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Asian Security 1981. Tokyo, Research Institute for Peace and Security, 1981, 214 pp. V3,000, $20.00

Asian Security 1981. Tokyo, Research Institute for Peace and Security, 1981, 214 pp. V3,000, $20.00 305 This study has a wider audience than Southeast Asia scholars. Anyone interested in modernization, women's studies, and politics will find this cleary organized, well written, and cogent study worth reading. Western Australian Institute of Technology South Bentley, Western Australia ROBERT H. BRUCE BOOK REVIEWS Asian Security 1981. Tokyo, Research Institute for Peace and Security, 1981, 214 pp. V3,000, $20.00. Complex forces which are subtly rearranging power configurations in Asia make pertinent up-to-date information on political, military, and economic trends indispen- sable to analysts and policy-makers. Given the subject's magnitude and diversity, no single volume can completely fulfill this task. Asian Security 1981, however, makes an impressive start by giving a cogent survey of both regional developments and of those aspects of super-power relations which carry security implications for Asia. This volume addresses issues at once broader and narrower than the title suggests. Trends outside of Asia are taken up in some detail insofar as they impinge upon Japan's security. On the other hand, the "Asian" trends are restricted to those in Japan, North and South Korea, China, and Vietnam, with slight attention to the ASEAN countries and almost none to South Asia. The selection of topics, and http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Asian and African Studies (in 2002 continued as African and Asian Studies) Brill

Asian Security 1981. Tokyo, Research Institute for Peace and Security, 1981, 214 pp. V3,000, $20.00

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Publisher
Brill
Copyright
© 1983 Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands
ISSN
0021-9096
eISSN
1568-5217
DOI
10.1163/156852183X00506
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

305 This study has a wider audience than Southeast Asia scholars. Anyone interested in modernization, women's studies, and politics will find this cleary organized, well written, and cogent study worth reading. Western Australian Institute of Technology South Bentley, Western Australia ROBERT H. BRUCE BOOK REVIEWS Asian Security 1981. Tokyo, Research Institute for Peace and Security, 1981, 214 pp. V3,000, $20.00. Complex forces which are subtly rearranging power configurations in Asia make pertinent up-to-date information on political, military, and economic trends indispen- sable to analysts and policy-makers. Given the subject's magnitude and diversity, no single volume can completely fulfill this task. Asian Security 1981, however, makes an impressive start by giving a cogent survey of both regional developments and of those aspects of super-power relations which carry security implications for Asia. This volume addresses issues at once broader and narrower than the title suggests. Trends outside of Asia are taken up in some detail insofar as they impinge upon Japan's security. On the other hand, the "Asian" trends are restricted to those in Japan, North and South Korea, China, and Vietnam, with slight attention to the ASEAN countries and almost none to South Asia. The selection of topics, and

Journal

Journal of Asian and African Studies (in 2002 continued as African and Asian Studies)Brill

Published: Jan 1, 1983

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