation, was ready for what the West had to offer. Ray A. Moore and Donald L. Robinson convincingly show that the country's affirmation of democracy was neither cynical nor merely tactical. What made Japan different was that Japan and the United States-represented in Tokyo by the headstrong and deeply conservative General Douglas MacArthur-worked out a genuine partnership, navigating skillfully among die-hard defenders of the emperor, Japanese communists, and America's opinionated erstwhile allies. No dry recounting of policy decisions and diplomatic gestures, Partners for Democracy resounds with the strong personalities and dramatic clashes that paved the way to a hard-won success. Here is the story of how a devastated land came to construct-at times aggressively and rapidly, at times deliberately and only after much debate-a democracy that stands today as the envy of many other nations.

Partners for Democracy Reviews

"[an] excellent book. Show[s] the sublety with which the Japanese got around awkward American proposals."-Foreign Affairs
"The most detailed and reliable book that has been written in English on the formulating process of Japan's present Constitution by two authors who are specialists in modern Japanese history and American Constitutional development. This book reveals in great detail, for the first time the drafting process of the GHQ/SCAP version based on interviews with, and the private papers of Colonel Kades, the main drafter of the Constitution. This book, from an original point of view, throws light on the present debate on Japanese Constitutional revision which is the most serious political issues of the postwar period."-Shoichi Koseki Professor of Constitutional Law Dokkyo University, Japan
"A fascinating inside story of the process of drafting a constitution that achieved widespread accepetance in Japan as the foundation of democracy . . . Highly Recommended." -Choice

About Ray A. Moore (Professor of History and Asian Studies, Professor of History and Asian Studies, Amherst College)

Ray A. Moore is Professor of History and Asian Studies at Amherst College. Donald L. Robinson is Charles N. Clark Professor of Government and American Studies at Smith College. Together they edited The Constitution of Japan: A Documentary History of its Framing and Adoption,1945-1947.

Table of Contents

FALL 1945; IMPOSING THE AMERICAN MODEL; TRANSFORMING A DRAFT INTO A CONSTITUTION; SEQUEL

Additional information

GOR009539705
9780195171761
0195171764
Partners for Democracy: Crafting the New Japanese State under MacArthur by Ray A. Moore (Professor of History and Asian Studies, Professor of History and Asian Studies, Amherst College)
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Oxford University Press Inc
2004-03-25
424
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Partners for Democracy