Academic literature on the topic 'Japan History Allied occupation 1945-1952'

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Journal articles on the topic "Japan History Allied occupation 1945-1952"

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Havens, Tom, and Mark Sandler. "The Confusion Era: Art and Culture of Japan During the Allied Occupation, 1945-1952." Monumenta Nipponica 53, no. 2 (1998): 295. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2385690.

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Badawi, Habib. "Education Reform in Post-War Japan: An Interdisciplinary Analysis of Policies, Impact, and Historical Context (1945–1952)." At-tadzkir: Islamic Education Journal 3, no. 2 (June 6, 2024): 70–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.59373/attadzkir.v3i2.56.

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This academic study examines the profound educational reforms that took place in post-war Japan from 1945 to 1952. The paper focuses on the transformative impact of the United States Education Mission on the Japanese education system during the Allied Occupation. The overarching objective of these reforms was to establish a democratic educational framework encompassing changes in administration, curriculum, textbooks, and teacher performance. This study sheds light on the historical context, policy implementation, and societal responses to these reforms. Additionally, it explores issues related to women's higher education during this transformative era, providing a comprehensive analysis of a pivotal chapter in Japan's history.
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Lee, Victoria. "Microbial Transformations." Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences 48, no. 4 (September 1, 2018): 441–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/hsns.2018.48.4.441.

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The domestication of penicillin production in Japan was a priority for the Allied occupation government (1945–1952) immediately after World War II, since manufacturing the drug using raw materials available locally would lower the cost of the occupation. In place of employing the analytical concept of technology transfer, this article explores processes of domestication (kokusanka) using the records of the Japan Penicillin Research Association (Nihon penishirin gakujutsu kyōgikai), an interdisciplinary academic association set up to mediate between government policy and industrial manufacturers, and which directed research in the critical early years of penicillin production. I argue that an examination of the occupation period is especially revealing of the contribution of indigenous knowledge from the World War II and prewar periods to the development of microbiology during Japan’s “economic miracle” (1950s to early 1970s), and I highlight the intellectual dimensions that were specific to Japanese science by comparison with other national cases of penicillin domestication. Beyond the transfer of submerged culture fermentation technology for antibiotic mass production, a distinctive engagement with agricultural chemistry’s longstanding perception of microbes—as alchemists of the environment, with the ability to transform resource scarcity into productive abundance—organized the knowledge by which penicillin scientists made the domestic environment work, and deeply shaped antibiotic research in the subsequent decades in Japan.
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Mullins, Mark R. "Secularization, Deprivatization, and the Reappearance of ‘Public Religion’ in Japanese Society." Journal of Religion in Japan 1, no. 1 (2012): 61–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/221183412x628442.

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Abstract Sociological theories about the fate of religion in modern societies originated in Europe and were initially based on the history of Western Christianity. Whether or not these theoretical perspectives are useful for the analysis of other religious traditions in non-Western regions of the world has been the focus of considerable debate for decades. This article engages some of the familiar theories of secularization in light of major developments in Japanese religion and society over the past two centuries. While it has been widely assumed that modernization inevitably brings with it a decline in religion, the first phase of this process in Japan was accompanied by the creation of a powerful new form of religion—State Shintō—that served to unite the nation around a common set of symbols and institutions for half a century. This was followed by the rapid and forced secularization of Shintō during the Allied Occupation (1945-1952), which essentially privatized or removed it from public institutions. Since the end of the Occupation, however, there has been an ongoing movement to restore the special status of Shintō and its role in the public sphere. Even though recent case studies and survey research indicate that individual religiosity and organized religions are facing serious decline today, the reappearance of religion in public life and institutions represented by this restoration movement also needs to be taken into account in our assessment of secularization in contemporary Japan.
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KIM, Kyung-ok. "Widow's Movement and Mother and Child Protection in Postwar Japan." Korean Association For Japanese History 62 (December 31, 2023): 149–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.24939/kjh.2023.12.62.149.

