Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-zzh7m Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T14:07:28.271Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Works Cited

from Part IV - SOCIAL AND INTELLECTUAL CHANGE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

Edited by
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1989

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abe, IsooMeiji sanjūnen no shakai minshutō”. In Nihon shakai undō in Shakai Kagaku (February 1928).Google Scholar
Abe, Isoo Meiji Shakaishugiron. Tokyo: Wabei Kyokai, 1907.
Abe, Isoo. “Shakaishugi shōshi”. In Shakaishugi shiron, ed. Kishimoto, Eitarō. Tokyo: Aoki shoten, 1955.Google Scholar
Abe, Isoo. Shakaishugiron. Tokyo: Heiminsha, 1903.
Abegglen, James C. The Japanese Factory: Aspects of Its Social Organization. Glencoe, Ill.: Free Press, 1958.
Adachi, Gan. Kokumin undō no saishuppatsu. Tokyo: Kasumigaseki shobō, 1940.
Agawa, Hiroyuki. Yamamoto Isoroku. Tokyo: Shinchōsha, 1965; new ed., 1969.
Akita, George. The Foundations of Constitutional Government in Modern Japan, 1868–1900. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1967.
Akuto, Hiroshi, Tominaga, Ken'ichi — and Sobue, Takao, eds. Hendōki no Nihon shakai. Tokyo: Nihon hōsō kyōkai, 1972.
Allen, G. C. A Short Economic History of Modern Japan. London: Allen & Unwin, 1946.
Allinson, Gary D. Japanese Urbanism: Industry and Politics in Kariya, 1872–1972. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1975.
Amakawa, Akira. “Chihō jichi hō no kōzō”. in Senryōki Nihon no keizai to seiji, ed. Takafusa, Nakamura. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1979.Google Scholar
Amakawa, Akira. “Dai-43-dai: Higashikuni naikaku: Miyasama naikaku no shūsen shori. In Nihon naikaku shi roku. 5, ed. Shigeru, Hayashi and Kiyoaki, Tsuji. Tokyo: Daiichi hōki, 1981.Google Scholar
Amakawa, Akira. “Dai-44-dai: Shidehara naikaku: ‘Minshu’ kaikaku no hajimari”. In Nihon naikaku shi roku, vol. 5, ed. Shigeru, Hayashi and- , Tsuji Kiyoaki Tokyo: Daiichi hōki, 1981.Google Scholar
Amakawa, Akira. “Dai-45-dai: Dai-i-ji Yoshida naikaku: Shin kenpō taisei e no ikō”. In Nikon naikaku shi roku, vol. 5, ed. Shigeru, Hayashi and Kiyoaki, Tsuji. Tokyo: Daiichi hōki, 1981.Google Scholar
Amakawa, Akira. “Senryō seisaku to kanryō no taiō”. in Kyōdō kenkyū: Nihon senryōgun: Sono hikari to kage, ed. kenkyūkai, Shisō kagaku, vol. 1. Tokyo: Tokuma shoten, 1978.Google Scholar
Aoki, Kōji. Nihon rōdō undōshi nenpyō, vol. 1. Tokyo: Shinseisha, 1968.
Aoki, Nobumitsu. Baba Eiichi den. Tokyo: Ko Baba Eiichi-shi kinenkai, 1945.
Arahata, Kanson Kindai shisō to Shinshakai ”. Shisō 460 (October 1962): 115–25.Google Scholar
Arai, Kurotake. Taiheiyō sensōki ni okeru yūgyū jinkō no suikei, Nihon tōkei gakkai hōkoku (July 1978).
Arai, Naoyuki. “Senryō seisaku to jānarizumu.”. In Kyōdō kenkyū: Nihon senryō, ed. kenkyūkai, Shisō kagaku. Tokyo: Tokuma shoten, 1972.Google Scholar
Ari, Bakuji. “Chihō seido (hōtaisei hōkai-ki): Burakukai chōnaikai seido”. In Kōza: Nihon kindaihō hattatsu shi - shihonshugi to hō no hatten, vol. 6, ed. Fukushima Masao Kawashima Takeyoshi, Tsuji Kiyoaki and Nobushige, Ukai. Tokyo: Keisō shobō, 1959.Google Scholar
Arima, Yoriyasu. Seikai dōchūki. Tokyo: Nihon shuppan kyōdō kabushiki kaisha, 1951.
Asada, Kyōji. Nihon teikokushugi to kyū shokuminchi no jinushisei. Tokyo: Mizu shobō, 1968.
Asada, Sadao.The Japanese Navy and the United States.” In Pearl Harbor As History: Japanese-American Relations 1931–1941, ed. Borg, Dorothy and Okamoto, Shumpei. New York: Columbia University Press, 1973.Google Scholar
shitsu, Asahi shinbunsha yoron chōsa, ed. Asahi shin-bun yoron chōsa no 30-nen: Nihonjin no seiji ishiki. Tokyo: Asahi shinbunsha, 1976.
Asahi, shinbunsha, ed. Yokusan senkyo taikan. Tokyo: Asahi shinbunsha, 1942.
Asahi, shinbunsha. Asahi nenkan. Tokyo: Asahi shinbunsha, annual.
Asahi, shinbunsha. Hyakka binran (Asahi nenkan, 1969, appendix). Tokyo: Asahi shinbunsha, 1969.
Baerwald, Hans H. The Purge of Japanese Leaders Under the Occupation (University of California Publications in Political Science, vol. 8). Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1959.
Bailey, Thomas Andrew. A Diplomatic History of the American People. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1950.
Barraclough, Geoffrey. An Introduction to Contemporary History. Harmonds-worth, England: Penguin, 1967.
Beckmann, George M. The Making of the Meiji Constitution: The Oligarchs and the Constitutional Development of Japan, 1868–1891. Lawrence: University of Kansas Press, 1957.
Beckmann, George M., and Okubo, Genji. The Japanese Communist Party 1922–1945. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1969.
Bennett, John W., and Ishino, Iwao. Paternalism in the Japanese Economy: Anthropological Studies of Oyabun-Kobun Patterns. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1963.
Berger, Gordon Mark. Parties Out of Power in Japan, 1931–1941. Princeton, N.J.: Prinecton University Press, 1977.
Bernstein, Gail Lee. “Women in Rural Japan.” In Women in Changing Japan, ed. Lebra, Joyce et al. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1976.Google Scholar
Blumenthal, Tuvia.Senkanki no Nihon keizai”. In Senkaki no Nihon keizai bunseki, ed. Takafusa, Nakamura. Tokyo: Yamakawa shuppansha, 1981.Google Scholar
,Board of Planning. “Invocation of the National General Mobilization Law.Tokyo Gazette 2 (March 1939).
,Board of Planning. “On the National Mobilization Law.Tokyo Gazette 11 (May 1938): 1–9.
Bōeichō, bōei kenshūjo senshishitsu. Daihon'ei riku-gunbu: Dai Tōa sensō kaisen keii, vol. 1. Tokyo: Asagumo shinbunsha, 1973.
Bōeichō, bōei kenshūjo senshishitsu, ed. Daihon'ei kai-gunbu: Rengō kantai (1) (1). Tokyo: Asagumo shinbunsha, 1970.
Bōeicho, bōei kenshūjo senshishitsu, ed. Kantōgun, vol. 1. Tokyo: Asagumo shinbunsha, 1969.
Borg, Dorothy, and Okamoto, Shumpei, eds. Pearl Harbor As History: Japanese-American Relations 1931–1941. New York: Columbia University Press, 1973.
Boulding, Kenneth E., and Gleason, Alan H.War as an Investment: The Strange Case of Japan.” In Economic Imperialism, ed. Boulding, Kenneth E. and Mukerjee, Tapan. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1972.Google Scholar
Boyle, John H. China and Japan at War 1937–45: The Politics of Collaboration. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1972.
Brown, A. J. The Mastery of the Far East: The Story of Korea's Transformation and Japan's Rise to Supremacy in the Orient. New York: Scribner, 1919.
Brudnoy, David. “Japan's Experiment in Korea.” Monumenta Nipponica 25 (1970): 155–95.Google Scholar
Butow, Robert J. C. Tōjō and the Coming of the War. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1961.
Chang, Han-yu, and Myers, Ramon H.Japanese Colonial Development Policy in Taiwan, 1895–1906: A Case of Bureaucratic Entrepreneurship.” Journal of Asian Studies 22 (August 1963): 433–49.Google Scholar
Chen, Ching-chin. “Community Control Systems and the Police in Japanese Colonies.” In The Japanese Colonial Empire, 1895–1945, ed. Myers, Ramon H. and Peattie, Mark R.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1984.Google Scholar
Chen, Ching-chin. “The Japanese Administration of the Pao-chia System in Taiwan, 1895–1945.” Journal of Asian Studies 24 (February 1975): 391–446.Google Scholar
Chen, Edward I-te. “Japan's Decision to Annex Taiwan: A Study in Itō-Mutsu Diplomacy.” Journal of Asian Studies 47 (November 1977): 61–72.Google Scholar
Chen, Edward I-te. “Japanese Colonialism in Korea and Formosa: A Comparison of the Systems of Political Control.” Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 30 (1970): 126–58.Google Scholar
Chiang, Kai-shek Shō Kai-seki hiroku – 9: Manshū jihen. Tokyo: Sankei shinbunsha, 1976.
Chiang, Kai-shek. Shō Kai-seki hiroku – 12: Nitchū zenmen sensō. Tokyo: Sankei shinbunsha, 1976.
Chiang, Kai-shek. Shō Kai-seki hiroku – 13: Dai Tōa sensō. Tokyo: Sankei shinbunsha, 1977.
Chihara, Jun. “Gunju sangyō rōdōsha no haisen e no taiō”. In Kyōdō kenkyū: Nihon senryō, ed. kenkyūkai, Shisō kagaku. Tokyo: Tokuma shoten, 1972.Google Scholar
, Chihōshi kenkyū kyogikai, ed. Nihon sangyōshi taikei, 7 vols. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1960.
Chubachi, Masayoshi, and Taira, Koji.Poverty in Modern Japan: Perceptions and Realities.” In Japanese Industrialization and Its Social Consequences, ed. Patrick, Hugh T.. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1976.Google Scholar
Chūō, bukka tōsei kyōryoku kaigi. Nihon ni okeru nōgyō keiei narabi ni tochi shoyū no hensen ni kansuru sankōshiryō. Tokyo: Chūō bukka tōsei kyoryoku kaigi, 1943.
