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Implications of Abenomics on Gender Equality in Japan and Its Conformity with CEDAW
TUCKER (DO NOT DELETE) 4/24/2017 6:16 PM RICKY TUCKER* Implications of Abenomics on Gender Equality in Japan and Its Conformity with CEDAW Introduction ....................................................................................... 544 A. Abenomics ...................................................................... 545 B. Female Workforce Participation ..................................... 546 C. History of Japanese Gender Equality Laws .................... 549 I. The Purpose of the Third Arrow Casts Doubt on its Ability to Accomplish Its Goals ............................................. 551 A. Addressing Financial Insecurity ..................................... 551 B. Addressing Gender Equality ........................................... 552 II. The Third Arrow Does Not Conform to the Strict Mandates Imposed Upon Member Countries to CEDAW ..... 554 A. Leadership ......................................................................... 555 1. CEDAW Article II .................................................... 556 2. CEDAW Article XI ................................................... 558 B. Childcare Waiting Lists .................................................. 559 C. Support for a Return to Work ......................................... 561 D. Assistance for Reentering the Workforce ....................... 563 III. Abenomics’ Conformity with CEDAW and the Overall Goal of Boosting the Economy Are Not Mutually Exclusive ................................................................................ 564 IV. A Counterpoint: -
Cambridge University Press 978-1-108-72474-6 — an Introduction to Japanese Society Yoshio Sugimoto Index More Information
Cambridge University Press 978-1-108-72474-6 — An Introduction to Japanese Society Yoshio Sugimoto Index More Information Index Abe, Shinz¯o,236, 303, 312 alternative culture, 285 abilities, of employees, 116–17 characteristics, 287 abortion, 186–8 communes and the natural economy, 299–300 academic world system, 52–3 Cool Japan as, 311 achieved status, 73–4, 81 countercultural events and performances, 298–9 Act on Land and Building Leases (1991), 122 historical examples, 297 Act on Promotion of Women’s Participation local resident–volunteer support movements as, and Advancement in the Workplace (2016), 325 182 mini-communication media and online papers, activism, see resident movements; social 297–8 movements nature of, 297 administrative guidance (gyosei¯ shido¯), 232, 235–6, social formations producing, 286 338 amae (active dependency), 29, 43, 51 administrative systems amakudari (descending from heaven), 232–5, 251 during Heian period, 9 Amaterasu Ōmikami, 6–7, 267 during Kamakura period, 10 ambiguity, manipulation of, 337–8 during Yamato period, 7 Ame no Uzume, 6 adoption, 196 Ampo struggle, 318, 321 AEON, 110 ancestor worship, 266, 281, 295 aging society, 47–8 animators, working conditions, 307 declining birth rate and, 86–7 anime, 27–8, 46–7, 302, 311 life expectancy in, 84–6 animism, 203, 266–7 rise in volunteering and, 323 annual leave, 120 woman’s role as caregiver in, 181 anomie (normlessness), 48 Agon-shu¯ (Agon sect), 273 anti-development protests, 324–5 agricultural cooperatives, 326 anti-nuclear demonstrations, 92, 317–21 -
Pokémon, Cultural Practice and Object Networks Jason Bainbridge
iafor The IAFOR Journal of Asian Studies Volume I – Issue I – Winter 2014 IAFOR Publications Executive Editor: Joseph Haldane The International Academic Forum The IAFOR Journal of Asian Studies Editor Seiko Yasumoto, University of Sydney, Australia Associate Editor Jason Bainbridge, Swinburne University, Australia Advisory Editors Michael Curtin, University of California, Santa Barbara, United States Terry Flew, Queensland University of Technology, Australia Michael Keane, Queensland University of Technology, Australia Editorial Board Robert Hyland, BISC, Queens University Canada, United Kingdom Dong Hoo Lee, Incheon University, Korea Ian D. McArthur, The University of Sydney, Australia Paul Mountfort, Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand Jin Nakamura, Tokyo University, Japan Tetsuya Suzuki, Meiji University, Japan Yoko Sasagawa, Kobe Shinwa Womens University, Japan Fang Chih Irene Yang, National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan Published by the International Academic Forum (IAFOR), Japan Executive Editor, IAFOR Publications: Joseph Haldane Editorial Assistance: Lindsay Lafreniere IAFOR Publications, Sakae 1-16-26-201, Naka-ward, Aichi, Japan 460-0008 The IAFOR Journal of Asian Studies Volume I – Issue I – Winter 2014 IAFOR Publications © Copyright 2014 ISSN: 2187-6037 Online: http://iafor.org/iafor/publications/iafor-journals/iafor-journal-of-asian-studies/ Cover image by: Norio NAKAYAMA/Flickr https://www.flickr.com/photos/norio-nakayama/11153303693 The IAFOR Journal of Asian Studies Volume I – Issue I – Winter 2014 Edited by -
Jingu Kogo Ema in Southwestern Japan Reflections and Anticipations of the Seikanron Debate in the Late Tokugawa and Early Meiji Period
R ic h a r d W A n d e r s o n Oregon State University Corvallis, Oregon Jingu Kogo Ema in Southwestern Japan Reflections and Anticipations of the Seikanron Debate in the Late Tokugawa and Early Meiji Period Abstract Preliminary investigation suggests that ema (votive paintings) featuring a fourth-century legendary empress (Jingu Kogo) of Japan as their subject were used by local elites in southwestern Japan in the nineteenth century to justify the need for overseas expansion — in particular the need for an invasion of Korea. Jingu Kogo ema exhibit two basic motifs, both of which allude to her alleged invasion of Korea. From ema surveys in Yamaguchi Prefecture and Fukuoka Prefecture I have discovered that a geographical and temporal correlation emerges from the distribution of these ema. I contend that the prevalence of different motifs in these areas, and the dating suggest that local elites were using Jingu Kogo ema as an iconographic “text” to discuss and comment on the advisa bility/feasibility of invading Korea {seikanron). This spillover of political themes into religious artifacts is an interesting and potentially very fruitful area of study that has received inadequate attention. Keywords: ema— seikanron— Jingu Kogo— folk art— Japanese-Korean relations— min- shushi Asian Folklore Studies, Volume 61,2002: 247-270 APANESE-KOREAN RELATIONS have evolved over a long and often con tentious history.1 The record of nearly two thousand years of contact between Japan and Korea includes the introduction of Buddhism into JJapan through Korea; the exchange of tribute and trade; repeated raids by pirates; two invasions and occupations of portions of the Korean peninsula (from the fourth to sixth centuries and in the latter part of the sixteenth cen tury);2 a major debate by Japanese government officials in the 1870s over whether to invade Korea a third time; and, finally, the annexation of Korea by Japan in 1905 until the restoration of its independence in 1945. -
A Historical Analysis of the Traditional Japanese Decision-Making Process in Contrast with the U.S
Portland State University PDXScholar Dissertations and Theses Dissertations and Theses 1976 A historical analysis of the traditional Japanese decision-making process in contrast with the U.S. system and implications for intercultural deliberations Shoji Mitarai Portland State University Follow this and additional works at: https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds Part of the Speech and Rhetorical Studies Commons Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Mitarai, Shoji, "A historical analysis of the traditional Japanese decision-making process in contrast with the U.S. system and implications for intercultural deliberations" (1976). Dissertations and Theses. Paper 2361. https://doi.org/10.15760/etd.2358 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of PDXScholar. Please contact us if we can make this document more accessible: [email protected]. AN ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS OF Shoji Mitarai for the Master of Arts in Speech Conununication presented February 16, 1976. Title: A Historical Analysis of the Traditional Japanese Decision-Maki~g Process in Contrast with the U.S. System and Implications for Intercultural Delibera tions. APPROVED BY MEMBERS OF THE THESIS COMMITTEES: The purpose of this research.is to (1) describe and analyze the different methods used by Japanese ·and by U.S. persons to reach ~greement in small. group deliberations, (2) discover the depth of ·conunitment and personal involvement with th~se methods by tracing their historical b~ginni~gs, and (3) draw implications 2 from (1) and (2) as to probability of success of current problem solving deliberations involving members of both ·groups. -
