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International graduate students of science in Japan : an ethnographic approach from a situated learning theory perspectiveSawyer, Rieko January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 305-313). / Also available by subscription via World Wide Web / xiii, 313 leaves, bound ill. 29 cm
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Yearning for a distant music : consumption of Hawaiian music and dance in JapanKurokawa, Yoko, 1957 January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 532-554) and discography (leaves 555-557). / Also available by subscription via World Wide Web / 2 v. (xix, 557 leaves, bound) music 29 cm
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From The floating world to The 7 stages of grieving: the presentation of contemporary Australian plays in Japan / From The floating world to The seven stages of grieving / Presentation of contemporary Australian plays in JapanSawada, Keiji January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Society, Culture, Media & Philosophy, Department of Critical and Cultural Studies, 2005. / Bibliography: p. 274-291. / Introduction -- The emergence of "honyakugeki" -- Shôgekijô and the quest for national identity -- "Honyakugeki" after the rise of Shôgekijô -- The presentation of Australian plays as "honyakugeki" -- Representations of Aborigines in Japan -- Minorities in Japan and theatre -- The Japanese productions of translated Aboriginal plays -- Significance of the productions of Aboriginal plays in Japan -- Conclusion. / Many Australian plays have been presented in Japan since the middle of the 1990s. This thesis demonstrates that in presenting Australian plays the Japanese Theatre has not only attempted to represent an aspect of Australian culture, but has also necessarily revealed aspects of Japanese culture. This thesis demonstrates that understanding this process is only fully possible when the particular cultural function of 'translated plays' in the Japanese cultural context is established. In order to demonstrate this point the thesis surveys the history of so-called 'honyakugeki' (translated plays) in the Japanese Theatre and relates them to the production of Western plays to ideas and processes of modernisation in Japan. -- Part one of the thesis demonstrates in particular that it was the alternative Theatre movement of the 1960s and 1970s which liberated 'honyakugeki' from the issue of 'authenticity'. The thesis also demonstrates that in this respect the Japanese alternative theatre and the Australian alternative theatre of the same period have important connections to the quest for 'national identity'. Part one of the thesis also demonstrates that the Japanese productions of Australian plays such as The Floating World, Diving for Pearls and Honour reflected in specific ways this history and controversy over 'honyakugeki'. Furthermore, these productions can be analysed to reveal peculiarly Japanese issues especially concerning the lack of understanding of Australian culture in Japan and the absence of politics from the Japanese contemporary theatre. -- Part two of the thesis concentrates on the production of translations of the Australian Aboriginal plays Stolen and The 7 Stages of Grieving. 'This part of the thesis demonstrates that the presentation of these texts opened a new chapter in the history of presenting 'honyakugeki' in Japan. It demonstrates that the Japanese theatre had to confront the issue of 'authenticity' once more, but in a radically new way. The thesis also demonstrates that the impact of these productions in Japan had a particular Japanese cultural and social impact, reflecting large issues about the issue of minorities and indigenous people in Japan and about the possibilities of theatre for minorities. In particular the thesis demonstrates that these representations of Aborigines introduced a new image of Australian Aborigines to that which was dominant amongst Japanese anthropologists. / Mode of access: World Wide Web. / 291 p
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Why reforms succeeded or failed : policy competition and regulatory adaptation in Japan’s postwar health policyLeduc, Benoit Rousseau 11 1900 (has links)
This dissertation investigates the position that interest groups occupy in the decisionmaking
process of the government of Japan from case studies in the area of health
policy. Three important points are demonstrated. First, the medical associations have
created strong interdependent linkages to the party in power and have obtained their
policy preferences from within the party's decision-making organs. Second, the policy
design process in Japan's leading political party, the Liberal Democratic Party, has left
little room for the prime minister's initiatives in health care policy. The party has
deconcentrated the policy approval process in various councils over which the prime
minister has little or no influence. This stands in sharp contrast to the situation
prevailing in most parliamentary systems. Third, the thesis demonstrates how the prime
minister can, through the design of supra-partisan national councils for reforms,
temporarily bypass the normal policymaking channels of the party and enhance its
ability to carry out policy adaptation. Two such national councils are investigated: the
Nakasone Provisional Council on Administrative Reform (1981-84) and the Hashimoto
Administrative Reform Council (1997-98). The temporary national councils are
investigated as institutions complementary to the normal policymaking channels of the
ministerial and party committees. In the field of health care, the national councils have
introduced policy options which had been rejected for years by the medical body and
the party in power. The Hashimoto national council, in particular, introduced marketoriented
policies that significantly altered Japan's health care system. Three policy areas
are investigated: the introduction of principles of information disclosure through the
provision of medical files, the creation of transparent price determination mechanisms,
and the attempt at reforming the medical fee schedule. These policy changes are seen as
a first step toward the introduction of market principles in Japan's service economy. / Arts, Faculty of / Political Science, Department of / Graduate
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American business and United States foreign economic policy in East Asia, 1953-1960Traylor, John Christopher, 1960- January 1987 (has links)
The Eisenhower Administration sought to create a large role for U.S. multinational corporations, who could provide a significant amount of the capital needed for trade expansion and industrial growth. This policy became known as "trade not aid." The trade not aid policy reflected both the fiscal conservatism and ideological beliefs of the Eisenhower Administration. By 1957 Eisenhower shifted to a policy of trade and aid. This study examines three foreign economic policies in the context of American-East Asian relations. It focused primarily on Japan, since that country served as the center of the American regional "workshop economy" concept in Asia. Tracing the development of the trade/aid program, this thesis then compares and contrasts governmental policies with business activity and opinion during the 1950s. It concludes that the foreign economic policy of the Eisenhower Administration contained serious flaws, served the needs of only a few countries in the region, and was weighted heavily toward a military support role rather than economic development. (Abstract shortened with permission of author.)
