When domestic interests and norms undermine the rules-based order: Reassessing Japan's attitude toward international law

IF 1 Q3 POLITICAL SCIENCE
Patrick Hein
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

It has been widely acknowledged that Japan is a full and equal member of the international legal order as it stands, asserting its postwar identity as a responsible and law-abiding member of the international community. However, this essay argues that Japan's external compliance with a rules-based order and international legal norms is not reflected in corresponding domestic practices. The article provides a social constructivist grounded in-depth analysis of the various interests and constraints that have shaped Japan's domestic response to international legal norms. The selected five comparative case studies—Non-proliferation Treaty obligations, whaling policies, the detention and deportation of asylum seekers, the dumping of radioactive waters into the high seas off Fukushima and sovereignty claims over the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands—suggest that pragmatic nationalism and cultural norms undermine Japan's commitment to the rules-based order.
当国内利益和规范破坏基于规则的秩序时:重新评估日本对国际法的态度
人们普遍认为,日本是现行国际法律秩序中完全和平等的一员,主张其战后身份是国际社会负责任和守法的一员。然而,本文认为,日本对外遵守以规则为基础的秩序和国际法律规范并没有反映在相应的国内实践中。本文以社会建构主义为基础,深入分析了影响日本国内对国际法律规范反应的各种利益和制约因素。所选的五个比较案例研究——不扩散条约义务、捕鲸政策、拘留和驱逐寻求庇护者、向福岛附近公海倾倒放射性水以及对尖阁列岛/钓鱼岛的主权主张——表明,务实的民族主义和文化规范破坏了日本对基于规则的秩序的承诺。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
40
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