Loading…

Chinese and Japanese Public Opinion Searching for Moral Security

Japanese and Chinese hold strikingly similar opinions of each other—both are negative. Since the normalization of Japan’s postwar relations with China in 1978, opinion surveys document a clear deterioration of goodwill after nearly two decades of relatively good relations. This trend has accelerated...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Asian perspective 2007, 31(1), , pp.92-125
Main Authors: Mindy L. Kotler, Naotaka Sugawara, Tetsuya Yamada
Format: Article
Language:Korean
Subjects:
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Japanese and Chinese hold strikingly similar opinions of each other—both are negative. Since the normalization of Japan’s postwar relations with China in 1978, opinion surveys document a clear deterioration of goodwill after nearly two decades of relatively good relations. This trend has accelerated over the past ten years. Most noticeable is how much the decline of trust coincides with a rise of internal socio-economic anxieties in both countries. The central governments are faltering in their ability to provide social stability and cohesion—a sense of safety and material well-being—while establishing a sense of national identity. We argue that current Sino-Japanese tensions reflect more each country’s domestic stresses than they do disagreements over history, any inherent geostrategic competition, or regional economic rivalry. Restoration, or the establishment of prosperity, social certainty, and “moral security” in both countries, is necessary before China and Japan can have any meaningful resolution of their historical and geopolitical issues. KCI Citation Count: 1
ISSN:0258-9184
2288-2871