Clark, Colin. The Condition of Economic Progress, 2nd ed. London: Macmillan, 1951.
Cohen, Jerome B. Japan's Economy in War and Reconstruction. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1949.
Cohen, Theodore.Labor Democratization in Japan: The First Years.” In The Occupation of Japan, ed. Redford, Laurence H.. Norfolk, Va.: MacArthur Memorial, 1980.Google Scholar
Cole, Alan B., Totten, George O., and Uyehara, Cecil H. Socialist Parties in Postwar Japan. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1966.
Cole, Robert E. Japanese Blue Collar: The Changing Tradition. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1971.
Cole, Robert E. Work, Mobility and Participation. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1979.
Conroy, Hilary. The Japanese Seizure of Korea, 1868–1910. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1960.
Coox, Alvin D. Japan: The Final Agony. New York: Ballantine, 1970.
Coox, Alvin D. Nomonhan: Japan Against Russia, 1939, 2 vols. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1985.
Crawcour, E. Sydney.Japan, 1868–1920.” In Agricultural Development in Asia, ed. Shand, R. T.. Canberra: Australian National University Press, 1069.Google Scholar
Crawcour, E. Sydney.Japanese Economic Studies in Foreign Countries in the Postwar Period.” Keizai kenkyū 30 (January 1979): 49–64.Google Scholar
Crawcour, E. Sydney, and Yamamura, Kozo. “The Tokugawa Monetary System: 1787–1868.” Economic Development and Cultural Change 18 (July 1970): pr. 1, 489–518.Google Scholar
Crawcour, E. Sydney. “The Tokugawa Heritage.” In The State and Economic Enterprise in Japan: Essays in the Political Economy of Growth, ed. Lockwood, William W.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1965.Google Scholar
Crowley, James B. Japan's Quest for Autonomy: National Security and Foreign Policy, 1930–1938. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1966.
Crump, John. The Origins of Socialist Thought. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1983.
Curtis, Gerald L. Election Campaigning Japanese Style. New York: Columbia University Press, 1971.
shōreikai, Dai Nihon fukugyō, ed. Nihon no fukugyō. Tokyo: Dai Nihon fukugyō shōreikai, 1911.
Divine, Robert A. Roosevelt and World War II. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1969.
Donnelly, Michael W.Setting the Price of Rice: A Study in Political Decision making.” In Policymaking in Contemporary Japan, ed. Pempel, T. J.. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1977.Google Scholar
Dore, Ronald P.Agricultural Improvement in Japan, 1870–1890.” Economic Development and Cultural Change 9 (October 1960): 69–91.Google Scholar
Dore, Ronald P.The Meiji Landlord: Good or Bad?Journal of Asian Studies 18 (May 1959): 343–55.Google Scholar
Dore, Ronald P. British Factory – Japanese Factory: The Origins of National Diversity in Industrial Relations. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press; London: Allen & Unwin, 1973.
Dore, Ronald P. Land Reform in Japan. London: Oxford University Press, 1959.
Dore, Ronald P. Shinohata: A Portrait of a Japanese Village. London: Lane, 1978.
Dore, Ronald P., ed. Aspects of Social Change in Modern Japan. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1967.
kenkyūjō, Dōshisha daigaku jinbunkagaku, ed. Rikugō zasshi. (microfilm). Tokyo: Nihon shiryō kankōkai, 1964.
Dower, John W. Empire and Aftermath: Yoshida Shigeru and the Japanese Experience, 1878–1954. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1979.
Drea, Edward J. The 1942 Japanese General Election: Political Mobilization in Wartime Japan (International Studies, East Asian Series Research Publication 11). Lawrence: Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 1979.
Dull, Paul S. A Battle History of the Imperial Japanese Navy (1941 – 1945). Annapolis, Md.: U.S. Naval Institute, 1978.
Dunn, Frederick S. Peace-Making and the Settlement with Japan. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1963.
Duus, Peter.Economic Dimensions of Meiji Imperialism: The Case of Korea, 1895–1910.” In The Japanese Colonial Empire, 1895–1945, ed. Myers, Ramon H. and Peattie, Mark R.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1984.Google Scholar
Duus, Peter.Liberal Intellectuals and Social Conflict in Taisho Japan.” In Conflict in Modern Japanese History, ed. Najita, Tetsuo and Koschmann, Victor. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1982.Google Scholar
Duus, Peter.Whig History, Japanese Style: The Min'yūsha Historians and the Meiji Restoration.” Journal of Asian Studies 33 (May 1974): 415–36.Google Scholar
Duus, Peter.Yoshino Sakuzō: The Christian as Political Critic.” Journal of Japanese Studies 4 (Spring 1978): 301–26.Google Scholar
Duus, Peter. Party Rivalry and Political Change in Taishō Japan. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1968.
Eguchi, Eiichi. Gendai no “teishotokusō”, 3 vols. Tokyo: Miraisha, 19791980.
Endō, Saburō. Nitchū jūgonen sensō to watakushi. Tokyo: Nitchū shorin, 1974.
Fei, John C. H., and Ranis, Gustav. Development of the Labor-Surplus Economy. Homewood, Ill.: Irwin, 1964.
Fieldhouse, David. The Colonial Empires; a Comparative Survey from the Eighteenth Century. New York: Delacorte, 1966.
Flanagan, Scott C.Electoral Change in Japan: An Overview.” In Political Opposition and Local Politics in Japan, ed. Kurt Steiner, Ellis S. Krauss, and Flanagan, Scott C.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1980.Google Scholar
Fletcher, William Miles, III. The Search for a New Order: Intellectuals and Fascism in Prewar Japan. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1983.
Fogel, Joshua A. Politics and Sinology: The Case of Naitō Kōnan (1866–1934). Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1984.
Franck, Harry A. Glimpses of Japan and Formosa. New York: Century, 1924.
Frank, Charles A., and Webb, Richard, eds. Income Distribution and Growth in the Less Developed Countries. Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution, 1977.
Fridell, Wilbur M. Japanese Shrine Mergers 1906–12: State Shinto Moves to the Grassroots. Tokyo: Sophia University Press, 1973.
Fuchida, Mitsuo. Shinjuwan sakusen no shinsō. Tokyo: Kawade shobō, 1967.
Fujii, Shōichi. “Capitalism, International Politics, and the Emperor System.” In The Emergence of Imperial Japan: Self-Defense or Calculated Aggression? ed. Mayo, Marlene. Lexington, Mass.: Heath, 1970.Google Scholar
Fujimura, Michio. “Iwayuru jūgatsu jiken no saikentō”. Nihon rekishi, no. 393 (February 1981): 52–65.Google Scholar
Fujinawa, Masakatsu. Nihon no saitei chingin. Tokyo: Nikkan rōdō tsūshinsha, 1972.
Fujiwara, Akira, Imai, Seiichi — and Tōyama, Shigeki. Shōwa shi, rev. ed. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1959.
Fukai, Eigo. Kaiko shichijūnen. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1941.
Fukawa, Kiyoshi. “Nihonjin no hi-senryō kan”. In Kyōdō kenkyū: Nihon senryō, ed. kenkyūkai, Shisō kagaku. Tokyo: Tokuma shoten, 1972.Google Scholar
Fukudome, Shigeru. Kaigun no hansei. Tokyo: Nihon shuppan kyōdō, 1951.
Fukudome, Shigeru. Shikan: Shinjuwan kōgeki. Tokyo: Jiyū Ajiyasha, 1955.
Fukui, Haruhiro. Jiyū minshutō to seisaku kettei. Tokyo: Fukumura shuppan, 1969.
Fukui, Haruhiro.The Japanese Communist Party: The Miyamoto Line and Its Problems.” In The Many Faces of Communism, ed. Kaplan, Morton A.. New York: Free Press, 1978.Google Scholar
Fukui, Haruhiro. Party in Power: The Japanese Liberal-Democrats and Policy-making. Canberra: Australian National University; Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1970.
Fukushima, Masao, Kawashima, Takeyoshi, Tsuji, Kiyoaki and Nobushige, Ukai, eds. Kōza: Nihon kindaihō hattatsu shi – shihonshugi to hō no hatten, vol. 6. Tokyo: Keisō shobō, 1959.
Fukushima, Jūrō. “Senryōka ni okeru ken'etsu seisaku to sono jittai”. In Senryōki Nihon no keizai to seiji, ed. Takafusa, Nakamura. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1979.Google Scholar
Fukutake, Tadashi. Japanese Rural Society, trans. Dore, Ronald P.. New York: Oxford University Press, 1967.
Funayama, Shin'ichi. Meiji tetsugakushi. Kyoto: Minerva shobō, 1959.
Furushima, Kazuo. Ichi rō-seijika no kaisō. Tokyo: Chūō kōronsha, 1951.Google Scholar
Furuta, Hikaru. Kawakami Hajime. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppanbu, 1959.
Gaimushō, chōsabu. “Nihon koyū no gaikō shidō genri kōryō” Dec. 1939. In Gaikō shiryōkan shiryō (Foreign Ministry File No. A-1-0-0-6).Google Scholar
Gaimushō, , ed. Nihon gaikō nenpyō narabi ni shuyō bunsho-ge. Tokyo: Hara shobō, 1966.
Gaimushō, , ed. Nihon gaikō nenpyō narabini shuyō bunsho – jo, rev. ed. Tokyo: Hara shobō, 1965.
Gaimushō, , ed. Shūsen shiroku. Tokyo: Shinbun gekkansha, 1952.
Galenson, Walter, and Odaka, Konosuke.The Japanese Labor Market.” In Asia's New Giant: How the Japanese Economy Works, ed. Patrick, Hugh T. and Rosovsky, Henry. Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution, 1976.Google Scholar
Gayn, Mark. Japan Diary. Tokyo: Tuttle, 1981.
Genda, Minoru. Kaigun kōkūtai shimatsuki, 2 vols. Tokyo: Bungei shunjūsha, 1968.
Gendaishi, shiryō. Nitchū sensō, vols. 8–10, 12–13, 1964–66; Taiheiyō sensō vol. 34–36, 38–39, 1968–75; Daihone, vol. 37, 1967. Tokyo: Misuzu shobō.
Gerschenkron, Alexander. Economic Backwardness in Historical Perspective: A Book of Essays. Cambridge, Mass: Belknap, 1962.
