Lecture on Japan’s New Leadership in Liberal Economic Governance, UTokyo, December 13, 2018

Gregory Noble Discussion
Type: 
Lecture
Date: 
December 13, 2018
Location: 
Japan
Subject Fields: 
Asian History / Studies, Japanese History / Studies, Political Science

 

The Contemporary Japan Group at the University of Tokyo’s Institute of Social Science (ISS, or Shaken), welcomes you to a lecture by

Yves Tiberghien (University of British Columbia)

Japan’s New Leadership in Liberal Economic Governance

DATE AND PLACE

Thursday, December 13, 2018 from 6:00-7:30 p.m. at Akamon Sōgō Kenkyūtō Room 549, Institute of Social Science, University of Tokyo, Hongo Campus, University of Tokyo

ABSTRACT

Japan has long been seen as a solid but rather stolid pillar of the global liberal order, more inclined to follow the US than take the initiative. This has changed over the last two years. Japan has grown more active in both regional leadership and global governance (IMF, reform of global architecture, G20, WTO, global climate negotiations). In trade, Japan has undergone a revolution from reluctant TPP joiner to the leader of the post-US TPP-11, complementing that feat with a Japan-EU FTA and other ongoing negotiations. At the G20, Japan is taking the helm in 2018-2019. In infrastructure and development, Japan is leading new international initiatives. And at the UN, PM Abe recently spoke boldly about the importance of upholding the global liberal order. What explains this dramatic shift?

In this talk, I explain Japan’s behaviour within a larger model of truncated strategic interactions. Drawing upon the cases of trade, G20, climate change, and development governance, I argue specifically that Japan’s new behaviour is driven less by domestic politics than by a reaction to the crisis of the liberal order caused by the election of President Trump and the emerging risk of a China-led order in Asia.

SPEAKER

Yves Tiberghien is Professor of Political Science at the University of British Columbia, where he is Executive Director of the UBC China Council and Director Emeritus of the Institute of Asian Research. He specializes in East Asian comparative political economy, international political economy, and global economic and environmental governance. His publications include Entrepreneurial States: Reforming Corporate Governance in France, Japan, and Korea (Cornell 2007), 亚洲与世界未来 [Asia and the Future of the World] (社会科学文献出版社, 2015) and L’Asie et le futur du monde (Science Po Press, 2012). He is currently working on China’s role in global and regional governance (including G20, AIIB, climate change, Belt and Road Initiative) and a book project titled Up for Grabs: Disruption, Competition, and the Remaking of the Global Economic Order. He is coordinating an international team on the Paris Agreement on climate change, and in 2015 founded the Vision 20 group, a new coalition of global scholars and policy-makers aiming at providing a long-term perspective on the challenges of global economic and environmental governance: http://www.thevision20.org).

CONTEMPORARY JAPAN GROUP
The ISS Contemporary Japan Group provides English-speaking residents of the Tokyo area with an opportunity to hear cutting-edge research in social science and related policy issues, as well as a venue for researchers and professionals in or visiting Tokyo to present and receive knowledgeable feedback on their latest research projects. Admission is free and advance registration is not required. Everyone is welcome.
For more information, including maps and a list of past lectures, please visit our website:

https://web.iss.u-tokyo.ac.jp/cjg/
or contact
Gregory W. NOBLE (noble@iss.u-tokyo.ac.jp)