Whpr19760630-019

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Whpr19760630-019 Digitized from Box 28 of the White House Press Releases at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library GUEST LIST :FOR THE LUNCHEON TO BE GIVEN B"l THE PRESIDENT IN HONOR OF HIS EXCELLEN"CY TAKEO .1-/IIKI, PRIME MINISTER OF JA?AN, ON ViEDNESDAY, JUNE 30, 1976, I:T ONE O'CLOCK, THE WI-:UTE HOUSE: His Excellency Takeo lVliki Prime Minister of Japan His Excellency Kiichi Miyazawa Minister of Foreign .Affairs His Excellency Mitsunori Ueki State Minister ~Iis Excellency The A1nbas sador of Japan and Mrs. Togo His Excellency Toshild Kaifu Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary The Honorable Hiroshi Mitsuzuka 1v'Ie1nber, House of Representatives The Honorable Sempachi Oishi Member, House of Repreoentatives His Excellency Bunroku Yoshino Deputy Minister of Foreign I.ffairs Mr. Toshio Yamazaki Director-General, American Affairs Bureau, Ministry of Foreign J-':,ffairs The Honorable Seiya Nishida and Mrs. Nishida l\l~ini:::;ter, Embassy of Japan The Vice President The Secretary of State and Mrs. Kissinger 1v:Ir. Justice Marshall and !-/Irs. Marchall The Secretary of the Interior and Mrs. Kleppe The Hon<rable Hiram L. Fong, U.S. E:enai::e ;(!-Iawaii) The :-Ionorable Theodore F. Stevens, U.S. Senate (l;laoka) and Mrs. Stevens The Honorable Robert J. Dole, U.S. Senate (Kanoas) and The Honorable Elizabeth Hanford Dole The Honorable L. }·I. Fountain, Eouse of Representative.: (North Carolina) The :-Ionorable John B. Anderson, :~ouse of Representatives (illinois) The Honorable David C. Treen, ~~~ouse of Repreoentatives (Louisiana) The :-:onorable Brent Scowcroft, J~asi:::tant to the Prcoident The Honorable James l'v~. Cannon, Assistant to the President & 1\llrs. Cannon General David C. Joneo, Chief of Stdf of the 1-dr Force, and Mrs. Jones The I-Ionorable Ja:neo D. Hodgson i~merican Ambassa:::lor to Japan The Honorable Philip C. Habib and Mro. Habib Assistant Secretary of State for Eaot Ldan ~ Pacific Affairs The :Honorable Roderick l\II. Hills Chairman, Securities & Exchange Co:mmission Mr. and Mrs. William R. Codus Acting Chief of Protocol Mr. and lVlrs. William H. Gleysteen, Jr. Deputy I~ seiotant Secretary of State, Bureau of East l: sian !1t Pacific Jdfs. Mr. Thomas Barnes Senior Mernber, National Security (;ouncil Mr. and Mrs. l.lfred 1-~ustin Ta1npa, Florida Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Banks Coach, Chicago Cues :Sc.seball Club Mr. and :fv ... rs. James F. Bere C~'lairman & Chief Executive Cfficer, Borg-Viarner Corporation Dr. and Mrs. James H. Billington Director, W"oodrow liviloon International Center for Scholars, Smithsonian Institution Mr. and Mrs. Robert I. Black York, Pennsylvania Mrs. -viTilliam V. Brokaw Executive Director, N.Y. Preoident Ford Finance Committee Mr. and Mrs. Harold Burson Chairm.an, Burson-Marsteller, Inc., Ne·w York, New York • -2- 6/30/76 at 1:00 p.m. Mr. Melvin M. Burton, Jr. Attorney, Washington, D. C. Mr. and Mrs. Broderick Crawford Actor Mr. Dan Dailey Actor Mr. Fred L. Dixon 1. F. of Folger, Nolan, Fleming, Douglas, Inc., Washington, D. C. Mr. and ~.;Irs. Irving Felt Chairman, Madison Square Garden, New York, New York Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. ~isher, III President, National Bc.nk of Detroit Mrs. Hiram Fong, Jr. Daughter-in-law and guest of Senator Hiram i!~ong The Honorable Abe Fortas anci Mrs. Fortas Attorney, Washington, D. C. Mr. an:::l Mrs. Eugene Garfield Chairman & President, Auto-Train Corporation, Vfashington, D. C. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gerstacker Chairman, Dow Chemical :::ompany; Chairman, U.S. -Japan Economic Council The Honorable Louise Gore Washington, D. C. Mr. and Mrs. Jess Gerkin Editor, Parade !vlagazine, New York, New York Mr. and Mrs. Rodney C. Gott Chairman, .AMF, Inc., White Plains, New York Dr. and Mrs. Donald. C. Hellmann Professor of Political Science & Asian Studies, Institute for Comparative & Foreign Area Studies, Univeroity of Washington, Seattle, Washington Mr. and Mrs. John Hall Chairman, U.S. -Japan Friendship Committee, Hamden, Connecticut Mr. and Mrs. Howard. F. Haneman Brigantine, New Jersey Dr. and Mrs. W. Frank Harrington