The Enigma of Japanese Power: People and Politics in a Stateless NationA full-scale examination of the inner workings of Japan's political and industrial system. From the Trade Paperback edition. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 87
Page 26
... institutions in which it is supposed to reside . In such cases , however , one expects to be able to point to an alternative institution , or a person or set of people , in de facto charge . In Japan there is no such clearly demarcated ...
... institutions in which it is supposed to reside . In such cases , however , one expects to be able to point to an alternative institution , or a person or set of people , in de facto charge . In Japan there is no such clearly demarcated ...
Page 195
... institutions , per cent of which are privately owned . Four - fifths of the population of these institutions are locked up without their own consent , as against . only one - twentieth in Britain . Two - thirds of these are under lock ...
... institutions , per cent of which are privately owned . Four - fifths of the population of these institutions are locked up without their own consent , as against . only one - twentieth in Britain . Two - thirds of these are under lock ...
Page 385
... institutions ' that were to provide them with an immediate , unimpeded supply of funds . By the end of February the system was in place.23 The authorised institutions , mainly the large zaibatsu banks , were backed by groups of smaller ...
... institutions ' that were to provide them with an immediate , unimpeded supply of funds . By the end of February the system was in place.23 The authorised institutions , mainly the large zaibatsu banks , were backed by groups of smaller ...
Contents
The Elusive State | 25 |
An Inescapable Embrace | 50 |
Servants of the System | 82 |
Copyright | |
14 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
administrators Agency amakudari Asahi Asahi Shimbun associations banks become behaviour believe Buddhism burakumin bureaucrats cabinet cent century Chuo Koron companies conflict corporations court culture Dentsu Diet members economic élite emperor established federations firms force foreign groups habatsu hierarchy Ibid idea ideology Imperial important individual industrial institutions intellectual Japan Japanese Japanese political Japanese society jinmyaku journalists kanryo keiretsu Keizai labour LDP politicians leaders major Meiji oligarchy Meiji period military Ministry of Finance MITI moral Naimusho Nakasone Nakasone Yasuhiro newspapers Nihon nihonjinron Nikkyoso nokyo officials organisation party police post-war power-holders pre-war prime minister problem prosecutors reality relations relationship religion role rules salaryman schools Shimbun Shinto shogunate social socio-political Sohyo sokaiya Tanaka Tanaka Kakuei theory thought tion Tokko Tokugawa Tokyo trade tradition unions University Press wartime Western workers yakuza Yamaguchi-gumi zoku