New in Asia-Pacific Journal: A contested oral tradition in Jindo, South Korea, "Waedeoksan," honors Japanese soldiers from 1597 but faces debate over its historical accuracy and role in Korea-Japan reconciliation.
apjjf.org/2026/3/zoh
@apjjf
In-depth critical analysis of the forces that shape the Asia-Pacific and the world. Edited by Tristan R. Grunow (Nagoya University) and Mary M. McCarthy (Drake University). Find us at: https://apjjf.org/.
New in Asia-Pacific Journal: A contested oral tradition in Jindo, South Korea, "Waedeoksan," honors Japanese soldiers from 1597 but faces debate over its historical accuracy and role in Korea-Japan reconciliation.
apjjf.org/2026/3/zoh
New in Asia-Pacific Journal: A powerful analysis of the “Statue of Peace” and how attempts to erase contested history often make it return even stronger.
apjjf.org/2026/2/kwak
New in Asia-Pacific Journal: An eye-opening look at military comfort stations and comfort women through Japanese Imperial Army daily records, revealing official practices and realities behind the system.
apjjf.org/2026/2/ha
These are the final days for our Glen S. Fukushima Matching Fund Challenge. Donate by February 28 and your contribution is doubled!
apjjf.org/fundraising-...
Support open-access publishing of in-depth analysis of forces shaping the Asia-Pacific and the world. Donate here:
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How can fiction deepen our understanding of Okinawa’s base politics?
Steve Rabson, contributing editor at APJJF, interviews journalist and novelist Sarah Z. Sleeper about Gaijin, her 2020 novel set in 1990s Okinawa.
#Okinawa #USJapanAlliance #MilitaryBases #Literature
apjjf.org/2026/2/sleep...
What does the rise of independents mean for party politics in Japan? Junichi Hasegawa argues that the 2024 Tokyo gubernatorial election reflected a longer trend showing growing distrust of established parties since the 1990s.
apjjf.org/2026/2/haseg...
#JapanPolitics #TokyoElection #PartyPolitics
Can popular anime shape how we think about disaster? Timo Thelen examines Suzume no Tojimari (2022), showing how mythology, memory of 3/11, and national identity intersect to individualize responsibility for earthquakes and social decline.
#Anime #Fukushima #Earthquake
apjjf.org/2026/2/thelen
How did migration become a political issue in Japan’s 2025 election?
In this article Maximilian Xavier Rehm explains how migration rose to political salience in Japan and what this shift means for the future of migration politics.
#JapanesePolitics #PoliticsOfMigration
apjjf.org/2026/2/rehm
How do games shape the way people experience public policy during crises? Ayaka Löschke analyzes the 2020 boom of Japan’s “Mitsu Desu” game, where players act as Tokyo governor Yuriko Koike to enforce social distancing.
apjjf.org/2026/1/loschke
#VideoGame #COVID19 #SocialDistancingPolicy #Japan
Is Japan a cautionary tale or a fetishized object that lets scholars and policymakers avoid hard questions? Paul Christensen explores this dynamic as part of our ongoing series, Critical Asian Scholarship in a Time of Global Crisis.
Read the full article here:
apjjf.org/2026/1/chris...
#Japan
Why are young people increasingly skeptical of media outrage?
In this article, journalist Waka Ikeda examines the gender and cultural politics of Japan’s 2025 election as a case study in institutional credibility crisis.
#SanaeTakaichi
#JapaneseElections
#GenderAndPolitics
apjjf.org/2026/1/ikeda
How much did Japan’s postwar bureaucracy really change?
Daniel Wollnik challenges narratives of institutional inertia, tracing how U.S.–Japanese negotiations reshaped the Ministry of Communications and Japan's postwar state.
#USJapanRelations #bureaucracy #PostWarJapan
apjjf.org/2026/1/wollnik
APJJF editorial board member Jenny Chan reflects on her own scholarly journey and highlights how APJJF serves as a platform for scholarly community, critical inquiry, and independent open-access publishing.
Read the full piece in Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus:
apjjf.org/2025/12/chan
#APJJF
Do criminal suspects in Japan have "a right to remain silent" in practice? David T. Johnson tackles this question and ongoing debates about legal reform in Japan.
Read the full piece in Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus:
www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
#Japan #APJJF #legalstudies
Support open-access publishing of critical analysis of the forces shaping the Asia-Pacific and the world.