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This paper examines the widow's movement and mother and child protection issues from immediately after the defeat to April 1952. The analysis until April 1952 is related to the political situation in Japan during this period. Japan was under Allied Occupation from immediately after the defeat until the San Francisco Peace Treaty took effect in April 1952. After this treaty went into effect, Japan became an independent government. During this period, Japanese widows could be divided into war widows and ordinary widows. The most distinctive feature of war widows is that the bereaved family, centered on men other than widows, took the initiative and proceeded with a bereaved movement focusing on mental treatment issues such as memorials and condolences. The feature of the widow's movement examined in this paper focuses on life problems. Therefore, it includes not only ordinary widows but also war widows in need due to livelihoods. In addition, unlike the bereaved movement, which is centered on male bereaved families, the widow's movement is centered on women. This article examines the reality of widows who lived in chaos during the occupation period, which began immediately after the defeat in World War II. Then, through the relationship between the mother-child dormitory and the widow's movement, it will examines the issue of mother-child protection. This analysis will provide implications for examining the changing social and mental awareness of widows based on life problems.
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Jeon, Chihyung. "“No Japanese in the Cockpit”." Pacific Historical Review 88, no. 4 (2019): 554–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/phr.2019.88.4.554.

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This article examines the techno-cultural process of accommodating, training, and qualifying the Japanese as pilots responsible for Pacific flights in the decade after the end of the allied occupation of Japan in 1952. There were two related modes of qualifying Japanese pilots, both of which created traffic of people, knowledge, and machines across the Pacific: One was the slow, politicized process of permitting Japanese pilots to fly again and training them with reference to American models of flying. Another mode of qualification consisted of measuring and recording the bodily differences between Japanese and American pilots, so that Japanese bodies could fit into American-designed cockpits and flying garments. Under the postwar technopolitical regime and given lingering racial perceptions, the terms and norms of the flying body and practice were mostly set by the American system, to which the Japanese worked hard to adapt. In this process, the cockpit and the Pacific served as crucial frames of reference for the Japanese. With its focus on pilot training and qualification, this article aims to bring together the histories of aviation, science, and U.S.-Japan relations and to situate them in the Pacific as a physical, imaginary, and technopolitical space.
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Thomas, Jolyon. "Religions Policies During the Allied Occupation of Japan, 1945-1952." Religion Compass 8, no. 9 (September 2014): 275–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rec3.12117.

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Kumano, Ruriko. "Anticommunism and Academic Freedom: Walter C. Eells and the “Red Purge” in Occupied Japan." History of Education Quarterly 50, no. 4 (November 2010): 513–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1748-5959.2010.00292.x.

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In August 1945, Imperial Japan surrendered to the Allied Powers. From September 1945 to April 1952, the United States–the most dominant power among the victorious nations–occupied the defeated country.
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Sheffer, Edith. "On Edge: Building the Border in East and West Germany." Central European History 40, no. 2 (May 14, 2007): 307–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0008938907000556.

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How did the inter-German border, created in 1945, become one of the most formidable boundaries in the world by 1952? The early boundary was not fenced, but just years in the wake of National Socialism's “Thousand Year Reich” Germans on both sides broadly accepted and enforced it against other Germans. These early divisions made possible the GDR's physical closure and fortification of the border after 1952. The hastily drawn demarcation line between Allied zones of occupation had rather quickly expanded into a legal, economic, political, and social boundary—in which both East and West developed a stake.
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카미벳부 마사노부. "A Study on the Japanese Religious Policies during the Allied Occupation of Japan, 1945-1952." Journal of the society of Japanese Language and Literature, Japanology ll, no. 60 (February 2013): 485–506. http://dx.doi.org/10.21792/trijpn.2013..60.024.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Japan History Allied occupation 1945-1952"

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De, Matos Christine, University of Western Sydney, of Arts Education and Social Sciences College, and School of Humanities. "Imposing peace and prosperity: Australia, social justice and labour reform in occupied Japan, 1945-1949." THESIS_CAESS_HUM_De Matos_C.xml, 2003. http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/480.

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Historiography tends to seek patterns of inevitability, attempting to explain a decided course rather than incorporating other evident, though unfulfilled possibilities. In the case of historiography on the Allied Occupation of Japan, this is particularly obvious. Occupation scholarship appears absorbed by the overarching US presence in Japan during this period, reflects the dominant paradigm of the Cold War and when it does venture past the US remains focused on the US-Japan dichotomy. Australia also participated in the Occupation, also held a vision for a Pacific future and developed a relationship with Japan. Often the Australian perspective did not coincide with that of the US especially on the terrain of ideological and historical experiences and interpretations. The potential for conflict between the two nations’ approaches to post-surrender Japan is particularly evident in labour reform policy and issues of social and economic justice – the focus of this thesis. Australian policies towards labour reform under the Chifley Labor Government are examined in this thesis within the context of the Australian labour movement’s historical legacy, Orientalism and racial stereotypes, the Cold War, US hegemony, idealism and pragmatism and overall Australian policy towards Occupied Japan as a dual-paradigm structure. This thesis investigates attempts to turn labour reform polices and ideals into practice, via the diplomatic control machinery established for the Occupation namely the Allied Council for Japan and Far Eastern Commission and as articulated by Australian government representatives including Dr H.V. Evatt, William Macmahon Ball, Patrick Shaw and Sir Frederick Eggleston. The thesis contests the predominant simplistic harsh peace label given to Australian policy in the current literature. By examining Australian policy towards Occupied Japan from a micro perspective, what emerges is a more complex foreign policy mosaic to which the research in this thesis is a contribution
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Fujiwara, Tetsuya. "Restoring honor: Japanese Pacific War disabled war veterans from 1945 to 1963." Diss., University of Iowa, 2011. https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1457.

