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Abstract
GLENN
D. HOOK AND TAKEDA HIROKO
“Self-responsibility” and the Nature of the Postwar Japanese State:
Risk through the Looking Glass
This article examines the relationship between the postwar Japanese
state and the citizen by focusing on how the state has deployed the
discourse of “self-responsibility” in recalibrating the citizen’s
exposure to external and internal risks. In the context of a more
pro-active military role and the pressures of globalization, the citizen
is increasingly being required to mediate a range of risks. The article
develops this argument by analyzing the Japanese state’s response to the
exposure of citizens to external risks in the war in Iraq and internal
risks in the employment market following the bursting of the “bubble
economy.”
Volume 33, Number 1 (Winter 2007) © 2007 Society for Japanese Studies
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