Japan Analysis 34 EN
Japan Analysis La lettre du Japon 34 July 2014 Perspectives on Japan’s openness to the world in 2014 CLOSE UP ON THE NEWS 1. The Abe government and the gender equality issue: “towards a society where women shine” – AMÉLIE CORBEL 3 2. Japan’s Revitalized Engagement with Africa: Key Issues and Challenges – YUKO KAWATO 11 POINT OF NEWS 3. Nishikawa Shūichi, “What anglicization is bringing to business: points of views of employees of Uniqlo and Rakuten”, Chūō Kōron, November 2013. (Translated from the Japanese source by Sophie Buhnik) 20 4. Yoshikuni Shin’ichi’s, “Reflections on the ‘third arrow’ of Abenomics: towards a diverse society more open to female employment”, Kin.yūzaiseibijinesu, March 2014. (Translated from the Japanese source by Arnaud Grivaud) 26 ÉDITORIAL The number and nature of published in But these comparative indexes also suggest large-circulation magazines have grown that Japan’s “decline” is far from being a significantly in importance in the last fifteen homogeneous process: depending on the years. They now cover a multiplicity of topics topic, the country’s position in the various and are structured around criteria ranging international rankings is either falling, rising1, from gross domestic product and the quality or staying the same (in absolute or relative of education dispensed by the leading higher terms). For instance, the number of Japanese education establishments (the Shanghai students spending a year abroad has been Ranking) to more abstract notions such as falling, in absolute terms, for the last ten years. competitiveness and urban standards of But Japan’s slippage in the annual ranking living (e.g. -
Cool Japan Fund Launched to Aid Global Promotion of Japanese Culture by Japan SPOTLIGHT Editorial Section
Column Cool Japan Fund Launched to Aid Global Promotion of Japanese Culture By Japan SPOTLIGHT Editorial Section Japanese culture, from animation to fashion and the broader that their popularity will become a driving force for Japan’s economic notion of “Japanese hospitality”, is now a new target for export growth. promotion for the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) in You can learn about the targets and projects below. If you are the 21st century. interested in the Cool Japan Fund, you can contact us (tel:03-5565- Prior to our next issue highlighting “the role of Japanese culture in 4822 or [email protected]) and we will connect you with the foreign policy”, we introduce our readers to METI’s new policy to relevant person in the fund. promote exports of Japanese cultural goods. This is considered one of the important policy measures presented as “the third arrow of Abenomics”, the growth strategy, and thus culture in our postindustrial society has economic policy implications as well. In Photo: Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) Japan reading both this short article and our next issue we hope you will enjoy learning about the wide range of these implications. On Nov. 25, 2013, at Toyko’s Roppongi Hills, Japanese business people and bureaucrats celebrated the office opening of the Cool Japan Fund, financed to the tune of 60 billion yen by the government and the private sector. This fund aims to invest money in companies and projects selling Japanese cultural products (the basic scheme is shown in the Charts below). -
EVOLUTION of JAPANESE WOMEN's KIMONO from A.D. 200 to 1960