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This dissertation examines the lives of Japanese disabled war veterans and the activism of the Japanese Disabled Veterans Association (JDVA: Nippon Shôigunjin kai) in the early postwar period, beginning immediately following the Allied Occupation in the summer of 1945 and ending in 1963, when the National Diet passed the "Act on Special Aid to the Wounded and Sick Retired Soldiers" (Senshôbyôsha Tokubetsu Engo-hô). Established in 1952, the JDVA would play a leading role in securing welfare for Japanese disabled war veterans.
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Cole, Emily. "Towards a New Way of Seeing: Finding Reality in Postwar Japanese Photography, 1945-1970." Thesis, University of Oregon, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/19275.

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This study examines postwar Japanese photography and the influence of World War Two, the Allied Occupation (1945-1952), and social and economic transformations during the Era of High-Speed Growth (1955-1970) on ways in which photographers approached and depicted reality. In the late 1940s, censorship erased the reality of a devastated society and evidence of the Allied Occupation from photography magazines. Once censorship ended in 1949, photographers reacted to miserable living conditions, as well as the experience of producing wartime propaganda, by confronting reality directly. Finally, photographers responded to social transformations and resulting challenges during the Era of High-Speed Growth by shifting from an objective reporting to a subjective critique of reality. A study of photography from 1945 to 1970 not only demonstrates how socio-historical forces influence photography but also reveals key changes in Japanese society and the urban landscape as Japan transitioned from a defeated, occupied nation to an economic powerhouse.
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Reed, Marie Rose. "Teaching democracy : education reforms during the allied occupation of Japan, 1945-1952." Online access for everyone, 2007. http://www.dissertations.wsu.edu/Thesis/Spring2007/M_Reed_050307.pdf.

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Chan, Wing-yan. "Internal discrepancies over the economic deconcentration policy during the period of allied occupation of Japan, 1945-1952." Click to view the E-thesis via HKUTO, 2007. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record/B37928028.

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Krumrey, Brett Alan 1968. "Japanese written language reforms during the Allied Occupation (1945-1952): SCAP and romanization." Thesis, The University of Arizona, 1993. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/278364.

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This paper discusses the Romaji Movement and its role in the reform of the Japanese written language during the Allied Occupation of Japan (1945-1952). Past analyses concerning the Romaji Movement have suggested that romanization failed due to conspiracies against it and have neglected to consider other alternatives being pursued by the Japanese government. This paper will take a closer look at the Americans who supported romanization, their motivations for doing so, and the development of SCAP policy towards language reform. Since simplification, not romanization, was the preferred objective of both the American and the Japanese governments, this paper goes on to examine alternative methods to simplification which, in the end, proved to be highly successful.
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Chan, Wing-yan, and 陳穎恩. "Internal discrepancies over the economic deconcentration policy duringthe period of allied occupation of Japan, 1945-1952." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2007. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B37928028.

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Carter, Carolyne History Australian Defence Force Academy UNSW. "Bewtween war and peace : the experience of occupation for members of the British Commonwealth Occupation Force, 1945-1952." Awarded by:University of New South Wales - Australian Defence Force Academy. School of History, 2002. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/38647.

