Between Grand Strategy and grandstanding: the international and domestic politics of foreign policy in 21st Century Japan

Location
B7 The Hemsley
Date(s)
Thursday 11th May 2017 (16:00-17:30)
Contact
For more information, please contact Katy Harrison
Description

Dr Giulio Pugliese from King's College London will present to IAPS on 11 May on 'Between Grand Strategy and grandstanding: the international and domestic politics of foreign policy in 21st Century Japan'.

A progressively changing post-Cold War order has brought along mounting insecurity and the need for states to respond to such changes through a reformulation of their main foreign policy line. In the Asia-Pacific, like elsewhere, the growing insistence by public officials on lofty strategic pronouncements is however also the by-product of a changed domestic political landscape, where charismatic leadership rests on the growing vagaries of a media-saturated public opinion environment. 

Traditional theories of foreign policy have presented a dichotomous separation of foreign policy formation: the inside-out perspective tend to stress the domestic determinants of Japan's foreign policy; an outside-in (or systemic) approach favours broader international structural forces and dynamics, such as the distribution of power in the international system. More complex theories have presented a dualist or dialectical framework, where both international and domestic variables impact on foreign policy. This paper uses the case of Abe Shinzo's Grand Strategy and foreign policy formulation to make the case for the primacy of a systemic approach that, at the very same time, caters to the above-mentioned strictures of domestic politics. The presentation will try to advance a novel conceptualization of foreign policy formation through concrete examples involving Japan's China strategy.

All are welcome. 

Asia Research Institute

Law and Social Sciences building
University of Nottingham
University Park
Nottingham, NG7 2RD

telephone: +44 (0)115 828 3087
email: asiaresearch@nottingham.ac.uk