THE EVOUTCION OF JAPANESE WOMEN'S KIMONO FEOK A.D. 200 TO 1960 *"> MASAKO TOYOSHMA B. S., Fukuoka Women's University, 1963 A MASTER'S REPORT submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree MASTER OF SCIENCE General Home Economics College of Home Eoonomios KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY Manhattan, Kansas 1967 Approved byi Major Professor TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE I. INTRODUCTION 1 II. HU-STYLE PERIOD (A.D. 200-552) 7 Political Situation 7 Dress of tha Period 9 III. T'ANG-STYLE PERIOD (552-894) 13 Politioal Situation 13 Dress of T'ang-stylo Period 18 IV. OS0DE-FASHI0N PERIOD (894-1477) 26 Political Situation 26 Dress of the OBode-Fashion Period 33 V. KOSODE-FASHION PERIOD (1477-1868) 44 Politioal Situation 44 Dress of Kosode-fashion Period •• 52 VI. JAPANESE-WESTERN PERIOD (1868-1960) 68 Politioal Situation 68 Dress of Japanese -'Western Period • 75 VII. SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS 83 Summary ............. 83 Recommendations •• •• 87 88 BIBLIOGRAPHY • • • ii LIST OF PLATES PLATE PAGE I Dress of Hu-style Period ..... ... 11 II Dress of T'ang-style Period 21 III Dress of Osode-fashion Period 37 17 Dress of Kosode-fashion Period 54 V Dress of Japanese -We stern Period. ............ 82 iii CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION Costume expresses a relationship to the ideals and the spirit - of the country during a particular time. Hurlock states in The Psych ology of Pre s s : In every age, some ideal is developed which predominates over all others. This ideal may be religious or political; it may re- late to the crown or to the people; it may be purely social or artistic, conservative or radical. -
Weekly News from Tokyo
TOKYO SKY TREE DITP TOKYO (2013 April13 – April19) Weekly News From Tokyo 29 June – 5 July 2013 Japan Mulls Cutting Tariffs On Rice For Processing TOKYO (Nikkei)--The government may agree to reduce import tariffs on rice used for processing in exchange for preserving current rates on staple-food varieties under the Trans-Pacific Partnership talks, The Nikkei learned Tuesday. The compromise will be presented to the U.S. and other trade partners in bilateral talks slated to begin as early as August once Japan officially joins the negotiations. Japan consumes roughly 7.15 million tons of rice a year as a staple food, while rice processed into crackers, sake and other products accounts for just 600,000 tons. There are 58 tariff categories for rice. But those targeting staple-food varieties, such as brown rice and polished white rice, total about six to eight, with the rest covering rice for processing. The government has long excluded rice as a whole from trade negotiations and has not looked into making distinctions between the tariff categories. The types of rice subject to possible tariff cuts under the new policy will be chosen carefully by weighing the impact on producers and processors. Rice distributed on the market for processing includes domestic crops grown for such purposes, varieties that do not meet standards for staple consumption, and foreign-grown imports bought through the minimum-access trade arrangement. Some processed-food firms are being forced to pay high tariffs for imports. Banner rice crops last year meant smaller portions diverted for processing, leading to higher prices. -
Abenomicspublished in May 2017 for Future Growth, for Future Generations, and for a Future Japan That Is Robust
ABENOMICSPublished in May 2017 For future growth, for future generations, and for a future Japan that is robust. We should look to the future, rather than worry about the present. Japan may be aging. Japan may be losing its population. But, these are incentives for us. – Prime Minister Shinzo Abe INTRODUCTION About Abenomics Setting the economy on course to (%) Nominal GDP and growth rate2 (JPY tril) 3.0 700 overcome deflation and make a steady 2.8 2.6 BEFORE ABENOMICS 2.5 recovery with the Three Arrows 2.5 2.1 In early 2013, after two decades of economic stagnation, Prime Minister 1.5 600 Shinzo Abe unveiled a comprehensive 1. 5 600 economic policy package to sustainably revive the Japanese economy while 554 540 maintaining fiscal discipline. 532 0.5 518 This program became known as 0.2 507 0 500 Abenomics. 