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Japan
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What is Japan?

Japan occupies a distinctive place in academic study across disciplines including history, economics, political science, international relations, and literature. Its trajectory from feudal society to industrial power, its role in twentieth-century warfare, and its postwar economic transformation give scholars and students rich material to analyze. The country's cultural identity, government structures, and position within global trade networks make it a compelling subject in business, area studies, and humanities courses alike. Works such as Gail Tsukiyama's Samurai's Garden bring Japan into literary analysis, while frameworks drawn from economics and policy studies address its modern development.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Historical and military analysis features prominently, with essays examining the attack on Pearl Harbor, the Battle of Iwo Jima, and the Battle of Okinawa from strategic and causal perspectives. Economic analysis is equally well represented, covering Japan's financial crisis of the 1990s, the Asian currency crisis, the rise of just-in-time manufacturing, and the competitive dynamics faced by Japanese automakers during periods of currency pressure known as endaka. Comparative and policy-oriented essays examine Japan alongside South Korea, explore trade agreements such as the Japan-Thailand Economic Partnership Agreement, and assess market-entry strategies for foreign companies like Coach Inc.

A strong essay on Japan benefits from a clearly scoped thesis that commits to one dimension — historical, economic, cultural, or literary — rather than attempting to cover the country broadly. Evidence drawn from specific events, policy decisions, or trade data carries more weight than general claims about national character. A common pitfall is treating Japan as a monolith; acknowledging internal complexity and historical change produces more persuasive, nuanced arguments.

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Paper Undergraduate
Allocation of fixed costs in business operations
The picture pertaining to the allocation of costs is complex and impacted by a wide array of factors. For Toyota, the burgeoning interest in its hybrid products has directly impacted not just the nature of costs…
Paper Doctorate
Competition in a Mixed Duopoly
The global airline manufacturing industry is one of the most capital-intensive, highly competitive there is. Compounding how competitive this industry is, there is increasing pressure on its product life cycles to stay…
Paper Undergraduate
Non-Moral or Religious Standpoint; While
¶ … non-moral or religious standpoint; while individual suicide is illigeal in many countries, the more legalistic issue is final exit, or assisted suicide that is advocated by many right-to-die organizations.
Essay Doctorate
Countries -- Brazil, Russia, India, China South
The economic sector of the modern day society reveals increasing levels of interdependence between countries, especially as the phenomena of globalization and market liberalization intensify. This virtually means that the stability and role of one country within the global market place spreads consequences and impacts for the other states as well.
Essay Doctorate
Analysis of Microsoft's decision to diversify the Xbox gaming business
Was Microsoft's decision to enter the game console business a good decision? Based on: Microsoft Xbox Online. University of Michigan Business School Case Study.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Intercultural Communications How Do Business
How do business protocols differ among cultures? Give specific examples from the readings of variations among at least three cultures.
Research Paper Undergraduate
The evolution and spillover of the subprime crisis
A recent headline in a United Kingdom (UK) newspaper may have said it all. The headline read, "UK banks preparing to access BoE's emergency liquidity scheme" (Aldrick, 2008). The article describes how UK bank liquidity…
Paper Undergraduate
Armstrong, E.; Kukla, R.; Kuppermann,
¶ … Armstrong, E.; Kukla, R.; Kuppermann, M. & Little, M. (2009). "RISK and the Pregnant Body." Hastings Center Report. 39(6), pp. 34.
Essay Doctorate
Technology Support Building Effective Technology Support Teams:
Building Effective Technology Support Teams: A Research Thesis
Paper Undergraduate
Reflective practice and personal development
The impact of poor living conditions and hygiene continued to be seen in the endemicity of hepatitis B (HBV) in rural and remote communities, although, as noted earlier, HBV was on the decline in urban settings. As many as 73 percent of Aborigines in some remote locations in the Northern Territory have shown evidence of exposure to hepatitis. In the later 1980s, the HBV carrier rate in non-indigenous Territorians was less than 0.1 1 percent, a rate similar to that found in the rest of non-indigenous Australia (CDHHS, 2004). The relative contribution of sexual and needle-sharing transmission to spread of HBV among indigenes is unknown, but the potential is significant, given the very high HBV carrier rates in some communities. Most infection appears to take place perinatally, through transmission from mother to child, or early in life through ?horizontal' transmission; overcrowding directly assists horizontal spread. The commonwealth provided, free from the beginning of 1987, universal vaccination for Aboriginal neonates (Gale, 2007).