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Sedentism, Agriculture, and the Neolithic Demographic Transition: Insights from Jōmon PaleodemographyUnknown Date (has links)
A paleodemographic analysis was conducted using skeletal data from Jōmon period sites in Japan. 15P5 ratios were produced as proxy birth rate values for sites throughout the Jōmon period. Previous studies based on numbers of residential sites indicated a substantial population increase in the Kantō and Chūbu regions in central Japan, climaxing during the Middle Jōmon period, followed by an equally dramatic population decrease, somewhat resembling changes that occurred during a Neolithic Demographic Transition (NDT). The Jōmon are viewed as a relatively sedentary, non-agricultural group, and provided an opportunity to attempt to separate the factors of sedentism and agriculture as they relate to the NDT. Skeletal data showed fairly stable trends in birth rates, instead of the expected increase and decrease in values. This discrepancy calls into question the validity of previous studies. The stable population levels suggest that sedentism alone was not the primary driver of the NDT. / Includes bibliography. / Thesis (M.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2017. / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
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Clothing their identities : competing ideas of masculinity and identity in Meiji Japanese culture / Title on signature form: Clothing their identities :|bcompeting ideas of masculinity & identity in Meiji Japanese cultureCuly, Anna M. 20 July 2013 (has links)
This is an in-depth analysis of competing cultural ideas at a pivotal time in Japanese history through study of masculinity and identity. Through diaries, newspaper articles, and illustrations found in popular periodicals of the Meiji period, it is evident that there were two major groups who espoused very different sets of ideals competing for the favor of the masses and the control of Japanese progress in the modern world. Manner of dress, comportment, hygiene, and various other parts of outward appearance signified the mentality and ideology of the person in question. One group espoused traditional Japanese ideas of masculinity and dress while another advocated embracing Western dress and culture. This, in turn, explained their opinions on the direction they believed Japan should take. Throughout the Meiji period (1868-1912), the two ideas grew and competed for supremacy until the late Meiji period when they merged to form a traditional-minded modernity. / Department of History
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Racial Equality Bill: Japanese proposal at Paris Peace Conference : diplomatic manoeuvres and reasons for rejection / Racial Equality Bill : Reasons for rejectionImamoto, Shizuka January 2006 (has links)
Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts (Honours) at Macquarie University. / Thesis (MA (Hons))--Macquarie University (Division of Humanities, Dept. of Asian Languages), 2006. / Bibliography: leaves 137-160. / Introduction -- Anglo-Japanese relations and World War One -- Fear of Japan in Australia -- William Morris Hughes -- Japan's proposal and diplomacy at Paris -- Reasons for rejection : a discussion -- Conclusion. / Japan as an ally of Britain, since the signing of Anglo-Japanese Alliance in 1902, entered World War One at British request. During the Great War Japan fought Germany in Asia and afforded protection to Australia. After the conclusion of the War, a peace conference was held at Paris in 1919. As a victorious ally and as one of the Five Great Powers of the day, Japan participated at the Paris Peace Conference, and proposed racial equality to be enshrined in the Covenant of the League of Nations. This Racial Equality Bill, despite the tireless efforts of the Japanese delegates who engaged the representatives of other countries in intense diplomatic negotiations, was rejected. The rejection, a debatable issue ever since, has inspired many explanations including the theory that it was a deliberate Japanese ploy to achieve other goals in the agenda. This thesis has researched the reasons for rejection and contends that the rejection was not due to any one particular reason. Four key factors: a) resolute opposition from Australian Prime Minister Hughes determined to protect White Australia Policy, b) lack of British support, c) lack of US support, and d) lack of support from the British dominions of New Zealand, Canada and South Africa; converged to defeat the Japanese proposal. Japanese inexperience in international diplomacy evident from strategic and tactical mistakes, their weak presentations and communications, and enormous delays in negotiations, at Paris, undermined Japan's position at the conference, but the reasons for rejection of the racial equality proposal were extrinsic. / Mode of access: World Wide Web. / xii, 188 leaves
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Aggregate and cross-sectional analyses on capital structure of Japanese manufacturing corporations.January 1995 (has links)
