561 |
Evaluation of risk strategy and market efficiency in the international coal market: A case study of the Japanese coking coal market.Wang, Tianchi. January 1992 (has links)
Market efficiency and buyers' risk strategy in the Japanese coking coal import market are examined. The Japanese coal market is found to be inefficient, Japanese buyers traditionally have purchased coals from the United States at a high price and, since the second half of the 1980's, have paid the highest average price to Canadian producers. Given the abundant low cost Australian coals, this purchasing pattern does not meet the cost minimization criteria for efficiency. This is explained mainly by the buyers' risk management strategy. To more accurately examine price differentiation, the complexity of coal quality is considered first. A statistical method is used to estimate the quality premium as a cost component in price formation. Next a comparison of supply regions and a detailed investigation on market conduct is based on quality-adjusted prices, which are assumed to represent the prices of homogenous coals. Although various reasons are used by researchers to explain Japanese buyers power, this study finds vertical integration of the Japanese companies to be the most important factor creating that power. A detailed survey of vertical integration is made. Finally, a monetary value of the risk premium is estimated by using the partial elasticity of substitution. Total payments by Japanese coking coal buyers for risk premiums are estimated. These represent the extra dollars paid by the Japanese to US and Canadian coal producers for purchasing their coals instead of Australian coals.
|
562 |
JAPANESE ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION: A CASE STUDY OF THE KANEMI RICE OIL DISEASE VICTIMS.HAUSKNECHT, PHILLIP ARNE. January 1983 (has links)
All major pollution incidents in contemporary Japan have spawned victims' protest movements. This dissertation is a case study of one such movement which emerged in the late 1960s among thousands of persons poisoned by polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) that had accidentally leaked into their cooking oil. The study describes the evolution of victims' response to the disaster, beginning with the initial outbreak of symptoms, their efforts to uncover the cause of these symptoms and to receive appropriate medical treatment, and their organization of a movement to seek redress in the form of an apology from the manufacturer of the oil, reform by industry and government, and compensation. Victims utilized a variety of tactics before finally resorting to litigation in attempts to achieve their goals. Theirs was the largest pollution case ever tried in Japan. The final section of the study focuses on a major leader of the victims' movement, Kamino Ryuzo. A spokesman for the victims, Kamino, a retired miner and Christian convert, became a kind of anti-pollution ideologue. An account of his intellectual and religious odyssey and of the unique tactics forged by his family to cope with their predicament provides a perspective on victims' movements not found elsewhere. The study concludes that victims became their own advocates only after the government and industry failed to accept responsibility for pollution; that the victims went to court only reluctantly after all other avenues for redress were closed to them; and that, although they won their case, they felt it was a Pyrrhic victory, because they failed to attain all their goals, such as reform of industrial policy. Research is based on participation-observation, interviews, written materials produced by pollution victims and their supporters, and published newspaper accounts.
|
563 |
Dynamics of policy interventions : the case of the government and the automobile industry in Japan c.1900 - c.1960.Yakushiji, Taizo January 1977 (has links)
Thesis. 1977. Ph.D.--Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Political Science. / MICROFICHE COPY AVAILABLE IN ARCHIVES AND DEWEY. / Vita. / Bibliography : leaves 630-638. / Ph.D.
|
564 |
Discourses of intercultural education in JapanMabuchi, Hitoshi, 1955- January 2001 (has links)
Abstract not available
|
565 |
Destructive Discourse: 'Japan-bashing' in the United States, Australia and Japan in the 1980s and 1990sNarrelle Morris January 2006 (has links)
By the 1960s-70s, most Western commentators agreed that Japan had rehabilitated itself from World War II, in the process becoming on the whole a reliable member of the international community. From the late 1970s onwards, however, as Japans economy continued to rise, this premise began to be questioned. By the late 1980s, a new Japan Problem had been identified in Western countries, although the presentation of Japan as a dangerous other was nevertheless familiar from past historical eras. The term Japan-bashing was used by opponents of this negative view to suggest that much of the critical rhetoric about a Japan Problem could be reduced to an unwarranted, probably racist, assault on Japan.
