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Japanese-Chinese “Cold Politics, Hot Economy”: Fitting Sectors into China’s Ecosystem

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Abstract:

*Subject was changed to fit my presentation to the panel.

The recent development of the Japanese-Chinese disputes and economic interdependence is characterized as “Cold politics, hot economy (seirei keinetsu)” in Japan. There is a division of the Japanese public opinion over whether China is a friend or an enemy.
I think the friend/enemy dichotomy is misleading. It is important to understand the complex structure of Chinese system and the Japanese-Chinese bilateral relationship. Drawing on sectoral approach and the concept of the limited carrying capacity, I will explain complexity of this troubled bilateral relationship.


Original title and abstract:
Disaggregating States Facing Global Issues: Case of Global Climate Regime and Surrounding Issues

There is a developing body of literature on transgovernmental aspects of global governance such as transgovernmental networks, public-private networks, or a club model. It is because global governance is global but decentralized rule-making and order-creating activities to cope with various global issues, and it usually involves specialized governmental agencies and officials with expert knowledge related to specific issue areas. So to speak, states are pulled by the needs to deal with individual global issues and splitting into transgovernmental components, while trying to retain their unity. But the existing literature does not sufficiently grasp this situation. I will thus challenge the task to (re)conceptualize such disaggregating states facing centrifugal forces in the global governance system, by examining the global climate regime and global issues surrounding it as a case study.

Most Common Document Word Stems:

china (255), japan (100), chines (96), sector (80), japanes (71), econom (66), energi (62), relat (41), militari (36), develop (36), environment (35), secur (34), press (32), new (32), ed (30), also (29), economi (29), food (29), cooper (29), 2004 (27), govern (27),

Author's Keywords:

dissaggregation of state, sectoral approach, Japan, China
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Name: International Studies Association
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http://www.isanet.org


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MLA Citation:

Nagata, Tatsuya. "Japanese-Chinese “Cold Politics, Hot Economy”: Fitting Sectors into China’s Ecosystem" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Studies Association, Hilton Hawaiian Village, Honolulu, Hawaii, Feb 27, 2005 <Not Available>. 2009-05-25 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p69657_index.html>

APA Citation:

Nagata, T. , 2005-02-27 "Japanese-Chinese “Cold Politics, Hot Economy”: Fitting Sectors into China’s Ecosystem" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Studies Association, Hilton Hawaiian Village, Honolulu, Hawaii Online <PDF>. 2009-05-25 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p69657_index.html

Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript
Review Method: Peer Reviewed
Abstract: *Subject was changed to fit my presentation to the panel.

The recent development of the Japanese-Chinese disputes and economic interdependence is characterized as “Cold politics, hot economy (seirei keinetsu)” in Japan. There is a division of the Japanese public opinion over whether China is a friend or an enemy.
I think the friend/enemy dichotomy is misleading. It is important to understand the complex structure of Chinese system and the Japanese-Chinese bilateral relationship. Drawing on sectoral approach and the concept of the limited carrying capacity, I will explain complexity of this troubled bilateral relationship.


Original title and abstract:
Disaggregating States Facing Global Issues: Case of Global Climate Regime and Surrounding Issues

There is a developing body of literature on transgovernmental aspects of global governance such as transgovernmental networks, public-private networks, or a club model. It is because global governance is global but decentralized rule-making and order-creating activities to cope with various global issues, and it usually involves specialized governmental agencies and officials with expert knowledge related to specific issue areas. So to speak, states are pulled by the needs to deal with individual global issues and splitting into transgovernmental components, while trying to retain their unity. But the existing literature does not sufficiently grasp this situation. I will thus challenge the task to (re)conceptualize such disaggregating states facing centrifugal forces in the global governance system, by examining the global climate regime and global issues surrounding it as a case study.

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Associated Document Available Political Research Online
Associated Document Available International Studies Association

Document Type: PDF
Page count: 37
Word count: 8727
Text sample:
Japanese-Chinese "Cold Politics Hot Economy": Fitting Sectors into China's Ecosystem Tatsuya Nagata PhD student Rutgers University-Newark Abstract The recent Japanese-Chinese relationship is characterized as "cold politics hot economy" and there are two schools of thoughts which describe this bilateral relationship as friendly or hostile. But such a friend/enemy dichotomy to humanize the two countries is not useful to understand it. A sectoral approach can offer the better understanding of China as a sectorally fragmented system with limited carrying capacity
Institute 1998). World Bank At China's Table: Food Security Options (Washington D.C. 1997). Yang Yongzheng and Weiming Tian eds. China's Agriculture at the Crossroads (Houndmills England: Macmillan Press New York: St. Martin's Press 2000). Yetiv Steven A. Crude Awakenings: Global Oil Security and American Foreign Policy (Ithaca: Cornell University Press 2004). Zha Daojing "The Politics of China-ASEAN Economic Relations: Assessing the Move towards a Free Trade Area " in Kanishka Jayasuriya ed. Asian Regional Governance: Crisis and Change (London


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