Constitutional politics in contemporary Japan

Date

2001

Authors

Sugita, Atsushi

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Division of Pacific and Asia History, The Australian National University.

Abstract

The Japanese constitution is now at a turning point. Today, first I would like to explain the two major political attitudes toward the constitution. After making clear why and how these attitudes have been developed, I will point out that each of these attitudes has its own contradiction and dilemma within it. Then I will tell you something about my own way of thinking about the constitution. We should think about the constitution within a broader context of politics, rather than sticking to the constitution as a written national law.

Description

Keywords

Ninth Clause, US-Japan Security Treaty, Japanese constitution, military, human rights, political framework, constitutional reform, politics

Citation

Source

Type

Conference paper

Book Title

Constitutions and Human Rights in a Global Age: an Asia Pacific perspective Symposium (2001 : The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT)

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

DOI

Restricted until

Downloads

File
Description