Asian Studies


Book Services


 


 About us
   
contact details

 Catalogue
   
business & economics
   
cultural studies
   
fiction
   
history & biography
   
languages & linguistics
   
literary studies
   
natural history/environment
   
politics & international affairs
   
religion & philosophy
   
visual arts

 Ordering
   
trade terms
   
contacts

 Participating publishers


.

Burma and Japan Since 1940
From ‘Co-Prosperity’ to ‘Quiet Dialogue’

by Donald M. Seekins, Meio University
  • Posits dialogue as an alternative to sanctions in international reform efforts

  • An unusual insight into Japanese post-war diplomacy

  • Shows how Burma is viewed through Asian eyes

Modern Myanmar/Burma is very much a creation of World War II, when the British colony was occupied by the Japanese, and its immediate aftermath. These years saw the rise of Aung San and his assassination, as well as the establishment of military forces by the Japanese (subsequently evolving into today’s ruling junta) and a sharp escalation of inter-ethnic antagonism and violence.

Today the military regime continues to survive despite strong opposition at home and abroad. Its resilience is often explained in human rights terms or by reference to close military engagement with drug-dealing warlords. What is less recognized, however, is that not everywhere is Burma an international pariah state. By its inclusion within their fold, the ASEAN states have worked hard to ‘normalise’ Burma, and China has provided strong backing for the military regime. The Japanese government, which gave massive amounts of development aid to Burma before 1988, has pursued a policy of ‘quiet dialogue’ as a non-confrontational way of promoting economic and political reform.

Tracing Burma-Japan relations since 1940, this volume will be of value not only for an understanding of post-war Japanese diplomacy and aid programmes, but also because it offers new material and insights on the ongoing story of Burma itself.

Contents: Introduction; Burma in World War II - The Paradoxes of State- and Army building; Burmese and Japanese War Narratives; Biri-Kichi - Burma-Japan Relations and the Politics of Aid, 1951-88; Japan’s Response to the Post-1988 Political Crisis in Burma; The Ambiguities of ‘Quiet Dialogue’; Conclusions; Bibliography; Index

Published by NIAS Press, NIAS Monographs # 106
Published 2007, 181 pp., illus.
ISBN 978 87 7694 98 4, hardback, £40.00
ISBN 978 87 7694 017 1, paperback, £16.99