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The success of competitive-communism in Japan / Douglas Moore Kenrick

Tác giả : Douglas Moore Kenrick

Nhà xuất bản : Macmillan Press

Năm xuất bản : 1988

Nơi xuất bản : Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire

Mô tả vật lý : xi, 201 p. ; 23 cm

ISBN : 0333457269

Số phân loại : 952.048

Chủ đề : 1. Nhật bản -- Điều kiện xã hội -- 1945-. 2. Japan -- Social conditions -- 1945-. 3. Lịch sử Nhật Bản.

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Tóm tắt :

Contents: For centuries Japan, although a totalitarian dictatorship, was ruled by figureheads who signed laws formulated 'behind the screen'. Hierarchy still defines everyone's status. The man at the top has power but jeopardizes his position if he ignores consensus opinions. Nowadays fashionable twentieth-century clothing cloaks a contradictory blend of intense competition with a tradition of harmony dependent on close human-relations and complex communal restraint. The Japanese organise themselves in cliques (not groups) which raise barriers against outsiders. Companies are controlled from within; shareholders are outsiders. Women are more than equal in their homes; less than equal at work. After living and managing his own business in Japan for forty years, the author explored widely before coining the term 'competitive communism' to describe Japan's economic and social system.

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