Established in 1974, the Journal of Japanese Studies features original, analytically rigorous articles from across the humanities and social sciences, including comparative and transnational scholarship in which Japan plays a major part

Hughes 43:1

ABSTRACT

CHRISTOPHER W. HUGHES
Japan’s Strategic Trajectory and Collective Self-Defense:
Essential Continuity or Radical Shift?

The government of Abe Shinzō and various commentators tout Japan’s moves during 2014–15 to breach the ban on collective self-defense as moderation and continuity in postwar security policy.  This article unpacks the supposed limitations on exercise of the right and marks this as a watershed moment in Japan’s development of a radical security trajectory as an alliance and international security partner.  The changing international security environment and growing acceptance of the indivisibility of U.S.-Japan security interests, coupled with hollow domestic legal, political, and bureaucratic constraints, heighten the likelihood Japan will use force to assist the United States

Volume 43, Number 1 (Winter 2017)
© 2017 Society for Japanese Studies