Glen S. Fukushima Matching Fund Challenge
Double your impact: donate $50 and it becomes $100 if you donate by February 28, 2026.
apjjf.org/fundraising-...
#APJJF #openaccess
Can civic organizations play the multi-faceted role of promoting multi-ethnic nationhood at home and sovereign statehood abroad? Michiko Suzuki explores how the Manchukuo Red Cross Society was used to pursue these goals in the context of Japanese imperialism.
www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
Support open-access publishing of critical analysis of the forces shaping the Asia-Pacific and the world.
Glen S. Fukushima Matching Fund Challenge
Double your impact: donate $50 and it becomes $100 if you donate by February 28, 2026.
apjjf.org/fundraising-...
#APJJF #openaccess
Atsushi Hagihara & Hasan Topacoglu explore culture practices and generational change in Hyogo Prefecture Okinawan Association. Using surveys and interviews, they highlight how Okinawans navigate migration challenges while preserving their heritage.
www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
#Okinawa #APJJF
How is public interest litigation evolving in Japan?
Lawrence Repeta examines CALL4, a bilingual platform highlighting public interest cases and crowdfunding litigation costs.
www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
#Japan #Law #PublicInterest #APJJF
How does Ishimaru Shinji fit into Japan’s evolving populist landscape?
In this article Jack Northey draws on the cases of Hashimoto Tōru and Koike Yuriko and identifies a “populist playbook” shaped by Japan’s neoliberal era.
www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
#Japan #Politics #Populism #APJJF
How do we understand Japan’s wartime past through the words and silences of its emperor? David McNeill speaks with historian Ryuichi Kitano about his new book, 側近が見た昭和天皇 (The Showa Emperor as Seen by His Close Aides). #Japan #History #APJJF apjjf.org/2025/10/mcne...
Can translation become a tool for historical revisionism? In this essay, Harumi Osaki examines how sympathetic translators and editors reshaped The Ōshima Memos (1942–45), allowing for wartime ideology to persist under the guise of reinterpretation. apjjf.org/2025/10/osaki #Japan #History #APJJF
How can film confront the silences surrounding workplace harassment? In conversation with art historian Asato Ikeda, filmmaker Atsushi Funahashi discusses his 2022 film Company Retreat, reflecting on trauma and solidarity in Japan’s workplaces.
apjjf.org/2025/9/ikeda #Film #Gender #Japan #APJJF
What did “compulsory education” mean for children excluded from it? In this powerful article, Gregory S. Johnson traces the history of the Kōmei School, Japan’s first public school for children with physical disabilities. www.cambridge.org/core/journal... #DisabilityHistory #Japan #Education #APJJF
How did Trump change US engagement with the UN? In this interview with Mark Selden, Lawrence S. Wittner examines the historical context and what it means for US-China relations and global influence.
#Trump #USPolitics #UnitedNations #USChina #ForeignPolicy #GlobalAffairs apjjf.org/2025/10/witt...
In this important article, Dorothy Finan and Kaori Suetomi examine efforts to introduce child safeguarding frameworks in Japan’s entertainment industries in the wake of the Johnny Kitagawa abuse scandal.
www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
#Japan #ChildSafeguarding #EntertainmentIndustry #APJJF
Yoko Demelius and Yutaka Yoshida use a post-feminist lens to analyze a famous case involving a female fraudster in Japan who gained “celebrity criminal” status.
Read more in Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus:
www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
#Japan #Postfeminism #GenderStudies #APJJF
Mi-Young Gu astutely analyzes Himizu (2012) through Foucault’s concept of heterotopia, showing how the film reveals tensions in post-3/11 Japan.
Read more in Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus:
www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
#Himizu #SonoShion #Post311 #DisasterCinema #Heterotopia #APJJF
Kanako Kuramitsu explores the overlooked experiences of children born to Chinese mothers and Japanese fathers during and after the Second Sino-Japanese War.
Read more in Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus:
www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
#SinoJapaneseWar #ChildrenBornOfWar #Migration #APJJF
In this timely article Robert Mizo and J. Scott Hauger show how climate change is reshaping Indo-Pacific maritime security and what this means for the Quad.
Read more in Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus:
www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
#IndoPacific #MaritimeSecurity #ClimateChange #APJJF