Minister, Peachtree Presbyterian Church, Atlanta, Georgi:a Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Hatfield Chairman & Chief Executive Officer, The Continental Group, Inc., New York, New York Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Ireland Partner, Brown Brothers Harriman & Cornpany, New York, New York Mr. and Mrs. Ernest A. Jones Chairman, D'P.rcy-MacManus & Masius, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan Mr. Hank Kashiwa Professional ski racer, Steamboat Village, Colorado Mr. and Mrs. Masao Kinoohita Landscape designer, Sacaki Associates, Inc., Watertown, Massachusetts Mr. and Mrs. Seymour M. Klein .Attorney, New York, New York; President of Louis & Bessie .Adler Foundation Mr. and Mrs. John B. Martin Chevy Chase, Maryland Mr. and Mrs. Mike Masaoka Chairman, Executive Committee, Japan-American Society of Washington The Honorable Paul McCracken and Mrs. McCracken Professor of Business Administration, University of Michigan; Chairman of Japan-U.S. A sse1nbly Mr. Isamu Noguchi Sculptor, Long Island City, New York Dr. Robert E. Osgood Dean, School for Advanced International Studieo, Johns Hopkins University Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pierpoint CBS, Inc., Washington, D. C • • -3- 6/30/76 at 1:00 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Eric Pleskow President and Chief Executive Officer, United Artists Corporation, New York, New York Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Salzman Director, Overseas Private Investment Corporation The Honorable Roger L. Stevens and Mrs. Stevens Chairman, John F. Kennedy Cen~er for the Performing Arts Mr. and Mrs. Henry Taylor Cayce, South Carolina Dr. and Mrs. Robert Threatt President, Morris Brown College, Atlanta, Georgia Mr. and Mrs. Henry Urban Publisher, Buffalo Evening News, Buffalo, New York Mrs. Harry Wagner, Jr. International President, The General Federation of Women's Clubs, Washington, D. C. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Walsh The Washington Post Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Webb Architect, Paris, Kentucky Mr. and Mrs. W. S. White, Jr. Chairman, American Electric Power Company, Inc., New York, New York Mr. and Mrs. James Whitmore Actor and actress (Audra Lindley) performing in "The Magnificent Yankee'' at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts • .
Recommended publications
  • Japan and the United States in the Asian Financial Crisis Management
    CHAPTER 8 Japan and the United States in the Asian Financial Crisis Management Not even the Asian countries, with their “miracle econo- mies,”could escape the µnancial turmoil of the twenty-µrst century.1 In 1997, Thailand, the Philippines, Malaysia, Indonesia, and Korea all experienced attacks on their currencies and stock markets, and their gov- ernments could not, on their own, manage these attacks or stabilize their economies. In response, the IMF, with the participation of Japan, the United States, and other governments, assembled international µnancial rescue packages in an effort to stabilize the international µnancial market. The com- bined total of aid committed through multilateral and bilateral channels reached more than $110 billion by the end of 1997. Japan’s involvement in the management of the Asian µnancial crisis2 presents a much more complex picture than its involvement in the series of Latin American crises analyzed in chapters 5 and 6. First, the Japanese gov- ernment’s actions and the style of leadership in managing the Asian crisis shifted over time from active and independent (early summer through fall 1997), to passive but cooperative (fall 1997 to mid-1998), to active with cau- tious independence (mid-1998 through 1999). Second, the Japanese govern- ment demonstrated ambivalence in cooperating with the United States and the IMF, by sometimes fully supporting their initiatives (e.g., in the second phase) and sometimes providing (or attempting to provide) alternative solu- tions to the crisis. This chapter analyzes the reasons for the variance in the Japanese government’s actions in Asian crisis management by applying the same theoretical framework as chapters 5 and 6: the importance of joint prod- uct and transnational linkages.
