At his death Yasusuke Murakami was director of the Center for Global Communications at the International University of Japan. Kozo Yamamura is the Job and Gertrud Tamaki Professor of Japanese Studies at the University of Washington.

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Description
Translator's preface Translator's introduction 1. On progress 2. Nationalism and transnationalism 3. The theory of hegemonic stability: a compromise between economic liberalism and nationalism 4. The demise of the classical belief 5. An economics of decreasing cost 6. Developmentalism as a system 7. The increasing complexity of the international economy A scenario for a new international system: the rules for polymorphic liberalism 9. Developmentalism, heterogeneity, and parliamentary politics 10. Understanding 'understanding' Afterword Notes Index.
"At last we have a translation of a major work explaining how the world looks from a Japanese perspective... Murakami undertakes a thorough analysis of liberalism, the nation-state, national security, and East-West relations. His thinking is complex and subtle... This book offers an important perspective from a major thinkers." - Choice