Gluck, Carol. Japan's Modern Myths: Ideology in the Late Meiji Period. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1985.
Gomikawa, Junpei. Gozen kaigi. Tokyo: Bungei shunjūsha, 1978.
Gondō, Seikei. “Jichi minsei ri”. In Gendai Nihon shisō taikei, vol. 31: Chōkokkashugi, 31:, ed. Bunzō, Hashikawa. Tokyo: Chikuma shobō, 1964.Google Scholar
Gordon, Andrew. The Evolution of Labor Relations in Japan: Heavy Industry, 1853–1955. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1985.
Gotō, Yasushi, ed. Tennōsei to minshū. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1976.
Gouldner, Alvin. The Two Marxisms. New York: Oxford University Press, 1980.
,Government Section, Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers. Political Reorientation of Japan, September 1945 to September 1948, 2 vols., Reprint ed. Grosse Pointe, Mich.: Scholarly Press, 1968.
Grajdanzev, Andrew. Formosa Today: An Analysis of the Economic Development and Strategic Importance of Japan's Tropical Colony. New York: Institute of Pacific Relations, 1942.
Grajdanzev, Andrew. Modern Korea: Her Economic and Social Development Under the Japanese. New York: Institute of Pacific Relations, 1944.
Griswold, Alfred Whitney. The Far Eastern Policy of the United States. New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1938.
Hadley, Eleanor. Antitrust in Japan. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1970.
Hafner, Sebastian. Hitorā to wa nanika, trans. Tatsuo, Akabane. Tokyo: Sōshisha, 1979.
Hagiwara, Susumu. “Senji chingin tōsei no isan”. Chingin fōramu, nos. 11–20 (1977).Google Scholar
Hagiwara, Sakutarō. Nihon e no kaiki. Tokyo: Hakusuisha, 1938.
Hall, John Whitney. “A Monarch for Modern Japan.” In Political Development in Modern Japan, ed. Ward, Robert E.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1968.Google Scholar
Hanzawa, Hiroshi. Ajia e no yume, vol. 6 of Meiji no gunzō. Tokyo: San'ichi shobō, 1970.
Hara, Akinori. Teikoku kaigun shireichōkan no nazo. Tokyo: Tokuma shoten, 1972.
Hara, Akira. “‘Manshū’ ni okeru keizai tōsei seisaku no tenkai – Mantetsu kaiso to Mangyō setsuritsu o megutte”. in Nihon keizai seisakushi ron - ge, ed. Yoshio, Andō. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1976.Google Scholar
Hara, Akira. “1930 nendai no Manshū keizai tōsei seisaku” 1930. in Nihon teikokushugika no Manshū, ed. kenkyūkai, Manshū. Tokyo: Ochanomizu shobō, 1972.Google Scholar
Hara, Takashi. Hara Takashi nikki, vol. 2. Tokyo: Fukumaru shuppan, 1965.
Hara, Takashi. Hara Takashi nikki, vol. 8. Tokyo: Tōkyō kengensha, 1950.
Hara, Shirō. “Kinyū kikan tachinaoru”. in Shōwa keizai shi, ed. Hiromi, Arisawa. Tokyo: Nihon keizai shinbunsha, 1976.Google Scholar
Harada, Kumao. Saionji-kō to seikyoku (also known as Harada nikki), 9 vols., ed. Masao, Maruyama and Shigeru, Hayashi. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 19501956.
Harris, John R., and Todaro, Michael P.Migration, Unemployment and Development: A Two-Sector Analysis.” American Economic Review 60 (March 1970): 126–42.Google Scholar
Hashikawa, Bunzō. “Kakushin kanryō”. In Kenryoku no shisō, vol. 10 of Gendai Nihon shisō taikei. ed. Jirō, Kamishima. Tokyo: Chikuma shobō, 1965.Google Scholar
Hata, Ikuhiko. “Onnenshikan kara no dakkyaku”. Keizai ōrai (February 1979).Google Scholar
Hata, Ikuhiko. “Rokōkyō daiippatsu no hannin”. In Ichiokunin no Shōwa shi 3: Nitchū sensō (2) – 3: (2). Tokyo: Mainichi shinbunsha, 1979.Google Scholar
Hata, Ikuhiko. “Ryojōkō jiken no saikentō”. Seiji keizai shigaku, no. 183 (August 1981): 1–19.Google Scholar
Hata, Ikuhiko. Gun fashizumu undōshi, rev. ed. Tokyo: Hara shobō, 1980.
Hata, Ikuhiko. Gun fashizumu undōshi. Tokyo: Kawade shobō shinsha, 1972.
Hata, Ikuhiko. Nitchū sensō shi, rev. ed. Tokyo: Hara shobō, 1979.
Hata, Ikuhiko. Nitchū sensō shi. Tokyo: Kawade shobō, 1961.
Hata, Ikuhiko. Taiheiyō kokusai kankei shi. Tokyo: Fukumura shuppan, 1972.
Hata, Ikuhiko. Taiheiyō sensō: Roku daikessen: Naze Nihon wa yaburetaka. Tokyo: Yomiuri shinbunsha, 1976.
Hatada, Takashi. “Nihonjin no Chōsenkan”. in Nihon to Chōsen, vol. 3 of Ajia-Ajurika Kōza. Tokyo: Keiso shobō, 1965.Google Scholar
Hatai, Yoshitaka.Business Cycles and the Outflow of Labor from the Agricultural Sector.” In The Labor Market in Japan, ed. Nishikawa, Shunsaku and trans. Mouer, Ross. Tokyo: Tokyo University Press, 1980.Google Scholar
Hatanaka, Sachiko, comp. A Bibliography of Micronesia from Japanese Publication [sic]. Occasional Papers no. 8, Gakushūin University, Tokyo, 1979.
Hatano, Sumio. “‘Tōa shinchitsujo’ to chiseigaku”. In Nihon no 1930 nendai, ed. Kimitada, Miwa. Tokyo: Sōryūsha, 1980.Google Scholar
Hattori, Takushirō. Dai Tōa sensō zenshi, 4 vols. Tokyo: Masu shobō, 1953.
Havens, Thomas R. H. Farm and Nation in Modern Japan: Agrarian Nationalism, 1870–1940. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1974.
Havens, Thomas R. H. Valley of Darkness: The Japanese People and World War Two. New York: Norton, 1978.
Hayami, Yūjirō, and Yamada, Saburō. “Agricultural Productivity and the Beginning of Industrialization.” In Agriculture and Economic Growth: Japan's Experience, ed. Ohkawa, Kazushi et al. Tokyo: Tokyo University Press; and Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1969.Google Scholar
Hayami, Yujirō, in association with Masakatsu Akino, Masahiko Shintani, and Saburō Yamada. A Century of Agricultural Growth in Japan, Its Relevance to Asian Development. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press; and Tokyo: Tokyo University Press, 1965.Google Scholar
Hayashi, Chikio. “Nihonjin no ishiki wa seitōshijibetsu ni dō chigau ka”. Nihonjin kenkyū No. 2 (Tokushū: Shijiseitōbetsu nihonjin shūdan), ed. kenkyūkai, Nihonjin. Tokyo: Shiseidō, 1975.Google Scholar
Hayashi, Chikio. “Sengo no seiji ishiki”. Jiyū (January 1964): 57–65.Google Scholar
Hayashi, Fusao. Dai Tōa sensō kōteiron, 2 vols. Tokyo: Banchō shobō, 1964, 1966.
Hayashi, Shigeru, Taiheiyō sensōNihon no rekishi vol. 25. Tokyo: Chūō kōronsha, 1967.
Hayashi, Shigeru, and Kiyoaki, Tsuji. Nihon naikakushi roku, 6 vols. Tokyo: Daiichi hōki, 1981.
Hayashi, Shigeru. Nihon shūsenshi, 3 vols. Tokyo: Yomiuri shinbunsha, 1962.
Hayashi, Shigeru. et al., eds. Heimin shinbun ronsetsushū Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1961.
Hayashi, Takehisa. “Shaupu kankoku to zeisei kaikaku”. in Keizai kaikaku, vol. 7 of Sengo kaikaku, ed. kenkyūjo, Tōkyō daigaku shakaikagaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 19741975.Google Scholar
Hayashi, Saburō. Taiheiyō sensō rikusen gaishi Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1951.
Hazama, Hiroshi. Nihon rōmu kanrishi kenkyū. Tokyo: Diamondosha, 1964.
Hellmann, Donald C. Japan and East Asia: The New International Order. New York: Praeger, 1972.
Hellmann, Donald C. Japanese Domestic Politics and Foreign Policy: The Peace Agreement with the Soviet Union. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1969.
Henderson, Dan F., ed. The Constitution of Japan: Its First Twenty Years, 1947–67. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1968.
Henderson, Gregory. Korea: Politics of the Vortex. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1966.
Higashikuni, Naruhiko. Ichi kōzoku no sensd nikki mdash; Tokyo: Nihon shūhōsha, 1959.
Hijikata, Seibi. “Shokugyōbetsu jinkō no hensen o tsūjite mitaru shitsugyō mondai”. Shakai seisakujihō 108 (September 1929).Google Scholar
Hirai, Tomoyoshi. “Soren no dōkō (1933 nen–1939 nen)” In Taiheiyō sensō e no michi, vol. 4, ed. kenkyūlbu, Nihon kokusai seiji gakkai Taiheiyō senso gen'in. Tokyo: Asahi shinbunsha, 1963.Google Scholar
Hirano, Ken'ichirō. “Manshū jihenzen ni okeru zai-Man Nihonjin no dōkō”. Kokusai seiji, no. 43 (1970): 51–76.Google Scholar
Hirano, Yoshitarō (5, ed. Kōtoku Shūsui senshū, 3 vols. Tokyo: Sekai hyōronsha, 19481950.
Hiratsuka, Atsushi, ed. ltd Hirobumi hiroku. Tokyo: Bun-shusha, 1929.
Hiratsuka, Atsushi, ed. Zoku ltd Hirobumi hiroku Tokyo: Bunshūsha, 1930.
Hiromatsu, Wataru. Kindai no chōkoku ron. Tokyo: Asahi shuppansha, 1980.
Hiromi, Arisawa, ed. Gendai Nihon sangyō kōza, vol. 5: Kikai kōgyō (1) 5:(1). Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1960.