    [Show full text]
  • Jpfp News Letter
    JPFP The Japan Parliamentarians Federation for Population NEWS LETTER No.83 June 2019 The 45th Anniversary of the Japan Parliamentarians Federation for Population (JPFP) (Part II): Promotion of Parliamentarian Activities on Population and Development and ICPPD The last issue traced the history leading up to the establishment of JPFP and its activities during the 1970s. In this issue, we follow JPFP’s activities in the international arena during the 1980s and 1990s. October 1981 - The Asian Conference of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (ACPPD) (Beijing, China) The conference resolved to establish the Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD) as well as the Asian Population and Development Association (APDA), as the parental body of AFPPD. Hon. Takeo Fukuda (Chair of JPFP) was awarded the United Nations Peace Medal. Headed by Hon. Takeo Fukuda (Chair of JPFP, HR, LDP), the participants from Japan included: Hon. Takashi Sato (HR, LDP), Hon. Eisaku Sumi (HR, LDP), Hon. Keijiro Shoji (HR, LDP), Hon. Yoshiro Mori (HR, LDP), Hon. 1981 - ACPPD (Beijing) Junichiro Koizumi (HR, LDP), Hon. Katsutsugu Sekiya (HR, LDP), Hon. Shin Sakurai (HR, LDP), Hon. Akira Momiyama (HR, LDP), Hon. Shigeru Ishimoto (HC, LDP), Hon. Yukio Tashiro (HC, LDP), Hon. Chikage Ogi (Hiroko Hayashi) (HC, LDP), Hon. Dr. Hironori Inoue (HR. SPDJ, Hon. Takako Doi (HR, SPDJ), Hon. Yoshito Fukuoka (HR, SPDJ), Hon. Toshimi Kawamoto (HR, SPDJ), Hon. Jinichi Katayama (HC, SPDJ, Hon. Shigetake Arishima (HR, Komeito), Hon. Yasu Kashiwabara (HC, Komeito), Hon. Dr. Hidehiko Yaoi (HR, Komeito), Hon. Kosaku Wada (HR, DSP), Hon. Michikazu Karatani (HC, DSP), Hon. Toshio Yamaguchi (HR, NLC), Hon.
    [Show full text]
  • The Limits of Forgiveness in International Relations: Groups
    JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations E-ISSN: 1647-7251 [email protected] Observatório de Relações Exteriores Portugal del Pilar Álvarez, María; del Mar Lunaklick, María; Muñoz, Tomás The limits of forgiveness in International Relations: Groups supporting the Yasukuni shrine in Japan and political tensions in East Asia JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations, vol. 7, núm. 2, noviembre, 2016, pp. 26- 49 Observatório de Relações Exteriores Lisboa, Portugal Available in: http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=413548516003 How to cite Complete issue Scientific Information System More information about this article Network of Scientific Journals from Latin America, the Caribbean, Spain and Portugal Journal's homepage in redalyc.org Non-profit academic project, developed under the open access initiative OBSERVARE Universidade Autónoma de Lisboa e-ISSN: 1647-7251 Vol. 7, Nº. 2 (November 2016-April 2017), pp. 26-49 THE LIMITS OF FORGIVENESS IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: GROUPS SUPPORTING THE YASUKUNI SHRINE IN JAPAN AND POLITICAL TENSIONS IN EAST ASIA María del Pilar Álvarez [email protected] Research Professor at the Faculty of Social Sciences of the University of Salvador (USAL, Argentina) and Visiting Professor of the Department of International Studies at the University T. Di Tella (UTDT). Coordinator of the Research Group on East Asia of the Institute of Social Science Research (IDICSO) of the USAL. Postdoctoral Fellow of the National Council of Scientific and Technical Research (CONICET) of Argentina. Doctor of Social Sciences from the University of Buenos Aires (UBA). Holder of a Master Degree on East Asia, Korea, from Yonsei University. Holder of a Degree in Political Science (UBA).
