1st Edition
Democracy in Occupied Japan The U.S. Occupation and Japanese Politics and Society
Introduction. The U.S. Occupation of Japan: A Secondary Affair: Innovation, Continuity and Compromise Mark E. Caprio & Yoneyuki Sugita 1. Feeding the Nation: Food Policy, Land Reform, and Japan’s Economic Recovery Steven J. Fuchs 2. Occupation Policy and Japanese Fisheries Management, 1945-1952 Sayuri Guthrie Shimizu 3. Protective Labor Legislation and Gender Equality: The Impact of the Occupation on Japanese Working Women Maho Toyoda 4. The Impact of the Occupation on Crime in Japan H. Richard Friman 5. Education Reform and History Textbooks in Occupied Japan Yoshiko Nozaki 6. Universal Health Insurance: The Unfinished Reform of Japan’s Healthcare System Yoneyuki Sugita 7. Resident Aliens: Forging the Political Status of Koreans in Occupied Japan Mark E. Caprio 8. Occupation Policy and Postwar Sino-Japanese Relations: Severing Economic Ties Sayuri Guthrie Shimizu 9. A Secondary Affair: United States Economic Foreign Policy and Japan, 1945-1968 Michael A. Barnhart
Biography
Mark E. Caprio is a member of the Department of Law and Politics, Rikkyo University.
Yoneyuki Sugita is Associate Professor of American History at Osaka University of Foreign Studies, Japan.
'This book, in short, offers a refreshingly new approach to the study of the seven years of the American Occupation of Japan. The authors of each of the studies and the editors are to be congratulated for their successful efforts to look in a new way at this important period of Japanese and American history.' - Ray A. Moore, Pacific Affairs, Vol. 80, No. 3, Fall 2007
'Bearing in mind the rich literature on the political, social, and economic effects of the U.S. occupation, editors Mark Caprio and Yoneyuki Sugita have compiled a groundbreaking collection that adds to our understanding of Japan since 1945 in two ways. Expanding the scope of scholarly inquiry, the richly documented essays in Democracy in Occupied Japan study critical, but previously unexplored, issues that infl uenced postwar Japan, including health insurance, textbook revision, policing, and policy regarding resident aliens' - Journal of Japanese Studies, 2009