Hirota, denki kankōkai Kōki, ed. Hirota Kōki. Tokyo: Chūō kōron jigyō shuppan, 1966.
Hirschman, Albert O. Exit, Voice, and Loyalty. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1970.
Hirschmeier, Johannes S. V. D.Shibusawa Eiichi: Industrial Pioneer.” In The State and Economic Enterprise in Japan: Essays in the Political Economy of Growth, ed. Lockwood, William W.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1965.Google Scholar
Ho, Samuel P. S.The Economic Development of Colonial Taiwan: Evidence and Interpretations.” Journal of Asian Studies 34 (February 1975): 417–39.Google Scholar
Ho, Samuel P. S.Agricultural Transformations Under Colonialism: The Case of Taiwan.” Journal of Economic History 28 (September 1968): 313–40.Google Scholar
Ho, Samuel P. S.The Economic Development Policy of the Japanese Colonial Government in Taiwan, 1895–1945.” In Government and Economic Development, ed. Ranis, Gustav. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1971.Google Scholar
Hofstadter, Richard. The Idea of a Party System. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1969.
Horiba, Kazuo. Shinajihen sensō shidō shi. Tokyo: Jiji tsūshinsha, 1962.
Hōsei, daigaku ōhara shakai mondai kenkyūjo. Taiheiyō sensōka no rōdōsha jōtai. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1964.
Hoshino, Naoki. Mihatenu yume: Manshūkoku gaishi. Tokyo: Diamondosha, 1963.
Hoshino, Yasusaburō. “Keisatsu seido no kaikaku”. In Seijikatei, vol. 3 of Sengo kaikaku, ed. kenkyūjo, Tōkyō daigaku shakaikagaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 19741975.Google Scholar
Hosoi, Wakizō. Jokō aishi. Tokyo: Kaizōsha, 1925.
Hoston, Germaine A. Marxism and the Crisis of Development in Prewar Japan. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1986.
Hozumi, Yatsuka. Kenpō teiyō. Tokyo: Yūhikaku, 1935.
Hunt, Frazier. The Untold Story of Douglas MacArthur. New York: Devin-Adair, 1954.
Ichihara, Ryōhei. “Seitō rengō undō no kiban: ‘Zaibatsu no tenkō’ o shōten to shiteKeizai ronsō 73 (February 1954): 106–22.Google Scholar
Ichihara, Ryōhei. “SeitZō rengō undo no hasan: ‘Teijin jiken’ o shōten to shite”, Keizai ronsō 73 (March 1954): 161–82.Google Scholar
Ichirō, Inoue. “Senryō shoki no sozei gyōsei'in”. In Kyōdō kenkyū: Nihon senryōgun: Sono hikari to kage. ed. kenkyūkai, Shisō kagaku. Tokyo: Tokuma shoten, 1978.Google Scholar
Ide, Yoshinori. “Sengo kaikaku to Nihon kanryōsei: Kōmuin seido no sōshutsu katei”. In Seiji katei, vol. 3 of Sengo kaikaku, ed. kenkyūjo, Tōkyō daigaku shakaikagaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 19741975.Google Scholar
Ike, Nobutaka. “War and Modernization.” In Political Development in Modern Japan. ed. Ward, Robert E.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1968.Google Scholar
Ike, Nobutaka. Japan's Decision for War. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1967.
Ikeda, Shigeaki. Zaikai kaiko. Tokyo: Konnichi no mondai sha, 1949.
Iki, Makoto. “Izanagi keiki”. in Shōwa keizai shi, ed. Hiromi, Arisawa. Tokyo: Nihon keizai shinbunsha, 1976.Google Scholar
Imada, Sachiko. “Gakureki kōZō no suisei bunseki”. In Nihon no kaisomacr; kōzō, ed. Ken'ichi, Tominaga. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1979.Google Scholar
Imada, Takatoshi and Junsuke, Hara. “Shakaiteki chii no ikkansei to hi-ikkansei”. In Nihon no kaisō kōzō, ed. Ken'ichi, Tominaga. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1979.Google Scholar
Imai, Seiichi and Takashi, Itō, eds. Kokka sōdōin m vol. 2 of Gendai shi shiryō. Tokyo: Misuzu shobō, 1974.
Imamura, Hitoshi. Shiki: Ichigunjin rokujūnen no aikan. Tokyo: Fuyō shobō, 1970.
Imanishi, Kinji, ed. Ponape-tō. Tokyo: Shoko shoin, 1944.
Inoguchi, Rikihei and Tadashi, Nakajima Kamikaze tokubetsu kōgekitai. Tokyo: Nihon shuppan kyōdōsha, 1951.
Inoki, Masamichi. Hyōden Yoshida Shigeru. 4 vols. Tokyo: Yomiuri shinbunsha, 1981.
Inoue, Kiyoshi and Tōru, Watanabe, eds. Kome sōdō no kenkyū, vol. 5. Tokyo: Yūhikaku, 1962.
Inoue, Kiyoshi. “Nihon teikokushugi no keisei”. In Kindai Nihon no keisei. ed. kenkyūkai, Rekishigaku. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1953.Google Scholar
,International Military Tribunal for the Far East. “Proceedings” (mimeo graphed). Tokyo, 19461949.
Inumaru, Yoshikazu. Kōza: Gendai no ideorogii II, Nihon no marukusushugi, sono 2, Tokyo: San'ichi shobō, 1961.
Iriye, Akira. Nichi-Bei sensō. Tokyo: ChūŌ kōronsha, 1978.
Iriye, Akira. After Imperialism: The Search for a New Order in the Far East. 1951–1941. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1965.
Ishibashi, Tanzan. Ishibashi Tanzan zenshū, 15 vols. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha: 19701972.
Ishida, Takeshi, and George, Aurelia D.Nōkyō: The Japanese Farmers’ Representative.” In Japan & Australia: Two Societies and Their Interaction. ed. Drysdale, Peter and Kitaoji, Hironobu. Canberra: Australian National University Press, 1981.Google Scholar
Ishida, Takeshi. “Movements to Protect Constitutional Government - A Structural Functional Analysis.” In Democracy in Prewar Japan: Groundwork or Façade? ed. Totten, George O.. Lexington, Mass.: Heath, 1965.Google Scholar
Ishida, Takeshi. “Sengo kaikaku to soshiki oyobi shōchō”. In Kadai to shikaku, vol. 1 of Sengo kaikaku, ed. kenkyūjo, Tōkyō daigaku shakaikagaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 19741975.Google Scholar
Ishida, Takeshi. “The Development of Interest Groups and the Pattern of Political Modernization in Japan.” In Political Development in Modern Japan. ed. Ward, Robert E.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1968.Google Scholar
Ishii, Kin'ichirō. “Nihon fuashizumu to chihō seido: 1943-nen no hōkaisei o chūshin ni” In Rekishigaku kenkyū (December 1965): 1–12.Google Scholar
Ishikawa, Shingo. Shinjuwan made no keii. Tokyo: Jiji tsushinsha, 1960.
Ishikawa, Tatsuzo. “Kokoro no naka no sensōChūōkōron (March 1963): 201–7.Google Scholar
Ishiwara, Kanji. Ishiwara Kanji shiryō (1): Kokubō ronsaku. ed. Jun, Tsunoda. Tokyo: Hara shobō, 1971.
Ishizaki, TadaoSangyō kōzō to shūgyō kōzō”. In Waga kuni kanzen koyō no igi to taisaku, ed. dojinkai, Shomacr;wa. Tokyo: Shōwa dojinkai, 1957.Google Scholar
Ishwara, Kanji. “Genzai oyobi shōrai ni okeru Nihon no kokubō”. In Ishiwara Kanji shiryō (2): Sensō shiron, ed. Jun, Tsunoda. Tokyo: Hara shobō, 1967.Google Scholar
Itarō, Ishii. Gaikōkan no isshō. Tokyo: Yomiuri shinbunsha, 1950.
Itō, Mitsuharu. Hoshu to kakushin no Nihonteki kōzō. Tokyo: Chikuma shobō, 1970.
Itō, Takashi. “‘Kyokoku itchi’ naikakuki no seikai saihensei mondai: Shōwa jūsan-nen Konoe shintō mondai kenkyū no tame ni”. In shakai kagaku kenkyū’ 24 (1972): 56–130.Google Scholar
Itō, Takashi. “Sengo seitōo no keisei katei” in Senryomacr;ki Nihon no keizai to seiji, ed. Takafusa, Nakamura. Tokyo: Tōky¯o daigaku shuppankai, 1979.Google Scholar
Itō, Takashi. Shōwa shoki seijishi kenkyū. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1969.
Itō, Takashi. Taishōki “Kakushin” ha no seiritsu, Tokyo: Hanawa shoten, 1978.
Ito, Daikichi. “The Bureaucracy: Its Attitudes and Behavior.The Developing Economies 6 (December 1968).Google Scholar
Ito, Hirobumi. Commentaries on the Constitution of Empire of Japan, trans. Ito, Miyoji. Tokyo: Chūō daigaku, 1906.
Ito, Takashi. “Conflicts and Coalitions in Japan, 1930: Political Groups [and] the London Naval Disarmament Conference.” In The Study of Coalition Behavior, ed. Groennings, Sven, Kelley, W. W., and Leiserson, Michael. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1970.Google Scholar
Ito, Takashi. “The Role of Right-Wing Organizations in Japan.” In Pearl Harbor As History: Japanese-American Relations 1931–1941. ed. Borg, Dorothy and Okamoto, Shumpei. New York: Columbia University Press, 1973.Google Scholar
Itoya, Toshio. Kōtoku shūsui kenkyū Tokyo: Aoki shoten, 1967.
Iwabuchi, Tatsuo. Yabururu hi made. Tokyo: Nihon shū hōsha, 1946.
Iwamoto, Sumiaki. “Senryōgun no tai-Nichi nōgyō seisaku” In Senryōki nihon no keizai to seiji. ed. Takafusa, Nakamura. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1979.Google Scholar
Iwasaki, Chikatsugu. Nihon marukusushugi tetsugakushi josetsu. Tokyo: Miraisha, 1971.
Izumiyama, Sanroku. Tora daijin ni naru made Tokyo: Tōhō shoin, 1953.
Jansen, Marius B.Modernization and Foreign Policy in Meiji Japan.” In Political Development in Modern Japan. ed. Ward, Robert E.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1968.Google Scholar
Jansen, Marius B. The Japanese and Sun Yat-sen. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1954.