    [Show full text]
  • The Birth and Consequences of the Bank of Japan's Quantitative
    Bound by a Hidden Agenda: The Birth and Consequences of the Bank of Japan’s Quantitative Monetary Easing Tetsufumi Arita July 2007 THE WALTER H. SHORENSTEIN ASIA-PACIFIC RESEARCH CENTER (Shorenstein APARC) is a unique Stanford University institution focused on the interdisciplinary study of contemporary Asia. Shorenstein APARC’s mission is to produce and publish outstanding interdisciplinary, Asia-Pacific– focused research; educate students, scholars, and corporate and governmental affiliates; promote constructive interaction to influence U.S. policy toward the Asia-Pacific; and guide Asian nations on key issues of societal transition, development, U.S.-Asia relations, and regional cooperation. The Walter H. Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies Stanford University Encina Hall Stanford, CA 94306-6055 http://shorenstein.stanford.edu 2 About the Author Tetsufumi Arita has been a reporter for the Japanese newspaper, Asahi Shimbun, since 990. He has extensive experience in reporting business and political news. Arita was a visiting fellow at the Walter H. Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center between 2004 and 2005. 2 3 4 Abstract For the past five years, the Bank of Japan (BOJ) has employed an unconventional monetary easing policy, called quantitative monetary easing. Under a zero interest rate regime, the BOJ shifted its tool for monetary easing from interest rates to quantity of money, thus providing the money market with much more money than it needs. It is difficult to find evidence that this monetary easing has contributed to the current economic recovery. What we can show is that this quantitative easing diluted the functions of interest rates in the money market, with the following consequences: quantitative easing hid the risks of the huge amount of fiscal debt and supported troubled commercial banks.
    [Show full text]
  • OFFICIAL GAZETTE ENGLISH GOVERNMENT Piihtinq B8IEAII EDITION 8=T-*-I~A=+Hbsmmw*
    OFFICIAL GAZETTE ENGLISH GOVERNMENT PiiHTiNQ B8IEAII EDITION 8=t-*-i~A=+HBsmmw* No. 279 FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 1947 Price 7.50 yen visions of Article 3-2 of the Opium Law. MINISTERIAL ORDINANCE (3) Approvals in accordance with the Health Insurance Law and the Regulations for the Ministry of Welfare Ordinance No. 6 Enforcement of the Health Insurance Law. March 7, 1947 (4) Special licences in accordance with the provisions of Article 4, paragraph 3 of the The Regulations for the Enforcement of National Park Law, and permissions in accor- the Ordinance of the Temporary Measures of Permission and Approval and others relative to dance with the provisions of Article 8, paragraph 2 of the same Law. the Ministry of Welfare shall be amended as (5) Permissions in accordance with the pro- follows : Minister of Welfare visions of Article 13 of the National Medical Treatment Law. .* KAWAI Yoshinari (6) Permissions in accordance with the pro- Article 1. According to the provisions of visions of Article 23, paragraph.1, of the Medi- paragraph 2 of Article 2 of the Ordinance of cines Law (including the cases applied in the the Temporary Measures of Permission and same Article, paragraph 4, of the same Law). Approval and otrers (hereinafter, shall be called (7) Approvals in accordance of the pro- the Ordinance), the following permissions and visions of Article 2, paragraph 2, and Article 5 approvals shall be given in accordance with the of "Resale by the Government of Opium for existing regulations : Pharmacy ". 1. Approval in accordance with the pro- (8) Permissions in accordance with the pro- visions of Article 89, "paragraph 1, of the Regu- visions of Article ll, paragraph 1, of the Regu- lations for the Enforcement of the Epidemic lations for the Enforcement of the Opium Law.
