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Subject: Political Science  Book Title: Partners for Democracy
Partners for Democracy
Crafting the New Japanese State Under MacArthur
Moore, Ray A. Professor of Asian History, Amherst College
Robinson, Donald L. Charles N. Clark Professor of Government, Smith College
Print publication date: 2002
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: November 2003
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-515116-9
doi:10.1093/019515116X.001.0001
 
Abstract: This book demonstrates that Japan's postwar Constitution has provided a solid foundation for democracy because, contrary to the conventional view that the American Occupation simply “imposed” it, there was considerable Japanese input in its making.The first two chapters analyze a sharp clash, during the American planning of the Occupation, over the fate and role of Emperor Hirohito. Papered over in the Potsdam Declaration and never resolved in official Washington, the dispute gave General Douglas MacArthur, Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers (SCAP), an opportunity to protect the emperor and use his authority to support MacArthur's own objectives.In the fall of 1945, both American and Japanese officials determined that democratization required constitutional revision and that Japan should take the lead in revising its Constitution. Accordingly, Japanese scholars and officials began advancing their ideas. Meanwhile, both the emperor and the cabinet named commissions (headed by Konoe Fumimaro and Matsumoto Jōji, respectively) to study the need for amendments. However, poor communication from the American side and political chaos among the Japanese doomed these fledgling efforts.In early February 1946, MacArthur, alarmed by the Moscow Agreement that created the Far Eastern Commission (FEC) and fearing that he might lose control over the political reform of Japan, ordered his Government Section (GS) to draft a model constitution for Japan, then pressured Prime Minister Shidehara's cabinet to present it as a Japanese government draft. Japanese attempts to modify SCAP's draft, an effort that achieved some success in the face of determined American resistance, have been largely ignored by those who slight Japan's contribution to its own postwar democratization.Chapters 12 through 20 trace the deliberations of the Japanese parliament (called the Diet) during the summer of 1946. It is a mistake to pass over this stage quickly, as most accounts of Japan's postwar democratization do. This was a critical juncture in postwar Japan's commitment to constitutional democracy, affording politicians in the recently elected House of Representatives and in the House of Peers a major opportunity to put their imprint on the document. Intense struggles took place over the role of the emperor, Article 9 (renouncing war and armed forces), the bill of rights and provisions for parliamentary governance.The Conclusion emphasizes that, as Japan currently deliberates whether to amend its postwar Constitution, it is important to understand that the transformation of Japan into a stable constitutional democracy was a joint achievement, to which both American and Japanese contributions were substantial and crucial.

Keywords: cabinet commissions, constitutional revision, Diet debates, Emperor Hirohito, House of Representatives, Douglas MacArthur, Moscow Agreement, Potsdam Declaration, SCAP draft, Yoshida Shigeru
Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction: “A New Order of Things”
    
1. “Negotiated Surrender”: American Planning and Occupation
    
2. “This Fundamental Problem”: MacArthur Saves Hirohito
    
3. “In Good Faith”: Japan Considers Constitutional Reform
    
4. “A Rational Way”: Konoe and Matsumoto on Constitutional Reform
    
5. “Only as a Last Resort”: The Americans Take Over
    
6. “A Liberal and Enlightened Constitution”: The Scap Model
    
7. “A Very Serious Matter”: The Cabinet's Initial Reactions
    
8. “Do Your Best”: The Marathon Meeting
    
9. “Grave Danger”: The Allies Challenge MacArthur
    
10. “Seize This Opportunity”: Reworking the March 6 Draft
    
11. “No Choice But to Abide”: The Privy Council and Bureaucrats Prepare
    
12. “Along Democratic and Peace-Loving Lines”: Yoshida Presents His Draft
    
13. “Free and Untrammeled Debate”: The Emperor's Prerogatives
    
14. “Fervent Hopes”: Pacifism and Human Rights
    
15. “Complex and Labyrinthine”: The Structure of Government
    
16. “Fresh Trouble”: The House Subcommittee Frames Amendments
    
17. “Fundamental Principles of Democracy”: Human Rights and Imperial Property
    
18. “Sincere and Steady Efforts”: Denouement
    
19. “Last Service to the Fatherland”: The House of Peers Addresses Constitutional Revision
    
20. “A Borrowed Suit”: Peers Accept the Inevitable
    
21. “Broaden and Deepen the Debate”: Fifty Years Without Revision
    
Conclusion
    
Bibliography
Index
doi:10.1093/019515116X.001.0001
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Fall 1945
Imposing the American Model
Transforming a Draft into a Constitution
Sequel