This thesis argues that the invention and popularisation of the highly-contested label Japan-bashing, rather than averting criticism of Japan, perversely helped to exacerbate and transform the moderate anti-Japanese sentiment that had existed in Western countries in the late 1970s and early 1980s into a widely disseminated, heavily politicised and even encultured phenomenon in the late 1980s and 1990s. Moreover, when the term Japan-bashing spread to Japan itself, Japanese commentators were quick to respond. In fact, the level and the nature of the response from the Japanese side is one crucial factor that distinguishes Japan-bashing in the 1980s and 1990s from anti-Japanese sentiment expressed in the West in earlier periods.
Ultimately, the label and the practice of Japan-bashing helped to transform intellectual and popular discourses about Japan in both Western countries and Japan itself in the 1980s and 1990s. Moreover, in doing so, it revealed crucial features of wider Western and Japanese perceptions of the global order in the late twentieth century. Debates about Japan showed, for example, that economic strength had become at least as important as military power to national discourses about identity. However, the view that Western countries and Japan are generally incompatible, and share few, if any, common values, interests or goals, has been largely discarded in the early twenty-first century, in a process that demonstrated just how constructed, and transitory, such views can be.
|
566 |
Exploration of Japanese women's patterns of educational attainment : the effect of gender of siblingsMichinobu, Toshiyuki 28 July 1995 (has links)
Guided by the emerging interest in gender of siblings as one important
sociological component in American family studies, the major objective of this study
was to examine the effect of sex composition of siblings on women's levels of
educational attainment in the Japanese setting. The present study hypothesized
that the presence of brothers poses women a greater obstacle to a high level of
educational attainment than the presence of sisters. For the purpose of gaining
more depth in understanding Japanese women's education, this study also
investigated other factors which differentiate the patterns of educational
attainment between men and women.
Two major methods were employed for the exploration. First, in order to
examine the effect of sibling gender, this study analyzed quantitative data obtained
from a sample of 518 young women. Second, face-to-face interviews were
conducted with 15 mothers and 15 young women individually. In the interviews,
in addition to several issues surrounding women's education, the mothers were
asked their experiences about their children's education whereas the young women
were asked their own educational experiences.
The quantitative results identified gender of siblings as one important
family characteristic in explaining women's levels of educational attainment.
While providing some support for the quantitative findings, the qualitative data
revealed the importance of other factors including parental attitudes toward gender
role ideology and the notion of an appropriate marriage age. Implications of the
findings for future research are discussed. / Graduation date: 1996
|
567 |
Fanning the spark of hope : culture, practice and everyday life in postwar Okinawa /Nelson, Christopher T. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, Dept. of Anthropology, August 2002. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 251-260). Also available on the Internet.
|
568 |
From colonial jewel to socialist metropolis Dalian 1895-1955 /Hess, Christian A. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of California, San Diego, 2006. / Title from first page of PDF file (viewed December 13, 2006). Available via ProQuest Digital Dissertations. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (p. 414-443).
|
569 |
Japan in der KatastropheJanuary 2011 (has links)
Die verheerenden Erdbeben im März dieses Jahres erschütterten nicht nur Japan, sie erschütterten die Welt. Das Reaktorunglück von Fukushima weckte düstere Erinnerungen an Tschernobyl. Wie geht das asiatische Land mit der Katastrophe um? Das Thema zeigt deutlich, dass die Krise noch lange nicht Überwunden ist. Weitere Themen: Europa macht die Eurokrise zu schaffen. Werner Weidenfeld kritisiert die Verengung und plädiert für ein politisches Projekt Europa. Berlins Große Politik im Fall Libyen analysiert Gunther Hellmann. Zudem ein aktuelles Interview mit dem Generaldelegierten Palästinas in Deutschland: Palästinas Antrag auf UN-Vollmitgliedschaft im September 2011 – Lösung des Knotens oder Verschärfung der Auseinandersetzung?
|
570 |
noneYang, Ching-yi 14 August 2007 (has links)
none
|
Page generated in 0.0791 seconds