Japanese pathways to peacebuilding: from historical legacies to contemporary practices

158
Japanese pathways to peacebuilding: from historical legacies to contemporary practices
// Pathways to Peace and Security. 2020. No 1(58). P. 9-25

DOI: 10.20542/2307-1494-2020-1-9-25

Kazushige Kobayashi (Japan) is Postdoctoral Researcher at the Centre on Conflict, Development and Peacebuilding, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva (Switzerland)


Abstract

Existing literature on peacebuilding arguably pays too much attention to host societies and not enough to the peacebuilders themselves. This article shows that, in many ways, Japan‟s contemporary approach to peacebuilding is the outward projection of its own postwar reconstruction experience. That experience constitutes a case of (re)building a postwar society by a transitional authority maintained by foreign intervention. In this process, the United States earned lasting and wide-ranging respect from many postwar Japanese citizens. It acted as a competent autocrat who effectively controlled information, imposed a strictly hierarchical order, tamed civil society, contained the seeds of postwar social disturbances, and paved the way for Japan‟s miraculous postwar growth. Within this framework, Japan successfully reconstructed the war-torn nation without local ownership, widespread democratic participation, or civil society involvement. This postwar experience profoundly informs Japan‟s peacebuilding policy that emphasizes the norms of state sovereignty, effective hierarchical governance, and socio-economic development as key legitimizing principles. A historically-grounded approach to the foundation of Japanese peacebuilding policy highlights the need to reconsider the taken-for-granted assumptions about the homogeneity of the liberal peace. More generally, the much-needed debate about the role, vision, and agency of non-Western peacebuilders offers a promising avenue for future research.


Keywords

Japan, postwar reconstruction, liberal peace, peacebuilding, democratization, development cooperation, foreign occupation, non-Western powers, historical legacies


Registered in System SCIENCE INDEX

For citation:
Kobayashi K. Japanese pathways to peacebuilding: from historical legacies to contemporary practices. Pathways to Peace and Security, 2020, No 1(58), pp. 9-25. https://doi.org/10.20542/2307-1494-2020-1-9-25



Comments (0)

No comments

Add comment







Indexes and Databases

 

 

  

Current Issue
2021, No. 2(61)
  • - DATASETS AND MATHEMATICAL METHODS IN PEACE AND CONFLICT STUDIES
  • - ISRAELI-PALESTINIAN CONFLICT
  • - IRAN NUCLEAR DEAL
  • - ARMS CONTROL
  • - VACCINE POLICY
  • - RELIGIOUS EXTREMISM AND CONFLICTS
  • - BOOK REVIEWS
  • - Africa in focus
View This Issue (2021, No. 2(61))
Submit an Article
Years
2021 | 2020 | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 | 2016 | 2015 | 2014 | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 |