Crisis Management in the Current sino-Japanese Relations* crisis would escalate rapidly and eventually goes out of control Hence, how to manage the Sino-Japanese relations from the perspective of crisis management * This article is originally
Promoting crisis management in the East China Sea | SIPRI This page provides background information for understanding aspects of addressing maritime security in the East China Sea from the perspective of crisis management Specifically, it gives overarching context to a series of four SIPRI Policy Briefs published in February 2014 on the same topic
Expanding Japans Credible Defense Role - JSTOR Masashi Nishihara is Professor of International Relationis, National Defense Academy, near Tokyo Research for this article was primarily supported by a project of the Japan Center for International Exchange
日本国際問題研究所リポジトリ × Nishihara, Masashi WEKO 240 en Nishihara, Masashi Search repository 著者所属(英) 言語 en 値 President of the Research Institute for Peace and Security (RIPS) 書誌情報 号 164, p 1-4, 発行日 2012-11-06 出版者 出版者 日本国際問題研究所 出版者(英) 出版者 The Japan Institute of International Affairs
Sino-Japanese Tensions Will Escalate in the East China Sea National pride rooted in 150 years of history, 15 years of escalating tensions, the inevitable shift in regional power dynamics, and the inherent limitations in real-time crisis management mechanisms make conflict between Japan and China over the Senkaku Diaoyu Islands increasingly likely
Japan and The East China Sea Dispute - ScienceDirect This article offers a closer examination of the way in which the 2010 crisis emerged between Japan and China The debate that it sponsored within Japan suggests that a crisis management initiative between Beijing and Tokyo rather than an overall reconciliation agenda may be what is now needed
U. S. I nvolvement in the Sino-Japanese Diaoyu Senkaku Conflict . . . 25 Fudan and Nottingham University professor Guo Dinping, envisions for the future: 1) the establishment of a crisis management mechanism between China and Japan, 2) wisdom and courage by Chinese and Japanese leaders to put the bilateral relationship on track, and 3) a more balance triangular relationship among China, Japan and the US, and
The 2010 Senkaku crisis - StratCom COE The crisis was resolved by the end of November 2010 when diplo-matic dialogue between both nations was restored fully and a sig-nificant de-escalation of measures took place