Jay, Martin. The Dialectical Imagination. Boston: Little, Brown, 1973.
Jiji, tsūshinsha. Jiji nenkan. Tokyo: Jiji tsūshinsha, annual.
Johannes, Hirschmeier, and Tsunehiko, Yui. The Development of Japanese Business, 1600-1973. London: Allen & Unwin, 1975.
Johnson, Chalmers. “Japan: Who Governs? An Essay on Official Bureaucracy.Journal of Japanese Studies 2 (Autumn 1975): 1–28.Google Scholar
Johnson, Chalmers. MITI and the Japanese Miracle: The Growth of Industrial Policy, 1925 –1975. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1982.
Johnston, Bruce F.The Japanese ‘Model’ of Agricultural Development: Its Relevance to Developing Nations.” In Agriculture and Economic Growth: Japan's Experience. ed. Ohkawa, Kazushi et al. Tokyo: Tokyo University Press; and Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1969.Google Scholar
Jun'ichirō, Ōtsu. Dai Nippon kensei shi, vol. 6. Tokyo: Hōbunkan, 19271928.
Jūyō, sangyō kyōgikai. Gunju kaishahō kaisetsu Tokyo: Teikoku shuppan, 1944.
Kahn, Herman. The Emerging Japanese Superstate: Challenge and Response. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1970.
Kajimura, Hideki. “Shokuminchi Chōsen de no Nihonjin”. In Chihō demokurashii to sensō, ed. Samon, Kimbara, vol. 9 of Chihō bunka no Nihonshi Tokyo: Bun'ichi sokai shuppan, 1978.Google Scholar
Kamishima, Jirō, ed. Kenryoku no shisō, vol. 10 of Gendai Nihon shisō taikei. Tokyo: Chikuma shobō, 1965.
Kanamori, HisaoTenbō I: Kyōran doto no naka no seichō” I: In Sh¯owa keizai shi, ed. Hiromi, Arisawa. Tokyo: Nihon keizai shinbunsha, 1976.Google Scholar
Kaneda, Hiromitsu. “Long-Term Changes in Food Consumption Patterns in Japan.” In Agriculture and Economic Growth, Japan's Experience. ed. Ohkawa, Kazushi et al. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1969.Google Scholar
Kaneko, Tamio. ChūōAjia nihaitta Nihonjin. Tokyo: Shinjinbutsu ōraisha, 1973.
Kankyōchō, . Kankyō hakusho Tokyo: Ōkurashō insatsu kyoku, annual.
Kannappan, Subbiah, ed. Studies of Urban Labour Market Behaviour in Developing Areas. Geneva: International Institute for Labour Studies, 1977.
Kanō, MasanaoMeiji kōki ni okeru kokumin soshikika no kateiShikan, no. 69 (March 1964): 18–46.Google Scholar
Kanō, Masanao. Taishō demokurashii no teiryū. Tokyo: Nihon hōsō shuppan kyōkai, 1973.
Kaplan, Morton A., ed. The Many Faces of Communism. New York: Free Press, 1978.
Karita, Tōru. Shōwa shoki seiji-gaikō shi kenkyū. Tokyo: Ningen no kagakusha, 1978.
Karube, Kiyoshi. “Nihonjin wa dono yō ni shite shijiseitō o kimeru ka”. In Tokushū: Shijiseitōbetsu Nihonjin shūdan, vol. 2 of Nihonjin kenkyū, ed. kenkyūkai, Nihonjin. Tokyo: Shiseidō, 1975.Google Scholar
Katakura, Tadashi Kaisō no Manshūkoku Tokyo: Keizai Oraisha, 1974.
Katayama, Sen. “Waga shakaishugi”. In Katayama Sen, Tazoe Tetsuji shū. ed. Eitar, Kishimoto ō Tokyo: Aoki shoten, 1955.Google Scholar
Katsuichirō, Kamei and Yoshimi, Takeuchi eds. Kindai Ni-hon shisōshi kōza, vol. 7: Kindaika to dentd, 7,. Tokyo: Chikuma shobō, 1959.
Kawabe, Torashirō. Ichigayadai kara Ichigayadaie. Tokyo: Jiji tsūshinsha, 1962.
Kawai, Ichirō et al., eds. Kōza: Nihon shihonshugi hattatsu shiron. vol. 3: Kyōkō kara sensō e Tokyo: Nihon hyōronsha, 1968.
Kawai, Kazuo. Japan's American Interlude. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1960.
Kawakami, Hajime. “Minponshugi to wa nanizoyaTōhō jiron (October 1917).Google Scholar
Kawamura, NozomuKosaku sōgi ki ni okeru sonraku taiseiSonraku shakai kenkyō nenpō, no. 7 (1960): 106–50.Google Scholar
Kawasaki, Hideji Yūki aru seijikatachi. Tokyo: Sengoku shuppansha, 1971.
Kawashima, Takeyoshi. “Nōson no mibunkaisōsei” In Nihon shihonshugi kōza. vol. 8. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1954.Google Scholar
Kazahaya, Yasoji Nihon shakai seisakushi Tokyo: Nihon hyōronsha, 1937.
Kazama, DaijiChūnensō no shijiseitōbetsu seikatsu ishiki” In Nihonjin kenkyū no. 2 (Tokushū: shiji seitobetsu Nihonjin shōdan). ed. kenkyūkai, Nihonjin Tokyo: Shiseidō, 1975.Google Scholar
Kazuo, Satō. “Senkanki Nihon no makuro keizai to mikuro keizai”. In Senkanki no Nihon keizai bunseki, ed. Takafusa, Nakamura. Tokyo: Yamakawa shuppansha, 1981.Google Scholar
Keene, Donald. “The Sino-Japanese War of 1894–95 and Its Cultural Effects in Japan.” In Tradition and Modernization in Japanese Culture. ed. Shively, Donald H.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1971.Google Scholar
Keijirō, Ōtani. Rakujitsu no joshō. Tokyo: Yagumo shoten, 1959.
Keizai, antei honbu sōsai kanbō kikakubu. Taiheiyō sensō niyoru waga kuni higai sōgō hōkokusho Tokyo, 1949.
Keizai, antei honbu. Taiheiyō sensō niyoru wagakuni no higai sōgō hokokusho. Tokyo, 1948.
Keizai, kikakuchō kokumin shotokuka. Kokutnin shotoku dokō. Tokyo, 1986.
Keizai, kikakuchō chōsakyoku, ed. Shiryō: keizai hakusho ni-jiigo nen Tokyo, 1972.
Keizai, kikakuchō sōgō keikakukyoku. ed. Shotoku shisan bunpai no jittai to mondaiten: Shotoku bunpai ni kansuru kenkyūkai hōkoku. Tokyo: Ōkurashō insatsu kyoku, 1975.
Keizai, kikakuchō, ed. Kokutnin seikatsu hakusho: Shōwa 54-nen ban Tokyo: Ōkurashō insatsu kyoku, 1979.
Keizai, kikakuchō. (1976) Gendai Nihon keizai no tenkai Tokyo, 1976.
Kelley, Allen C., and Williamson, Jeffrey G. Lessons from Japanese Economic Development. An Analytical Economic History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1974.
kenkyūjo, Tōkyō daigaku shakaikagaku, eds. Senji Nihon no hōtaisei, vol. 5 of Fuashizumuki no kokka to shakai. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1979.
kenkyūkai, Nichi-Man nōsei. Saikin ni okeru jinkō idō no seikaku to nōgyō. Tokyo, 1940.
Kenpō, chōsakai. Kenpō seitei no keika ni kansuru shōiinkai hōkokusho. (Kenpō chōsakai hōkokusho fuzoku bunsho, no. 2). Tokyo: Kenpō chōsakai, July 1964.
Keynes, John Maynard. The Economic Consequences of Mr. Churchill. London: L. and V. Woolf, 1925.
Kimura Eiichi riji no setsumei”. Kikan gendai shi 56 (November 1972).
Kinoshita, Hanji. “Kokuminshugi undō no gendankai”. Chūōkōron (December 1938): 216–23.Google Scholar
Kishimoto, Eitarō and Hirotake, Koyama. Nihon no hi-kyōsantō marukusushugisha. Tokyo: San'ichi shobō, 1962.
Kishimoto, Eitarō and Hirotake, Koyama, eds. Nihon kin-dai shakai shisōshi. Tokyo: Aoki shoten, 1959.
Kita, Ikki. “Nihon kaizō hōan taikō”. In Gendai Nihon shisō taikei. vol. 31: Chōkokka shugi, ed. Bunz, Hashikawa ō Tokyo: Chikuma shobō, 1964.Google Scholar
Kitaoka, Shin'ichiRikugun habatsu tairitsu (1931 –35) no saikentō” In Shōwaki no gunbu. ed. kenkyūkai, Kindai Nihon. Tokyo: Yamakawa shuppan-sha, 1979.Google Scholar
Kiya, Ikusaburō. Konoe-kō hibun. Wakayama: Kōyasan shuppansha, 1950.
Ko-Baba, Eiichi-shi kinenkai. Baba Eiichi den. Tokyo: Ko-Baba Eiichi-shi kinenkai, 1945.
Kobayashi, Hideo. “Manshū kin'yū kōzō no saihensei katei - 1930 nen-dai zenhanki o chūshin to shite”. In Nihon teikokushugika no Manshū ed. Manshū kenkyōkai. Tokyo: Ochanomizu shobō, 1972.Google Scholar
Kobayashi, YukioTai-So seisaku no suii to Man-Mō mondai” in Taiheiyō sensō e no michi ed. kenkyūbu, Nihon kokusai seiji gakkai Taiheiyōsensō gen'in. Tokyo: Asahi shinbunsha, 1962.Google Scholar
Koiso, Kuniaki jijoden kankōkai, ed. Kaisuzan kōsō. Tokyo: Koiso Kuniaki jijoden kankōkai, 1963.
Kōji, Kata. “Gunsei jidai no fūzoku”. In Kyōdō kenkyū: Nihon senryō. ed. kenkyūkai, Shisō kagaku. Tokyo: Tokuma shoten, 1972.Google Scholar
Kokumin, seikatsu sentā ed. Kokumin seikatsu tōkei nempō‘80 ‘80. Tokyo: Shiseidō, 1980.
