Defending the Japanese State: Structures, Norms, and the Political Responses to Terrorism and Violent Social Protest in the 1970s and 1980s |
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
An Overview of Terrorism and Violent Protest | 2 |
LeftWing Terrorist Organizations and Violent Groups | 25 |
Copyright | |
6 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
activists activities Affairs Amakudari Apter and Sawa arrested Asahi Nenkan Asia Bayley bombing Bund bureaucratic Chukaku Constitution cooperation court crime prevention criminal Distribution of Incidents Division domestic example Faction foreign Hijacking important institutions internal security policy Interview Investigation issue January 18 Japan's internal security Japan's policy Japanese government Japanese police Japanese Red Army Japanese society Kakurokyo Keisatsu Keisatsucho koban Kühne and Miyazawa left-wing leftist legal norms Mainichi Maruoka military Ministry Narita Airport National Police Agency Number of Incidents operation Ordinance organized crime Osaka patrol police percent police boxes police budget police officers police system policemen policy of internal political prefectural police forces Prime Minister prosecutors PSIA questions of internal Red Army Red Army Faction right-wing riot police security police Steinhoff surveillance Table Tahara Taikakai Takagi Tokyo total number Treaty UNAFEI United violent social protest West Germany Wolferen Yomiuri Zengakuren
References to this book
Rethinking Japanese Security: Internal and External Dimensions Peter J. Katzenstein No preview available - 2008 |
Sokaiya: Extortion, Protection, and the Japanese Corporation Kenneth Szymkowiak Limited preview - 2002 |