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This thesis explores the British Commonwealth experience of occupation in Japan from 1945-1952. It draws on official and private records from the four participating British Commonwealth countries ??? Australia, Britain, India and New Zealand- to examine the complex relationship that developed between the occupying troops and the occupied Japanese population in the period between the cessation of hostilities and the formal ratification of a Peace Treaty. The thesis begins with an analysis of the preconceptions British Commonwealth troops brought with them to Japan, to establish the context for their cross-cultural encounter with Japan and the Japanese people. An understanding of the historical background enables the impressions formed by BCOF troops during the occupation to be presented not as random observations, but as part of a tradition of contact and cultural critique. The British Commonwealth experience in Japan was shaped by a number of external factors. Delays in moving to Japan weakened media and public interest in the force, eroded morale and precipitated a ???foreign force??? mentality. Once in Japan, the dominant US presence, the subordinate status of BCOF and the shortcomings of the isolated, rural area allocated to the force were a source of disappointment and frustration. But the difficulties attending British Commonwealth involvement in the occupation should not obscure the simultaneous development of a significant cultural encounter. The circumstances of the occupation created a particular dynamic between BCOF troops and Japanese civilians. The responsibilities and obligations that SCAP conferred on the British Commonwealth force invested BCOF personnel with authority over the Japanese. The disparity in power was reinforced by participation in occupation tasks that confirmed their status as occupiers. The occupation relationship was heavily influenced by the nature of personal interactions established between BCOF personnel and the Japanese people. Service in Japan provided opportunities for troops to reassess their views of the Japanese in the light of personal experience. For some, the cultural differences they observed only reinforced their sense of the ???otherness??? of the Japanese. For many others, the occupation provided a bridge between war and peace, as contact with Japanese people eased the intense hatreds generated during the war. For most British Commonwealth personnel, service with BCOF impacted in some way on the beliefs they held about Japan and the Japanese.
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De, Matos Christine. "Imposing peace and prosperity: Australia, social justice and labour reform in occupied Japan, 1945-1949." Thesis, 2003. http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/480.

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Historiography tends to seek patterns of inevitability, attempting to explain a decided course rather than incorporating other evident, though unfulfilled possibilities. In the case of historiography on the Allied Occupation of Japan, this is particularly obvious. Occupation scholarship appears absorbed by the overarching US presence in Japan during this period, reflects the dominant paradigm of the Cold War and when it does venture past the US remains focused on the US-Japan dichotomy. Australia also participated in the Occupation, also held a vision for a Pacific future and developed a relationship with Japan. Often the Australian perspective did not coincide with that of the US especially on the terrain of ideological and historical experiences and interpretations. The potential for conflict between the two nations’ approaches to post-surrender Japan is particularly evident in labour reform policy and issues of social and economic justice – the focus of this thesis. Australian policies towards labour reform under the Chifley Labor Government are examined in this thesis within the context of the Australian labour movement’s historical legacy, Orientalism and racial stereotypes, the Cold War, US hegemony, idealism and pragmatism and overall Australian policy towards Occupied Japan as a dual-paradigm structure. This thesis investigates attempts to turn labour reform polices and ideals into practice, via the diplomatic control machinery established for the Occupation namely the Allied Council for Japan and Far Eastern Commission and as articulated by Australian government representatives including Dr H.V. Evatt, William Macmahon Ball, Patrick Shaw and Sir Frederick Eggleston. The thesis contests the predominant simplistic harsh peace label given to Australian policy in the current literature. By examining Australian policy towards Occupied Japan from a micro perspective, what emerges is a more complex foreign policy mosaic to which the research in this thesis is a contribution
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Traynor, Chloe-Rose. "Fraternising with the enemy : the British Commonwealth Occupation Force and its interactions with Japanese citizens, 1946 – 52." Thesis, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:50018.

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This thesis examines the relationships between Australian troops of the British Commonwealth Occupation Force (BCOF) and Japanese citizens during the Allied Occupation of Japan following World War Two (1945 – 1952). Literature regarding the Allied Occupation of Japan largely focuses on the United States and its role in the development of post-war Japan’s politics and foreign relations. This extends to social and cultural histories, which focus on the fraternisation involving American GIs. The BCOF was, in contrast ‘the forgotten force’. In comparison to the United States, the BCOF established strict guidelines towards fraternisation. However, this thesis argues that these guidelines did nothing to stop fraternisation with the local Japanese population. Using archival evidence, memoirs, media and existing research, this thesis analyses and discuss Australian troops and their interactions with Japanese citizens.
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Books on the topic "Japan History Allied occupation 1945-1952"

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Edward, Ward Robert, Sakamoto Yoshikazu, Nihon Gakujutsu Shinkōkai, Joint Committee on Japanese Studies., and Social Science Research Council (U.S.), eds. Democratizing Japan: The allied occupation. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1987.

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1951-, Neary Ian, ed. War revolution & Japan. Folkestone: Japan Library, 1993.

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Bates, Peter. Japan and the British Commonwealth Occupation Force 1946-52. London: Brassey's, 1993.

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Bailey, Paul John. Postwar Japan: 1945 to the present. Oxford: Blackwell, 1996.

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Clements, Monica Lynn. Pocket guide to occupied Japan. Atglen, PA: Schiffer Pub., 1999.

