This paper examines why Americans so often feel compelled to describe the Japanese in such strong terms. Americans are threatened by Japan. It is not that Japan is stronger, or bigger. The problem is that the Japanese are perceived as different. The difference threatens American assumptions about the American way. This will be illustrated by first reviewing what the problem is between the United States and Japan - centering on the trade imbalance. Then some scholars\u27 analyses of this problem are reviewed, not to find the cause of the problem, but to identify common themes. The common theme is that Japan and the United States do things differently. The differences are reflected in the way government and business relate, in the different r...
Today Japan is no longer an insignificant kingdom in a remote corner of East Asia as it used to be k...
Trade frictions between the United States and Japan go back well over a century. While the form and ...
In this Article, Professors Abbott and Totman address the widespread Western belief that the Japanes...
This paper examines why Americans so often feel compelled to describe the Japanese in such strong te...
This paper examines why Americans so often feel compelled to describe the Japanese in such strong te...
The bilateral relationship with Japan now dominates American thinking on the benefits and costs of f...
The bilateral relationship with Japan now dominates American thinking on the benefits and costs of f...
The bilateral relationship with Japan now dominates American thinking on the benefits and costs of f...
"This article can explore only a bit of the American ideology which is reflected in the current fasc...
The purpose of this Article is to present a Japanese view of United States trade laws, concentrating...
The purpose of this Article is to present a Japanese view of United States trade laws, concentrating...
For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/Subtle changes in Japanese th...
Today Japan is no longer an insignificant kingdom in a remote corner of East Asia as it used to be k...
The goal of this research is to test whether or not theories of public opinion and foreign policy ca...
The goal of this research is to test whether or not theories of public opinion and foreign policy ca...
Today Japan is no longer an insignificant kingdom in a remote corner of East Asia as it used to be k...
Trade frictions between the United States and Japan go back well over a century. While the form and ...
In this Article, Professors Abbott and Totman address the widespread Western belief that the Japanes...
This paper examines why Americans so often feel compelled to describe the Japanese in such strong te...
This paper examines why Americans so often feel compelled to describe the Japanese in such strong te...
The bilateral relationship with Japan now dominates American thinking on the benefits and costs of f...
The bilateral relationship with Japan now dominates American thinking on the benefits and costs of f...
The bilateral relationship with Japan now dominates American thinking on the benefits and costs of f...
"This article can explore only a bit of the American ideology which is reflected in the current fasc...
The purpose of this Article is to present a Japanese view of United States trade laws, concentrating...
The purpose of this Article is to present a Japanese view of United States trade laws, concentrating...
For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/Subtle changes in Japanese th...
Today Japan is no longer an insignificant kingdom in a remote corner of East Asia as it used to be k...
The goal of this research is to test whether or not theories of public opinion and foreign policy ca...
The goal of this research is to test whether or not theories of public opinion and foreign policy ca...
Today Japan is no longer an insignificant kingdom in a remote corner of East Asia as it used to be k...
Trade frictions between the United States and Japan go back well over a century. While the form and ...
In this Article, Professors Abbott and Totman address the widespread Western belief that the Japanes...