Kolakowski, Leszek. Main Currents of Marxism. vol. 2: The Golden Age. New York: Oxford University Press, 1978.
Komatsu, Ryūji Kigyōbetsu kumiai no seisei Tokyo: Ochanomizu shobō, 1971.
Komiya, Ryutarō et al., eds. Kōdo seicho no jidai. Tokyo: Nihon hyōronsha, 1981.
Komiya, Ryutarō et al., eds. Nihon no sangyō seisaku. Tokyo: Tokyō daigaku shuppankai, 1984.
Komiya, Ryutarō. Gendai Nihon keizai kenkyō. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1975.
Konoe Fumimaro-kō no shuki: ushinawareshi seiji. Tokyo: Asahi shinbunsha, 1946.
Kōsai, YutakaIwato keiki” In Shdwa keizai shi ed. Hiromi, Arisawa. Tokyo: Nihon keizai shinbunsha, 1976.Google Scholar
Kosai, Yutaka, and Ogino, Yoshitaro. The Contemporary Japanese Economy. New York: Macmillan, 1981.
Kōtoku, Shōsui Hyōron to zuisō Tokyo: Jiyūhyōronsha, 1950.
Kōtoku, ShūsuiShakaishugi no tai'seiNihon-jin August 20, 1900.Google Scholar
Kōtoku, Shūsui Shakaishugi shinzui. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1955.
Kōtoku, Shūsui Teikokushugi: Nijōseiki no kaibutsu. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1954.
Kovalio, Jacob. “The Personnel Policy of Army Minister Araki Sadao: The Tosa-Saga Theory Re-examined.” In Tradition and Modern Japan. ed. O'Neill, P. G.. Tenterden, Kent: Paul Norbury, 1981.Google Scholar
Koyama, Hirotake Nihon marukusushugiski Tokyo: Aoki shoten, 1956.
Koyama, Hirotake and Hitoshi, Koyama. “Taishō shakai-shugi no shisōteki bunka”. Shisō 466 (April 1963): 119–30.Google Scholar
Koyama, Hirotake and Yasuji, Sugimori. “Rōnōha marukusu shugi” In Shōwa no hantaisei shisō ed. Etsuji, Sumiya Tokyo: Haga shobo, 1967.Google Scholar
Koyama, Hirotake. “Nihon no marukusushugi no keisei”. In Shōwa no hantaisei shisō. ed. Etsuji, Sumiya. Tokyo: Haga shobō, 1967.Google Scholar
Krauss, Ellis S.Opposition in Power: The Development and Maintenance of Leftist Government in Kyoto Prefecture.” In Political Opposition and Local Politics in Japan. ed. Steiner, Kurt, Krauss, Ellis S., and Flanagan, Scott C.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1980.Google Scholar
Krebs, GerhardDoitsu kara mita Nihon no Dai Tōa seisaku” in Nihon no 1930 nendai ed. Miwa Kimitada Tokyo: Sōryōsha, 1980.Google Scholar
Kublin, Hyman. “Taiwan's Japanese Interlude, 1895–1945.” In Taiwan in Modern Times. ed. Sih, Paul K. T.. New York: St. John's University Press, 1973.Google Scholar
Kublin, Hyman. “The Evolution of Japanese Colonialism.Comparative Studies in Society and History 2 (1959): 67–84.Google Scholar
Kublin, Hyman. Asian Revolutionary: The Life of Sen Katayama. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1964.
Kubota, Akira. High Civil Servants in Postwar Japan: Their Social Origins, Educational Background, and Career Patterns. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1969.
Kūki, Shūzō. “Iki” no kōzō. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1967.
Kume, Shigeru. “Kokutetsu rōso to Suzuki Ichizō ni miru senryōka rōdō undō”. in Kyōdō kenkyū: Nihon senryō. ed. kenkyūkai, Shisō kagaku. Tokyo: Tokuma shoten, 1972.Google Scholar
Kusaka, Ryūnosuke Rengō kantai sanbōchō no kaisō. Tokyo: Kōwadō, 1979.
Kusuda, Minoru Shushō. hishokan Tokyo: Bungei shun-jōsha, 1975.
Kuznets, Simon. Economic Growth of Nations: Total Output and Production Structure. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1971.
Lamley, Harry J.Assimilation in Colonial Taiwan: The Fate of the 1914 Movement.Monumenta Serica 29 (19701971): 496–520.Google Scholar
Landes, David S.Technological Change and Development in Western Europe, 1750–1914.” In Cambridge Economic History of Europe. vol. I, ed. Habakuk, H. J. and Postan, M.. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1965.Google Scholar
Large, Stephen S.Perspectives on the Failure of the Labour Movement in Prewar Japan.Labour History 37 (November 1979).Google Scholar
Large, Stephen S. Organized Workers and Socialist Politics in Interwar Japan. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1981.
Large, Stephen S. The Rise of Labor in Japan: The Yūaikai. Tokyo: Sophia University Press, 1972.
Lee, Bradford. Britain and the Sino-Japanese War 1937–39. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1977.
Lee, Chong-sik. The Politics of Korean Nationalism. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1973.
LeMay, Curtis E., with Mackinlay, Kantor. Mission with LeMay: My Story. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1965.
Levine, Solomon B. Industrial Relations in Postwar Japan. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1958.
Levine, Solomon B., and Kawada, Hisashi. Human Resources in Japanese Industrial Development. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1980.
Lewis, W. Arthur. “Economic Development with Unlimited Supplies of Labour.Manchester School of Economic and Social Studies 22 (May 1954): 39–91.Google Scholar
Lichtheim, George, Marxism: An Historical and Critical Study. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1961.
Lockwood, Willam W. The Economic Development of Japan: Growth and Structural Change, 1868–1938. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1954.
Lockwood, William W. The State and Economic Enterprise in Japan: Essays in the Political Economy of Growth. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1965.
(Long-Term Economic Statistics) Kazushi, Ökawa, Miyohei, Shinohara and Mataji, Umemura, eds. Chōki keizai tōkei, (LTES, Long-Term Economic Statistics). Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1965–).
Lory, Hillis. Japan's Military Masters: The Army in Japanese Life. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1943.
(Long-Term Economic Statistics, vol. 4) Koichi, Emi, ed. Shihon keisei. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1971.
(Long-Term Economic Statistics. vol. 10) Miyohei, Shinohara, ed. Tekkōgyō, Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1972.
(Long-Term Economic Statistics. vol. 11) Shozaburō, Fujino, Shirō, Fujino and Akira, Ono, eds. Sen'ikōgyō. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1979.
(Long-Term Economic Statistics. vol. 12) Ryōshin, Minami, ed. Tetsudō to denryok. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1965.
(Long-Term Economic Statistics. vol. 14) Yamazawa Ippei and Yamamoto Yūzō, Bō to kokusai shūshi. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1979.
(Long-Term Economic Statistics. vol. 1) Kazushi, Ōkawa, Nobukiyo, Takamatsu and Yūzō, Yamamoto, eds. Kokumin shotoku. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1974.
(Long-Term Economic Statistics. vol. 3) Kazushi, Ōkawa, et al., eds. Shihon sutokku. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1966.
(Long-Term Economic Statistics. vol. 6) Miyohei, Shinohara, ed. Kojin shōhi shishutsu, Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1967.
(Long-Term Economic Statistics. vol. 7) Koichi, Emi and Yuichi, Shionoya, eds Zaisei shishutsu, Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpösha, 1966.
(Long-Term Economic Statistics. vol. 8) Kazushi, Ökawa et al., eds. Bukka Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1967.
(Long-Term Economic Statistics. vol. 9) Mataji, Umemura, et al., eds. Nōringyō. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1966.
Maddison, Angus. Economic Growth in Japan and the USSR. London: Allen & Unwin, 1969.
Maeda, Masana. “Kōgyō iken”. (1885). In Kōgyōiken hoka Maeda Masana kankei shiryō, ed. Yoshio, Asndō and Hirofumi, Yamamoto. Tokyo: Koseikan, 1971.Google Scholar
Maeda, Yasuyuki. Shōkō seisakushi dai 11-kan: Sangyō tōsei. Tokyo: Tsūshō sangyō kenkyūsha, 1964.
Magota, Ryōhei. “Kigyōbetsu kumiai no keisei”. Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences, no. 12 (May 1975): 21–38.Google Scholar
Makise, Kikue. “Kichi no mawari de no kikigaki”. In Kyōdō kenkyū: Nihon senryō. ed. kenkyukai, Shisō kagaku. Tokyo: Tokuma shoten, 1972.Google Scholar
Man-Mō shūsenshi. Tokyo: Kawade shobō shinsha, 1962.
Manshūshi, kenkyūkai, ed. Nihon teikokushugika no Manshū. Tokyo: Ochanomizu shobō, 1972.
Marr, David G. Vietnamese Tradition on Trial. 1920–1945. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1981.
Marshall, Alfred. Principles of Economics. 8th ed. London: Macmillan, 1949.
Marshall, Byron K. Capitalism and Nationalism in Prewar Japan: The Ideology of the Business Elite, 1868–1941. Stanford Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1967.
Maruyama, Kanji. “Minshuteki keikō to seitō”. Nihon oyobi Nihonjin (January 1913).Google Scholar
Maruyama, Masao. “Patterns of Individuation and the Case of Japan: A Conceptual Scheme.” In Changing Japanese Attitudes Toward Modernization. ed. Jansen, Marius B.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1965.Google Scholar
Masao, Maruyama. Thought and Behaviour in Modern Japanese Politics. expanded ed., ed. Morris, Ivan. London: Oxford University Press, 1969.
Masao, Miyoshi. As We Saw Them. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1979.
Matsuishi, Yasuji. “Kokubō daihōshin ni kansuru iken”. In Daihon'ei rikugunbu. ed. shitsu, Bōeichō bōei kenshūjo senshi. Tokyo: Asagumo shinbunsha, 1967.Google Scholar
Matsumoto, Hiroshi. “Meiji-Taishō ki ni okeru jinushi no beikoku hanbai ni tsuite”. Hitotsubashi ronsō 60 (November 1968): 547–65.Google Scholar
Matsumura, Shu'itsu. Miyakezaka: Gunbatsu wa ikanishite umareta ka. Tokyo:, Tōkō shobō, 1952.
Matsumura, Shu'itsu. Sensen kara shūsen made Tokyo: Nihon shūhōsha, 1964.
