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. |
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Page 84
... hierarchy , with Todai ( the Univer- sity of Tokyo ) - more specifically , its law department- at its apex . Todai's graduates have the best chance of gaining admission to the Ministry of Finance , the best jumping board for a try at ...
... hierarchy , with Todai ( the Univer- sity of Tokyo ) - more specifically , its law department- at its apex . Todai's graduates have the best chance of gaining admission to the Ministry of Finance , the best jumping board for a try at ...
Page 329
... hierarchy Ritual and hierarchy substitute for an internalised set of abstractions in fostering predictability and reducing the likelihood of open conflict . If everybody has a proper place in the scheme of things and sticks to it , much ...
... hierarchy Ritual and hierarchy substitute for an internalised set of abstractions in fostering predictability and reducing the likelihood of open conflict . If everybody has a proper place in the scheme of things and sticks to it , much ...
Page 330
... Hierarchy begins at home , although except in highly placed families the emphasis on ' younger ' and ' older ' is much less than it was before the war . But in schools children's ranks can be recognised by the uniforms or tags they wear ...
... Hierarchy begins at home , although except in highly placed families the emphasis on ' younger ' and ' older ' is much less than it was before the war . But in schools children's ranks can be recognised by the uniforms or tags they wear ...
Contents
The Japan Problem | 1 |
The neglected role of power | 17 |
The Elusive State | 25 |
Copyright | |
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administrators Agency amakudari Asahi Asahi Shimbun associations banks become behaviour believe Buddhism burakumin cabinet cent century Chapter Chinese Chuo Koron companies conflict corporations court culture Dentsu DIEGO Diet members economic élite emperor established federations firms force foreign formal groups habatsu hierarchy Ibid ideas ideology imperial important individual industrial institutions intellectual Japan Japanese Japanese political Japanese society jinmyaku kanryo Keidanren keiretsu Keizai labour LDP politicians major Meiji oligarchy Meiji period military Ministry of Finance MITI moral Naimusho Nakasone Nakasone Yasuhiro newspapers Nihon nihonjinron Nikkyoso nokyo officials organisation parties police post-war power-holders pre-war prime minister problem prosecutors reality relations relationship religion role rules salaryman scandal schools Shimbun Shinto shogunate social socio-political Sohyo sokaiya Tanaka Tanaka Kakuei theory tion Tokugawa Tokyo trade tradition unions University Press wartime Western yakuza Yamaguchi-gumi zoku