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Robert, Ricketts, and Swann Sebastian, eds. Inside GHQ: The Allied occupation of Japan and its legacy. New York: Continuum, 2002.

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1945-, Sandler Mark Howard, and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery (Smithsonian Institution), eds. The confusion era: Art and culture of Japan during the Allied Occupation, 1945-1952. Washington, D.C: Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution in association with the University of Washington Press, Seattle and London, 1997.

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European Association for Japanese Studies. Conference. War, revolution & Japan. Sandgate, Folkestone, Kent: Japan Library, 1993.

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1951-, Neary Ian, ed. War revolution & Japan. Folkestone: Japan Library, 1992.

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Nishi, Toshio. Unconditional democracy: Education and politics in occupied Japan, 1945-1952. Stanford, Calif: Hoover Institution Press, Stanford University, 2004.

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Book chapters on the topic "Japan History Allied occupation 1945-1952"

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Takeda, Kayoko. "Chapter 6. Interpreting with “human sympathy”." In Benjamins Translation Library, 145–70. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/btl.159.06tak.

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Utilizing language skills and cultural knowledge obtained through their time proselytizing or by virtue of growing up in Japan, a number of repatriated Christian missionaries and their children took part in the Allied war effort during the Pacific War (1941–1945) and the postwar occupation of Japan (1945–1952), including as interpreters and trainers of interpreters for military intelligence. By examining what language-related activities these missionary-connected Americans and Canadians engaged in and how they viewed their own participation in the defeat and occupation of communities among which they had recently lived and worked, this chapter adds to the discussion of roles missionaries play as linguistic mediators, informants, and advisors in colonization, trade, diplomacy, and conflict.
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"The Formulation and Reversal of the Japanese Occupation Policy." In A History of Japanese Trade and Industry Policy, edited by Mikio Sumiya, 153–69. Oxford University PressOxford, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198292517.003.0008.

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Abstract The Imperial Rescript on Surrender issued by Emperor Hirohito on 15 August 1945 brought an end to the long Pacific War. Unlike Germany, however, which was administered directly by the Allied military government, Japan had accepted the terms of the Potsdam Declaration of July 1945 and was administered indirectly, with the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers (SCAP) in overall command but with the Japanese government managing the Japanese economy, although the direction in which the post-war Japanese economy moved was naturally defined largely by the Occupation policies of the Allied Powers.
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"Building the Foundation for a Self-Supporting Economy, and MITI Policy." In A History of Japanese Trade and Industry Policy, edited by Mikio Sumiya, 235–50. Oxford University PressOxford, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198292517.003.0013.

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Abstract When the San Francisco Peace Treaty went into effect on 28 April 1952, Japan was freed from the Allied Occupation that had lasted over eight years and regained its sovereignty. The following is a review of the convoluted sequence of events that led to this outcome.
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"The Reorganization of the Political and Economic Order." In A History of Japanese Trade and Industry Policy, edited by Mikio Sumiya, 253–65. Oxford University PressOxford, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198292517.003.0014.

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Abstract Japan regained its independence on 28 April 1952 as the San Francisco Peace Treaty signed in September 19 51 came into effect. The Allied Occupation, that had lasted nearly seven years, finally came to an end. Even with the restoration of independence, however, Japan still faced a number of problems before it could achieve a complete return to the international community in the greatly changing climate of the post-war period, particularly the intensifying East-West conflict. Japan’s tasks included resumption of normal relations with the Eastern-bloc countries and reparations negotiations.
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Freeman, Alice. "CHAPTER NINE Suzuki Daisetz’ “Spiritual Japan” and Buddhist War Responsibility: An Alternative History of the Allied Occupation of Japan, 1945–1952." In Beyond Zen, 199–224. University of Hawaii Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780824892210-013.

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"Australia and the Occupation of Japan." In The British Commonwealth and the Allied Occupation of Japan, 1945 - 1952, 53–62. Global Oriental, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004242968_006.

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"Canada and the Occupation of Japan." In The British Commonwealth and the Allied Occupation of Japan, 1945 - 1952, 77–96. Global Oriental, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004242968_008.

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"India and the Occupation of Japan." In The British Commonwealth and the Allied Occupation of Japan, 1945 - 1952, 97–111. Global Oriental, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004242968_009.

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"New Zealand and the Occupation of Japan." In The British Commonwealth and the Allied Occupation of Japan, 1945 - 1952, 63–76. Global Oriental, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004242968_007.

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"History Textbook Reform in Allied Occupied Japan, 1945–1952." In Education and Schooling in Japan since 1945, 29–46. Routledge, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315052038-7.

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