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Published byChad Robinson Modified over 9 years ago
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Total Defeat Explaining “stabilization”
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Total War: the front lines euphoria Early victory
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Total War: the front lines euphoria Early victory atrocity
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Total War comes home
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Landscapes of Total Defeat
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Total Defeat: Kyodatsu
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Total Defeat
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Problem: Explaining Stability Fears of revolution Hopes for revolution
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Problem: Explaining Stability
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Occupation Reforms 1. Dismantle the old order [blamed for the war] purge wartime leaders (military, party, business) break up zaibatsu expropriate landlords
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Land Reform Constituencies for and against change Land reform: tenants and bureaucratic reforms v. landlords
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Labor reform unions and social policy bureaucrats v. business elite and economic bureaucrats
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Constitutional Reform: adapting old form
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Reverse course Context of deepening “cold war” Fear of left in Japan From about 1947: Crackdown on labor Retreat from zaibatsu dissolution Purge of communists, 1950 De-purge of some of “old guard”
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Recap: Explaining “stabilization” Stability ≠ stagnation or lack of change Hybrid result: mix of promoting, managing, resisting, change SCAP mobilizes existing constituencies, shifts balance among them Effectively: land, labor cases Less effect: zaibatsu dissolution, education, policing Economic recovery also critical
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Transwar trends in political economy and society Industrial policy Three iterations: “self-control” circa early 1930s State control: 1940 Control Associations Postwar MITI: gets the state-private mix right? Labor Organization Wartime controls codify seniority wages Patriotic Associations feed into inclusive employee unions Agrarian Reform Further weaken landlords, strengthen tenants
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