494 495 -0.5 The centerpiece of Abenomics has been GDP (Expenditure Approach) the three “policy arrows” targeted at -1.1 (Right scale) aggressive monetary policy, flexible fiscal Nominal GDP growth rate policy and growth strategy including -1.5 400 (Left scale) structural reform. FY2011 FY2012 FY2013 FY2014 FY2015 FY2016 FY2017 TARGET (Estimate) (Forecast) Since then, Abenomics has achieved Jobs to applicants ratio Dependency ratio on remarkable progress. (JPY tril) Corporate ordinary profits3 (X) and unemployment rate4 (%) (JPY tril) Japanese Government Bonds6 (%) For example: 80 1.75 5.0 60 57.6 57.7 50 68.2 4.5 • Nominal GDP grew from 495 to 532 1.43 4.5 47.9 1.50 50 1 4.0 44.3 35.6 trillion yen between the fiscal years of 60 35.3 1.25 3.5 40.9 2012 and 20152 2.8 40 45.3 3.0 34.4 34.4 1. -
In Japanese Culture 日本人は信仰心が篤いのか? 日本文化における「諸派統合の信心深さ」 の問題
Analecta Nipponica JOURNAL OF POLISH ASSOCIATION FOR JAPANESE STUDIES 9/2019 Analecta Nipponica JOURNAL OF POLISH ASSOCIATION FOR JAPANESE STUDIES 特別号: アイデンティティの構築。日本文化のパターン Special Issue: Constructing Identity. The Patterns of Japanese Culture Guest Editors - Agnieszka Kozyra, Iwona Kordzińska-Nawrocka Analecta Nipponica JOURNAL OF POLISH ASSOCIATION FOR JAPANESE STUDIES Editor-in-Chief Alfred F. Majewicz Nicolaus Copernicus University, Toruń Guest Editors of Number 9/2019 Agnieszka Kozyra University of Warsaw Iwona Kordzińska-Nawrocka University of Warsaw Editorial Board Agnieszka Kozyra University of Warsaw Iwona Kordzińska-Nawrocka University of Warsaw Editing in English Aaron Bryson Editing in Japanese Yoko Fujii Karpoluk Editorial Advisory Board Moriyuki Itō Gakushūin University in Tokyo Mikołaj Melanowicz Professor emeritus Sadami Suzuki International Research Center for Japanese Studies in Kyoto Hideo Watanabe Shinshū University in Matsumoto Estera Żeromska Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań The publication was financed by Takashima Foundation Copyrights © 2019 by Polish Association for Japanese Studies and Contributing Authors ANALECTA NIPPONICA: Number 9/2019 ISSN: 2084-2147 Published by: Published by: Polish Association for Japanese Studies Krakowskie Przedmieście 26/28 00-927 Warszawa, Poland http://psbj.orient.uw.edu.pl Contents 目次 Editor’s Preface Agnieszka Kozyra, Iwona Kordzińska-Nawrocka The 11th Annual Days of Japan at the University of Warsaw, Constructing Identity. The Pattern of Japanese Culture, International Conference -
Exploitation and Social Reproduction in the Japanese Animation Industry
California State University, Monterey Bay Digital Commons @ CSUMB Capstone Projects and Master's Theses Capstone Projects and Master's Theses 5-2018 Exploitation and Social Reproduction in the Japanese Animation Industry James Garrett California State University, Monterey Bay Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.csumb.edu/caps_thes_all Part of the Asian Studies Commons, Behavioral Economics Commons, Labor Economics Commons, Labor History Commons, and the Other History Commons Recommended Citation Garrett, James, "Exploitation and Social Reproduction in the Japanese Animation Industry" (2018). Capstone Projects and Master's Theses. 329. https://digitalcommons.csumb.edu/caps_thes_all/329 This Capstone Project (Open Access) is brought to you for free and open access by the Capstone Projects and Master's Theses at Digital Commons @ CSUMB. It has been accepted for inclusion in Capstone Projects and Master's Theses by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ CSUMB. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Exploitation and Social Reproduction in the Japanese Animation Industry James Garrett Senior Capstone School of Social, Behavior & Global Studies: Global Studies Major Capstone Advisors: Ajit Abraham & Richard Harris 1 Acknowledgements I would like to thank the Global Studies department and faculty of California State University, Monterey Bay, for the dedication of their pursuit of understanding and acknowledging the complexities of global changes and shifts through an interdisciplinary curriculum. In particular, I would like to thank Dr. Angie Tran and Dr. Robina Bhatti for helping me to develop a more complex understanding of advanced capitalist societies and the place of labor within those societies. I would also like to thank Dr.