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Blog des Japan-Zentrums
3. Juli 2024

Vortrag am 17. Juli: „Leadership and Japan’s China Policy: From Diplomacy to Grand Strategy“ (Prof. Dr. Giulio Pugliese, Oxford University)

Spring term 2024 lunch lectures at LMU Japan-Center

Das Japan-Zentrum lädt Sie im Rahmen der Vortragsreihe „Japan in International Relations“ im Sommersemester 2024 zu folgendem Vortrag herzlich ein:

Mittwoch, 17.07.2024, 12.30 Uhr – 14.00 Uhr (CEST)

The rise of China has fueled the hopes and kindled the insecurities of many of its neighbors. This project engages with the wider implications of such a rise by examining Japan’s China policy, because Japan’s approach to China is symptomatic of region-wide trends, if not global ones. Understanding it offers a unique window into the complex interplay and links among economic, political, and security dynamics of the Asia-Pacific region. The Japanese government has responded to the structural change of the regional system — centered on China’s re-emergence and US relative decline — with strategies in line with the preferences of sitting premiers and their foreign policy entourage.

Through the adoption and enrichment of Neo-Classical Realism theory, this study marks the evolution of political leadership, or lack thereof, in post-war Japan’s China policy to find that the US and domestic veto players have traditionally constrained Tokyo’s diplomatic outlook. 21st Century Japan’s harsher security predicament and domestic transformations have instead empowered the prime minister. Upon Abe Shinzō’s comeback to power in 2012, the prime ministerial executive neutralized domestic and international veto players and towered over the decision-making machine. It did so to overhaul Japan’s security regime and to churn out a Grand Strategy across the diplomatic, information, military and economic domains (DIME) that allowed for strategic balance with China. In the process, Japan would turn into a quiet leader in world politics. From Tokyo’s creation of the “Free and Open Indo-Pacific” strategic narrative to its embrace of economic security, the Japanese government has enlisted the United States and major liberal democracies in its China balancing agenda.

Dr. Giulio Pugliese is a Departmental Lecturer in Japanese Politics at the University of Oxford, a Part-time Professor on EU-Asia Studies at the European University Institute, and a Senior Fellow (Asia-Pacific) at the Istituto Affari Internazionali (IAI). An Italian citizen, he specializes in great power politics in the Asia-Pacific, focusing on Japan, China, and the United States. He has presented his work at numerous academic and Track 1.5 venues and has published articles and book chapters on academic, policy-oriented, and commercial themes in Europe, the US, and Japan. Dr. Pugliese earned his PhD from the University of Cambridge. He has held visiting scholar positions at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies (GRIPS) in Tokyo, Oxford University (St. Antony’s College), George Washington University in Washington DC, and the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) at Johns Hopkins University, where he also completed his MA in International Economics and East Asian Studies (with Honors and Distinction). He serves on the editorial and advisory boards of The International Spectator, Asia Major, Japan Review, and the book series Sicurezza e Politica Internazionale.

The event will take place in hybrid form

Location: LMU Japan-Center, Oettingenstraße 67, Room L155

Participation in the lecture on the Zoom meeting (no registration required):

https://lmu-munich.zoom-x.de/j/62730421828?pwd=aadKs6f4g8bpY9BL6K6XeG3Yy6Y0BQ.1

Meeting-ID: 627 3042 1828, Kenncode: 329722

Kommende Veranstaltungen

Juni 17
16:00 - 18:00

Vortrag von Masahiro Maeda (Associate Professor): „Restoring rich interactions between people and the environment in cities: based on trends in ‚machizukuri‘ and community revitalization in Japan“

Juni 26
18:15 - 19:45

Vortrag von Prof. Dr. David Chiavacci: „‚Foreigners Are Committing Very Heinous Crimes‘: Framing of Deviance and Order in Japan’s Immigration Policy“

Juli 17
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Vortrag von Prof. Ran Zwigenberg, Ph.D. „Hiroshima’s Transwar and the Architecture of Memory and Forgetting“

Juli 21
18:15 - 19:45

Vortrag von Prof. Celeste Arrington, PhD (George Washington University): „The Public’s Role in Changing Smoking Behavior: the Collective Enforcement of Appeals and New Rules in Japan and South Korea“

Juli 22
18:00

Vortrag von Prof. Nobuhiro Yanagihara: „Nationale und globale Opfernarrative im japanischen Diskurs über Hiroshima und Nagasaki“

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