Skip to main content

LUP Student Papers

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Japan: A Rising Champion of Human Rights and Democracy in East and Southeast Asia? : The 21st century, a changing approach with old continuities

Asplund, André (2010)
Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies, Lund University
Abstract
This study explores and provides an understanding of how Japan, in its foreign policy, has approached the protection and promotion of international human rights and democracy in East and Southeast Asia during the 21st century. It sheds light on the Japanese government’s official policies stated in forums like the national Diet and the United Nations, and it analyzes the main characteristics of the Japanese approach. By using international relations theory as a framework, this study argues that Japan has increasingly in its foreign policies during the 21st century emphasized the importance of human rights and democracy (in lines with a liberal approach), at levels not seen before, in general and towards Asia as region. The importance of... (More)
This study explores and provides an understanding of how Japan, in its foreign policy, has approached the protection and promotion of international human rights and democracy in East and Southeast Asia during the 21st century. It sheds light on the Japanese government’s official policies stated in forums like the national Diet and the United Nations, and it analyzes the main characteristics of the Japanese approach. By using international relations theory as a framework, this study argues that Japan has increasingly in its foreign policies during the 21st century emphasized the importance of human rights and democracy (in lines with a liberal approach), at levels not seen before, in general and towards Asia as region. The importance of spreading the universal values of human rights and democracy to all parts of the world has during the 21st century become a continuous notion of the Japanese government. However, Japan has not been consistent in its promotion of such values. Policies of human rights and democracy have been superseded by realist claims of security towards East and Southeast Asian nations that pose imminent or potential security threats (military or economic) to Japan. Hence, Japan is utilizing an elective and adaptive policy on human rights and democracy, adhering to a generally liberal approach where possible and a realist where needed. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Asplund, André
supervisor
organization
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
East and Southeast Asia, Democracy, Human Rights, Japanese Foreign Policy, North Korea, Cambodia, Myanmar, China
language
English
id
1670254
date added to LUP
2010-09-13 10:22:47
date last changed
2010-09-13 10:22:47
@misc{1670254,
  abstract     = {{This study explores and provides an understanding of how Japan, in its foreign policy, has approached the protection and promotion of international human rights and democracy in East and Southeast Asia during the 21st century. It sheds light on the Japanese government’s official policies stated in forums like the national Diet and the United Nations, and it analyzes the main characteristics of the Japanese approach. By using international relations theory as a framework, this study argues that Japan has increasingly in its foreign policies during the 21st century emphasized the importance of human rights and democracy (in lines with a liberal approach), at levels not seen before, in general and towards Asia as region. The importance of spreading the universal values of human rights and democracy to all parts of the world has during the 21st century become a continuous notion of the Japanese government. However, Japan has not been consistent in its promotion of such values. Policies of human rights and democracy have been superseded by realist claims of security towards East and Southeast Asian nations that pose imminent or potential security threats (military or economic) to Japan. Hence, Japan is utilizing an elective and adaptive policy on human rights and democracy, adhering to a generally liberal approach where possible and a realist where needed.}},
  author       = {{Asplund, André}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Japan: A Rising Champion of Human Rights and Democracy in East and Southeast Asia? : The 21st century, a changing approach with old continuities}},
  year         = {{2010}},
}