Matsuo, Takayoshi. “Dai'ichi taisengo no fusen undō”. in Taishōki no seiji to shakai, ed. Kiyoshi, Inoue. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1969.Google Scholar
Matsuo, Takayoshi. Taishō demokurashii no kenkyū. Tokyo: Aoki shoten, 1966.
Matsuoka, Yōsuke denki kankōkai, eds. Matsuoka Yōsuke. Tokyo: Kōdansha, 1974.
Matsushima, Keizō. Higeki no Nagumo chūjō. Tokyo: Tokuma shoten, 1967.
Matsushita, Keiichi. “Sengo kenpōgaku no riron kōsei”. In Seiji katei, vol. 3 of Sengo kaikaku, ed. kenkyūjo, Tōkyō daigaku shakaikagaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 19741975.Google Scholar
Matsushita, Yoshio. Meiji Taishō hansensō undōshi. Tokyo: Sōbisha, 1949.
Matsuzawa, Hiroaki. “Meiji shakaishugi no shisō”. in Nihon no shakaishugi, ed. gakkai, Nihon seiji. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1968.Google Scholar
Matsuzawa, Hiroaki. Nihon shakaishugi no shisō. Tokyo: Chikuma shobō, 1973.
McCormack, Gavin. Chang Tso-lin in Northwest China. 1911–1928: China, Japan, and the Manchurian Idea. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1977.
McKean, Margaret A.Political Socialization Through Citizen's Movement.” In Political Opposition and Local Politics in Japan, ed. Steiner, Kurt, Krauss, Ellis S., and Flanagan, Scott. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press,1980.Google Scholar
McNair, Harley Farnsworth, and Lach, Donald F. Modern Far Eastern International Relations. New York: Van Nostrand, 1950.
Miki, Kiyoshi. “Kaishakugakuteki genshōgaku no kisogainen”. In Kindai Nihon shisō taikei. vol. 27: Miki Kiyoshi shū, 27:, ed. Kazuhiko, Sumiya. Tokyo: Chikuma shobō, 1975.Google Scholar
Miki, Kiyoshi. Miki Kiyoshi Zenshū. vol. 3, ed. Hyōe, Ōuchi. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 19661968.
Mikuriya, TakashiKokusaku tōgōkikan setchi mondai no shiteki tenkai”. In Nenpō kindai Nihon kenkyū–1 Shōwa-ki no gunbu. Tokyo: Yamakawa shuppansha, 1979.Google Scholar
Mikuriya, Takashi. “Meiji kokka kikō sōsetsu katei ni okeru seiji shidō no kyōgō: Naikaku seido oyobi teikoku gikai sōsetsu no seiji katei”. Kokka gakkai zasshi 92 (April 1979): 61–4, 77–9.Google Scholar
Miller, Frank O. Minobe Tatsukichi, Interpreter of Constitutionalism in Japan. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1965.
Minami, Manshū tetsudō kabushiki kaisha, comp. Minami Manshū tetsudō kabushiki kaisha sanjū-nen ryakushi. Dairen: Minami Manshū tetsudō kabushiki kaisha, 1937.
Minami, Ryōshin. Dōryoku kakumei to gijutsu shimpo: Senzen-ki seizōgyō no bunsek. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1976.
Minami, Ryōshin. Nihon no keizai hatten. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1981.
Minami, Ryoshin, and Ono, Akira. “Wages.” In Patterns of Japanese Economic Development: A Quantitative Appraisal. ed. Ohkawa, Kazushi and Shinohara, Miyohei. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1979.Google Scholar
Minami, Ryoshin. “Mechanical Power in the Industrialization of Japan.Journal of Economic History 37 (December 1977): 935–58.Google Scholar
Minami, Ryoshin. “The Introduction of Electric Power and Its Impact on the Manufacturing Industries: With Special Reference to Smaller Scale Plants.” In Japanese Industrialization and Its Social Consequences. ed. Patrick, Hugh T.. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1976.Google Scholar
Minami, Ryoshin. The Turning Point in Economic Development. Tokyo: Kino-kuniya, 1973.
Minobe, Tatsukichi. “Waga gikai seido no zento”. Chūō kōron 553 (January 1934): 2–14.Google Scholar
Minobe, Tatsukichi. Chikujō kenpō seigi. Tokyo: Yuhikaku, 1927.
Minobe, Tatsukichi. Kenpd satsuyō. Tokyo: Yuhikaku, 1926.
Mishima, Yukio. “Bunka bōeiron.” In Mishima Yukio zenshū, vol. 33, ed. Shōichi, Saeki. Tokyo: Shinchōsha, 19731976.Google Scholar
Mita, Munesuke. Gendai nihon no shinjō to ronri Tokyo: Chikuma shobō, 1971.
Mitani, Taichirō. “Kokusai kin'yū shihon to Ajia no sensō”. In Kindai Nihon kenkyū– 2: Kindai Nihon to Higashi Ajia, ed. kenkyūkai, Kindai Nihon. Tokyo: Yamakawa shuppansha, 1980.Google Scholar
Mitani, Taichirō. “Nihon ni okeru baishin sei seiritsu no seijishiteki imi, Shihōbu to seitō kenryoku kankei no tenkai (3)”. Kokka gakkai zasshi 92 (October 1979).Google Scholar
Mitani, Taichirō. “Nihon ni okeru baishinsei seiritsu no seijishiteki imi, Shihōbu to seitō kenryoku kankei no tenkai (1)”. Kokka gakkai zasshi. 92 (March 1979).Google Scholar
Mitani, Taichirō. “Nihon ni okeru baishinsei seiritsu no seijishiteki imi, Shihōbu to seitō kenryoku kankei no tenkai (2)”. Kokka gakkai zasshi. 92 (June 1979).Google Scholar
Mitani, Taichirō. “Seiyūkai no seiritsu”. In Iwanami kōza Nihon rekishi, Kindai 3. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1976.Google Scholar
Mitani, Taichirō. “Taishō shakaishugisha no ‘seiji’ kan – ‘seiji no hitei’ kara ‘seijiteki taikō’ e”. In Nihon no shakaishugi. ed. gakkai, Nihon seiji. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1968.Google Scholar
Mitani, Taichirō. Kindai Nihon no shihoken to seitō: baishinsei seiritsu no seijishi. Tokyo: Hanawa shobo, 1980.
Mitani, Taichirō. Nihon seitō seiji no keisei, Hara Kei no seiji shidō no tenkai. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1967.
Mitani, Taichirō. Taishō demokurashiiron Tokyo: Chūō kōronsha, 1974.
Mitchell, B. R. European Historical Statistics. New York: Macmillan, 1975.
Mitchell, Richard H. Thought Control in Prewar Japan. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1976.
Mitsubishi, Zōsen K.K., Sōmuka, , ed. “Honpō kindai zōsen hogoseisaku no enkaku”. Reprinted in Nihon sangyō shiryō taikei. vol. 5. Tokyo: Chūgai shōgyō shinpōsha, 1926.Google Scholar
Miwa, Kimitada. Matsuoka Yōsuke. Tokyo: Chūō kōronsha, 1971.
Miwa, Ryōichi1926-nen kanzei kaisei no rekishiteki ichi1926. In Nihon shihonshugi: Tenkai to ronri. ed. Takahito, Sakasai et al. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1978.Google Scholar
Miwa, Ryōichi. “Takahashi zaiseiki no keizai seisaku”. In Senji Nihon keizai, ed. kenkyūjo, Tōkyō daigaku shakai kagaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1979.Google Scholar
Miyake, IchirōYūkensha kōzō no hendō to senkyo”. In Nenpō seijigaku 1977 (55-nen taisei no seiritsu to hōkai: Zoku gendai Nihon no seiji katei) 55, ed. gakkai, Nihon seiji. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1979.Google Scholar
Miyake, Seiki Shinkō kontserun tokuhon Tokyo: Shunjūsha, 1937.
Miyamoto, Mataji. “Shōkō kumiai”. In Nihon keizaishi jiten, ed. ūkai, Keizaishi kenky. Tokyo: Nihon hyōronsha, 1940.Google Scholar
Miyashita, Buhei. “Keisha seisan hōshiki”. In Shōwa keizai shi. ed, Hiromi, Arisawa. Tokyo: Nihon keizai shinbunsha, 1976.Google Scholar
Miyazaki, Giichi. Gendai Nihon no kigyō shūdan Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1976.
Miyazaki, Yoshimasa. Saishō: Satō Eisaku. Tokyo: Hara shobō, 1980.
Miyazawa, Toshiyoshi. Tennō kikansetsu jiken. 2 vols. Tokyo: Yūhikaku, 1970.
Mizuguchi, Norito. “Kamitsuchi ni okeru seiji sanka: Ōsaka daitoshi ken o rei to shite,”. in Nen pō seijigaku 1974 (Seiji sanka no riron to genjitsu), ed. gakkai, Nihon seiji. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1975.Google Scholar
Mochiji, Rokusaburō. Taiwan shokumin seisaku Tokyo, Fuzanbō, 1912.
Mochikabu, kaisha seiri iinkai, ed. Nihon zaibatsu to sono kaitai. Tokyo, 1951.
Moore, Barrington. Social Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy: Lord and Peasant in the Making of the Modern World. Boston: Beacon Press, 1967.
Mori, Giichi —. Kosaku sōgi senjutsu. Tokyo: Hakuyōsha, 1928.
Mori, Katsumi. Manshū jihen no rimen shi. Tokyo: Kokusho kankōkai, 1976.
Mori, Takemaro. “Nihon fuashizumu no keisei to nōson keizai kōsei undō”. Rekishigaku kenkyū special supplement): 135–52.
Morishima, Morito. Imbō, ansatsu, guntō. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1950.
Morita, Yoshio. Nihon keieisha dantai hatten shi Tokyo: Nikkan rōdō tsūshin, 1958.
Morley, James W., ed. Deterrent Diplomacy: Japan, Germany and the USSR. 1935–1940- New York: Columbia University Press, 1976.
Morley, James W., ed. Dilemmas of Growth in Prewar Japan. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1971.
Morley, James W., ed. Japan Erupts: The London Naval Conference and the Man- churian Incident, 1928–1932. New York: Columbia University Press, 1984.
Morley, James W., ed. The China Quagmire: Japan's Expansion on the Asian Continent. New York: Columbia University Press, 1983.