by Kok-fai Chung. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1995. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 86-92). / Chapter Chapter 1 --- Introduction --- p.1 / Chapter Chapter 2 --- Corporate Capital Structure Decision: A Review of Theory and Evidence --- p.5 / Chapter A. --- Introduction --- p.5 / Chapter B. --- Static Tradeoff Theory --- p.6 / Chapter C. --- Agency Theory --- p.11 / Chapter D. --- Asymmetric Information Theory --- p.13 / Chapter E. --- The Choice of Providers of Finance --- p.16 / Chapter F. --- Concluding Remarks --- p.19 / Chapter Chapter 3 --- An Analysis on Aggregate Capital Structure of Japanese Manufacturing Corporations --- p.22 / Chapter A. --- Introduction --- p.22 / Chapter B. --- Setting the Stage --- p.22 / Chapter C. --- Historical Predominance of Bank Loans in Japan and Main Bank System --- p.25 / Chapter D. --- Substitutions of Bond Issues and Internal Fund for Bank Borrowings --- p.29 / Chapter E. --- Concluding Remarks --- p.35 / Chapter Chapter 4 --- Determinants of Financial Heterogeneity among the Japanese Manufacturing Corporations: An Econometric Analysis --- p.42 / Chapter A. --- Introduction --- p.42 / Chapter B. --- Statistical Evidence of Financial Heterogeneity of Japanese Manufacturing Corporations --- p.43 / Chapter C. --- Factors Affecting the Debt-Equity Choice and Bank Loan- Bond Issue Choice --- p.52 / Chapter D. --- Data Sources and Methods of Sampling and Estimations --- p.68 / Chapter E. --- Estimation Results and Discussions --- p.70 / Chapter F. --- Concluding Remarks --- p.79 / Chapter Chapter 5 --- Conclusion --- p.82 / Bibliography --- p.86
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William Smith Clark: A Study in Education, Christianity, and American-Japanese Cooperation in the Nineteenth CenturyWalker, Brett L. 14 May 1993 (has links)
In March, 1990, I was hired to teach English in Japan at a small, private academy in Chitose, Hokkaido. The school was called the Academy of Clark's Spirit. My first day at work I was asked by my boss, Sato Masako: "So Mr. Walker, of course you know who Dr. Clark is?" I told Mr. Sato that I was sorry, but that I did not. "You said in your resume that you are a history student? We named this school after him. He's one of the most important people in Hokkaido's history," he said, looking disappointed. Mr. Sato explained that he wanted me to teach with the spirit of Clark in mind and bring to his classrooms what Clark brought to Hokkaido over a hundred years before. I nodded and asked to see my apartment. I began this study of William Smith Clark after my first stay in Hokkaido. It is the product of my interest in modern Japanese history, particularly Japan's relationship with the United States. The first leg of this project was started in Amherst, Massachusetts, where I met with Dr. John Maki. He directed me through the Clark collection at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. I had several interviews with Maki during the week I was in Massachusetts and was given liberal access to the Clark collection under his influence. The second leg of my study was continued in Sapporo, Hokkaido. I met with Dr. Toshiyuki Akizuki at Hokkaido University and was shown through the Clark collection there. I lived in Hokkaido for about two years and have kept notes on the tribute paid to Clark and visible signs of his impact on the northern island. The focus of this study is to look at Clark's contribution to the development of Hokkaido by detailing his work in education, Christianity, and agriculture. By focusing on Clark's particular contribution to Hokkaido a larger historical trend, that is, the importation of foreign ideas in the history of Meiji Japan, is better understood. ~he results of this study conclude that Clark was an important figure in the history of Hokkaido's settlement, and to the development of nineteenth century Japan.,. ,Clark was also an important figure in the history of the relations between Japan and the United states., It is in lasting institutions like Hokkaido University and the Sapporo Independent Christian Church where Clark's impact is best illustrated. These institutions, particularly the university, were the nerve centers for Hokkaido's development, and Clark planted these seeds of enlightenment, under the direction of the Meiji government, in the fertile northern soil. I have gained a better understanding of Clark's stay in Hokkaido because of this project, but doubt that I could even now satisfy Mr. Sato's insistence that I teach with Clark's spirit. I do understand, however, why it was important to Mr. Sato that I try. Clark's phrase "Boys Be Ambitious" still embodies the spirit of many educators in Hokkaido and his success with Japanese students is one of the better examples of international exchange in any country. Clark is cherished by the people of Hokkaido as the spiritual pioneer of their island even though his stay
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