    [Show full text]
  • Civil Society and the State in Democratic East Asia
    PROTEST AND SOCIAL MOVEMENTS Chiavacci, (eds) Grano & Obinger Civil Society and the State in Democratic East Asia East Democratic in State the and Society Civil Edited by David Chiavacci, Simona Grano, and Julia Obinger Civil Society and the State in Democratic East Asia Between Entanglement and Contention in Post High Growth Civil Society and the State in Democratic East Asia Protest and Social Movements Recent years have seen an explosion of protest movements around the world, and academic theories are racing to catch up with them. This series aims to further our understanding of the origins, dealings, decisions, and outcomes of social movements by fostering dialogue among many traditions of thought, across European nations and across continents. All theoretical perspectives are welcome. Books in the series typically combine theory with empirical research, dealing with various types of mobilization, from neighborhood groups to revolutions. We especially welcome work that synthesizes or compares different approaches to social movements, such as cultural and structural traditions, micro- and macro-social, economic and ideal, or qualitative and quantitative. Books in the series will be published in English. One goal is to encourage non- native speakers to introduce their work to Anglophone audiences. Another is to maximize accessibility: all books will be available in open access within a year after printed publication. Series Editors Jan Willem Duyvendak is professor of Sociology at the University of Amsterdam. James M. Jasper teaches at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Civil Society and the State in Democratic East Asia Between Entanglement and Contention in Post High Growth Edited by David Chiavacci, Simona Grano, and Julia Obinger Amsterdam University Press Published with the support of the Swiss National Science Foundation.
    [Show full text]
  • RELIGIÃO E SEGURANÇA NO JAPÃO: Padrões Históricos E Desafios No Século XXI
    UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL DO RIO GRANDE DO SUL INSTITUTO DE FILOSOFIA E CIÊNCIAS HUMANAS PROGRAMA DE PÓS-GRADUAÇÃO EM CIÊNCIA POLÍTICA LORENZO DE AGUIAR PERES RELIGIÃO E SEGURANÇA NO JAPÃO: Padrões Históricos e Desafios no Século XXI Porto Alegre – RS 2010 LORENZO DE AGUIAR PERES RELIGIÃO E SEGURANÇA NO JAPÃO: Padrões Históricos e Desafios no Século XXI Dissertação de Mestrado apresentada ao Programa de Pós-Graduação em Ciência Política da Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, para obtenção do grau de Mestre em Ciência Política. Orientador: Marco Aurélio Chaves Cepik Porto Alegre – RS 2010 2 Dedico esta Dissertação à minha mãe, Lícia Peres, cujo amor e estímulos diários me motivam a superar cada desafio. 3 AGRADECIMENTOS À Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) que financiou esta pesquisa. Ao programa de Pós-Graduação em Ciência Política da UFRGS por todo suporte acadêmico e técnico, possibilitando um ambiente propício para a elaboração do presente trabalho. Ao meu orientador e professor, Marco Cepik, pelo auxílio e rigor acadêmico, sempre buscando desenvolver meu senso crítico. Ao professor e amigo José Miguel Quedi Martins, que me estimulou a pesquisar este tema e sempre se dispôs a debatê-lo. Aos professores do Mestrado em Ciência Política, pelos ensinamentos e pela busca constante da excelência. Aos colegas e amigos Igor Castellano da Silva, Fernando Sebben, Julio Rodriguez, Rodrigo Cardoso, Gustavo Dullius, Luiza Schneider, Lucas Kerr, Fabrício Ávila, Nilo de Castro, Márcio Guimarães, Eduardo Bueno e João Chiarelli, que sempre se colocaram à disposição para debater assuntos relacionados às Relações Internacionais e à Ciência Política.
    [Show full text]
  • How Japan's Ministry of Finance Orchestrates Its Own Reformation
    Fordham International Law Journal Volume 22, Issue 1 1998 Article 5 Master of Puppets: How Japan’s Ministry of Finance Orchestrates Its Own Reformation Gregory D. Ruback∗ ∗ Copyright c 1998 by the authors. Fordham International Law Journal is produced by The Berke- ley Electronic Press (bepress). http://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/ilj Master of Puppets: How Japan’s Ministry of Finance Orchestrates Its Own Reformation Gregory D. Ruback Abstract This Comment analyzes Japan’s effort to create a competitive securities market that is free, transparent, and reliable. Part I describes Japan’s regulatory environment, emphasizing the power and authority of the Ministry and its influence within the Japanese government and over the secu- rities industry. Part II details elements of the Big Bang reforms and describes the current political situation that will influence the effectiveness of the reforms. Part III addresses the probable effec- tiveness of the reforms in the context of Japan’s regulatory structure, past scandals and reforms, and current political environment. Finally, this Comment argues that the Ministry has the ability to control the reformation of the securities industry because of the Ministry’s extensive influence within the government and over the securities industry. In addition, this Comment argues that the reforms initiated by the Japanese government will be ineffective in changing the regulation of the securities industry because the reforms threaten to reduce the Ministry’s authority over the securities industry. MASTER OF PUPPETS:
    [Show full text]
  • President George H.W. Bush Meetings with Foreigners, 1989
    President George H.W. Bush Meetings with Foreigners, 1989 Date Met with... Country/Organization Meeting Location Occasion January 24, 1989 Secretary General Javier Pérez de Cuéllar United Nations Washington, D.C. State Dinner February 2, 1989 President Yoweri Museveni Uganda Washington, D.C. Photo Opportunity February 2, 1989 President Mohamed Siad Barre Somalia Washington, D.C. Photo Opportunity February 2, 1989 Prime Minister Noboru Takeshita Japan Washington, D.C. Official Visit Chairman of Free Democratic Party Otto Graf Lambsdorff and Ambassador Federal Republic of February 8, 1989 Washington, D.C. Official Visit of Federal Republic of Germany to U.S. Jürgen Ruhfus Germany Chief of Federal Chancellery Wolfgang Schauble and Ambassador of Federal Republic of February 9, 1989 Washington, D.C. Official Visit Federal Republic of Germany to U.S. Jürgen Ruhfus Germany Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians Vazgen I and Armenian Apostolic February 9, 1989 Washington, D.C. Official Visit Catholicos of Great House of Cilicia Karekin II Church February 10, 1989 Prime Minister Brian Mulroney Canada Ottawa, Canada Official Visit February 17, 1989 Prince Charles (Prince of Wales) United Kingdom Camp David, Maryland Private Dinner 1 President George H.W. Bush Meetings with Foreigners, 1989 Date Met with... Country/Organization Meeting Location Occasion February 23, 1989 President François Mitterrand France Tokyo, Japan Funeral of Japanese Emperor February 23, 1989 Prime Minister Noboru Takeshita Japan Tokyo, Japan Funeral of Japanese Emperor Bilateral Meetings Tokyo, Japan Funeral of Japanese Emperor President Mário Soares Portugal President Hosni Mubarak Egypt Prime Minister Chatichai Choonhavan Thailand February 23, 1989 King Juan Carlos I Spain King Hussein I Jordan President Chaim Herzog Israel President R.
    [Show full text]
  • Remarks with Prime Minister Kiichi Miyazawa of Japan to the Presidential Business Delegation in Tokyo January 8, 1992
    Administration of George Bush, 1992 / Jan. 8 And lastly, and this is the end, you’ll be every one of you. happy to know, I just want to thank all of the people in this wonderful city who have given Barbara Bush, over here, and me such Note: The President spoke at 4:10 p.m. In a warm welcome. When we got off that hel- his remarks, he referred to Yoshiya icopter here and came by those wonderfully Kakimoto, Governor of Nara; Taro Miura, warm, smiling faces, extending to us a Mayor of Kashihara; Michio Watanabe, Jap- warm, Japanese welcome, we felt very, very anese Minister of Foreign Affairs; and grateful and very emotional. And that said Charles Lazarus, chairman and chief execu- an awful lot about the friendship between tive officer of Toys-R-Us. A tape was not Japan and the United States of America. available for verification of the content of Thank you. And may God bless each and these remarks. Remarks With Prime Minister Kiichi Miyazawa of Japan to the Presidential Business Delegation in Tokyo January 8, 1992 The President. Let me just say to those beat of our country in jobs in small busi- on the American side and this very distin- ness, independent business. And so, the guished delegation of American business head of the Independent Business Associa- people that are here, led by our able Sec- tion is here, the National Association of retary of Commerce, how pleased we are Manufacturing. And in these discussions, to be in Japan and, Mr. Prime Minister, your friends and colleagues are talking to how much we appreciate your hospitality.
    [Show full text]
  • “Historical Injustices in Comparative Perspective”
    CONTRIBUTORS Tsuneo Akaha Tsuneo Akaha is Professor of International Policy Studies and Director of the Center for East Asian Studies at the Monterey Institute of International Studies, Monterey, California. He received his Ph.D. in International Relations from the University of Southern California. He has taught at USC, Kansas State University, and Bowling Green State University and held visiting positions at the University of Tokyo, Waseda University, Hokkaido University, the University of Shimane, and Seikei University. His research interests include human and nontraditional security and nationalism and regionalism in East Asia, Japan‟s foreign and security policies, and international migration. His recent publications include: The U.S.-Japan Alliance: Balancing Soft and Hard Power in East Asia (2010); Crossing National Borders: Human Migration Issues in Northeast Asia (2005); The Future of North Korea (2002); “Human Security in East Asia: Embracing Global Norms through Regional Cooperation in Human Trafficking, Labor Migration, and HIV/AIDS” (2009); “International Migration and Human Rights: A Case for Regional Approach in Northeast Asia” (2008); "Non-traditional Security Cooperation for Regionalism in Northeast Asia" (2007); "Russians in Contemporary Japan: Case Studies in Hokkaido and Niigata" (2005); and “Cross-border Migration as a New Element of International Relations in Northeast Asia: A Boon to Regionalism or a New Source of Friction?” (2004). Daniel Butt Daniel Butt is Lecturer in Political Theory at the University of Bristol, UK. He was previously Fellow and Tutor in Politics at Oriel College, Oxford; Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Social and Political Thought at the Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Oxford; and Research Fellow and Tutor in Politics at Keble College, Oxford.
    [Show full text]
  • Kebijakan Jepang Di Kawasan Asia Tenggara Melalui Penandatanganan “Joint Declaration on AJCEP” Di Era Kepemimpinan Junichiro Koizumi
    Kebijakan Jepang di Kawasan Asia Tenggara melalui Penandatanganan “Joint Declaration on AJCEP” di Era Kepemimpinan Junichiro Koizumi Nafira Fitri, Sukma Sushanti, S.S., M.Si., Putu Titah Kawitri Resen, S.IP., M.A. Fakultas Ilmu Sosial dan Ilmu Politik Universitas Udayana Email : [email protected], [email protected], [email protected] ABSTRAK This paper found that the making of Japanese foreign policy related to trade sector in Southeast Asia in the era of the leadership of Junichiro Koizumi. This topic is interesting, because until the mid-1990s, Japan committed to making the policy of multilateralism and reject the free trade agreements, because they assume the free trade agreement is not in accordance with the GATT / WTO. But in the era of Junichiro Koizumi changed the emphasis of economic cooperation to "act together and move forward together" with ASEAN and establish the ASEAN-Japan Comprehensive Economic Partnership (AJCEP) as the beginning of the establishment for the Free Trade Agreement. In this paper the author will examine the making of Japanese foreign policy-related trade in Southeast Asia in the era of the leadership of Junichiro Koizumi. With a locus of time in the 1998-2002, after Asian crisis in 1997 and the signing of the "Joint Declaration on the ASEAN-Japan Comprehensive Economic Partnership". This paper will explorate using Model II: Organizational Process by Graham T. Allison with the initial assumption that the change of foreign policy in the economic field in Japan is the result of the government organization in Japan which is influenced by external factors at that time and the list options which produced by the organization.
    [Show full text]