Morley, James W., ed. The Fateful Choice: Japan's Advance into Southeast Asia. 1939–1941. New York: Columbia University Press, 1980.
Morris, Morris D.The Problem of the Peasant Agriculturalist in Meiji Japan.Far Eastern Quarterly 15 (1956): 357–70.Google Scholar
Moskowitz, Karl. “The Creation of the Oriental Development Company: Japanese Illusions Meet Korean Reality.Occasional Papers on Korea, no. 2, Joint Committee on Korean Studies and the Social Science Research Council, March 1974, 73–109.Google Scholar
Muramatsu, Takeji. “Shokuminsha no kaisō”. Chōsen kenkyū. (September 1967 & December 1968): 1-14.Google Scholar
Muramatsu, Michio, and Krauss, Ellis S.Bureaucrats and Politicians in Policymaking: The Case of JapanAmerican Political Science Review 78 (March 1984): 126–46.Google Scholar
Murata, Kiyoaki. “Emotions in Dispute.Japan Times Weekly, August 28, 1982.Google Scholar
Mutō, Akira. Hitō kara Sugamo e. Tokyo: Jitsugyō no Nipponsha, 1952.
Myers, Ramon H.Taiwan as an Imperial Colony of Japan, 1895 –1945.Journal of the Institute of Chinese Studies 6 (December 1973): 425–51.Google Scholar
Myers, Ramon H., and Ching, Adrienne. “Agricultural Development in Taiwan Under Japanese Colonial Rule.Journal of Asian Studies 33 (August 1964): 555–70.Google Scholar
Myers, Ramon H., and Peattie, Mark R., eds. The Japanese Colonial Empire. 1895–1945. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1984.
Nagai, Ryūtarō hensankai, ed. Nagai Ryūtarō Tokyo: Seikōsha, 1959.
Nagai, Ryūtarō. Kaizō no risō. Tokyo, 1920.
Nagaoka, Shinjirō. “Nanpō shisaku no gaikōteki tenkai (1937 nen-1941 nen)”. In Taiheiyō sensō e no michi. vol. 6, ed. kenkyūbu, Nihon Kokusai seiji gakkai Taiheiyō sensō gen'in. Tokyo: Asahi shimbunsha, 1963.Google Scholar
Nagata, Tetsuzan. “Kokka sōdōin junbi shisetsu to seishōnen kunren”. in Kokka sōdōin no igi ed. Kusuzō, Tsujimura. Tokyo: Aoyama shoin, 1925.Google Scholar
Nagata, Tetsuzan. Kokka sōdōin. Osaka: Ōsaka mainichi shinbunsha, 1928.
Nahm, Andrew, ed. Korea Under Japanese Colonial Rule: Studies of the Policy and Techniques of Japanese Colonialism. Kalamazoo, Mich.: Center for Korean Studies, Institute of International and Area Studies, Western Michigan University, 1973.
Naigai senkyo dēta –. (‘78 Mainichi nenkan bessatsu) ‘78 Tokyo: Mainichi shinbunsha, 1978.
Naitō, Norikuni. “Rikugun no rōso hinin to danketsuken yōgo undō”. in Rōdō keizai to rōdō undō ed. iinkai, Ōkōchi Kazuo sensei kanreki kinen ronbunshū hakkō. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1966.Google Scholar
Najita, Tetsuo. “Nakano Seigō and the Spirit of the Meiji Restoration in Twen tieth-Century Japan.” In Dilemmas of Growth in Prewar Japan. ed. Morley, James W.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1971.Google Scholar
Najita, Tetsuo. Hara kei in the Politics of Compromise. 1905–1915. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1967.
Nakagawa, Keiichirō, and Rosovsky, Henry. “The Case of the Dying Kimono: The Influence of Changing Fashions on the Development of the Japanese Woolen Industry.Business History Review 37 (Spring-Summer 1963): 5980.Google Scholar
Nakagawa, Keiichiro, ed. Labor and Management: Proceedings of the Fourth Fuji Conference. Tokyo: Tokyo University Press, 1979.
Nakamura, Hideo, ed. Saikin no shakai undō Tokyo: Kyōchokai, 1929.
Nakamura, Katsunori. “Nihon shakaitō no soshiki to undō”. HōgakuKenkyū 33 (October 1960).Google Scholar
Nakamura, Katsunori. Meiji shakaishugi kenkyū Tokyo: Sekai shoin, 1966.
Nakamura, Masanori. “Keizai kōsei undō to nōson tōgō” in Fuashizumuki no kokka to shakai vol. I of Shōwa kyōkō, ed. kenkyūjō, Tōkyō daigaku shakai kagaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1978.Google Scholar
Nakamura, Takafusa and Akira, Hara. “Keizai shintaisei”. In Nihon seiji gakkai nenpō 1972-nen 1972 Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1972.Google Scholar
Nakamura, Takafusa and Akira, Hara, eds. “Kaisetsu,” “Ōkyū butsudō keikaku shian,” “Setsumei shiryō”, In Kokka sōdōin (1) keizai – Gendaishi shiryō 31 (—). Tokyo: Misuzu shobō, 1970.Google Scholar
Nakamura, Takafusa. “Chōki tōkei no seido ni tsuite – 19-seiki Nihon no jakkan no sūji o megutte” —. Keizai kenkyū 30 (January 1979): 1–9.Google Scholar
Nakamura, Takafusa. “Nihon no kahoku keizai kōsaku”. In Kindai Nihon kenkyū – 2: Kindai Nihon to Higashi Ajia — 2:, ed. kenkyūkai, Kindai Nihon. Tokyo: Yamakawa shuppansha, 1980.Google Scholar
Nakamura, Takafusa. “Sensō keizai to sono hōkai”. In Iwanami kōza, Nihon rekishi – 21: Kindai 821: 8. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1977.Google Scholar
Nakamura, Takafusa. “Shijō kōzō to sangyō soshiki”. In Nihon keizai ran – keizai seichō Ioo-nen no bunseki — ed. Kōichi, Emi — and Yūichi, Shionoya —. Tokyo: Yūhikaku, 1973.Google Scholar
Nakamura, Takafusa. “Zairai men orimonogyō no hatten to suitai oboegaki” —. In Sūō keizaishi ronshū 2. Kindai ikōki no Nihon keizai – Bakumatsu kara Meiji e 2., ed. Hiroshi, Shinbo. and Yasukichi, Yasuba. Tokyo: Nihon keizai shinbunsha, 1979.Google Scholar
Nakamura, Takafusa. “Zairai sangyō no hatten kikō – Meiji Taishō-ki no Nihon ni oite”. Keizai hyōron 16 (January 1967): 134–56.Google Scholar
Nakamura, Takafusa. “Zairai sangyō no kibo to kōsei – Taishō 9-nen kokusei chōsa o chūshin ni -”— In. Sūryō keizaishi ronshū I. Nihon keizai no hatten I. ed. Mataji, Umemura, Hiroshi, Shimbo, Shunsaku, Nishi kawa and Akira, Hayami. Tokyo: Nihon keizai shinbunsha, 1976.Google Scholar
Nakamura, Takafusa. Senzenki Nihon keizai seichō no bunseki Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1971.
Nakamura, Takafusa. Shōwa kyōkō to keizai seisaku. Tokyo: Nihon keizai shinbunsha, 1978.
Nakamura, James I.Incentives, Productivity Gaps, and Agricultural Growth Rates in Pre-War Japan, Taiwan and Korea.” In Japan in Crisis: Essays in Taishō Democracy. ed. Silberman, Bernard and Harootunian, H. D.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1974.Google Scholar
Nakamura, James I. Agricultural Production and the Economic Development of Japan 1873–1922. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1966.
Nakamura, Takafusa. Economic Growth in Prewar Japan. trans. Feldman, Robert A.. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1983.
Nakamura, Takafusa. The Postwar Japanese Economy: Its Development and Structure. Tokyo: Tokyo University Press, 1981.
Nakane, Chie. Kinship and Economic Organization in Rural Japan. London: Athlone, 1967.
Nakano, Tatsuo and Shigetarō, Iizuka. Nihon o ugokasu soshiki: Shakaitō; minshatō (Nihon o ugokasu soshiki series)Tokyo: Sekkasha, 1968.
Nakase, Toshikazu. “The Introduction of Scientific Management in Japan and Its Characteristics – Case Studies of Companies in the Sumitomo Zaibatsu.”In Labor and Management: Proceedings of the Fourth Fuji Conference, ed. Nakagawa, Keiichiro. Tokyo: Tokyo University Press, 1979.Google Scholar
Nakayama, Ichirō ed. Nihon no kokufu kōzō Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1959.
Namiki, Masayoshi. “Chingin kōzō to nōka rōdōryoku”. In Nihongata chingin kōzō no kenkyū, ed. Miyohei, Shinohara and Naomichi, Funahashi. Tokyo: Rōdō hōgaku kenkyūjo, 1961.Google Scholar
Namiki, Masayoshi. “Nōka jinkō no idō keitai to shūgyō kōzō.”. In Nōgyō niokeru senzai shitsugyō, ed. Seiichi, TohataTokyo: Nihon hyōronsha, 1956.Google Scholar
Naoi, Masaru. “Sangyōka to kaisō kōzō no hendō”. In Hendōki no Nihon shakai, ed. Hiroshi, Akuto, Ken'ichi, Tominaga — and Takao, Sobue. Tokyo: Nihon hōsō kyōkai, 1972.Google Scholar
Naoi, Michiko. “Kaisō ishiki to kaikyū ishiki”. In Nihon no kaisō kōzō, ed. Ken'ichi, Tominaga —. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1979.Google Scholar
,NHK hōsō yoron chōsajo, ed. Gendai Nihonjin no ishiki kōzō (NHK Books, 344) NHK Tokyo: Nihon hōsō shuppankai, 1979.
Nichi-Man zaisei keizai kenkyūkai shiryō 3 vols. Tokyo: Nihon kindai shiryō kenkyūkai, 1970.
Nihon, gaikō gakkai, ed. Taiheiyō sensō shūketsuron. Tokyo: Tokyō daigaku shuppankai, 1958.
Nihon, ginkō chōsakyoku. “Kantō shinsai yori Shōwa ni-nen kin'yū kyōkō ni itaru waga zaikai”— Nihon kin'ytūshi shiryō: Meiji Taishō hen vol. 22. Tokyo, 1959.Google Scholar
Nihon, ginkō chōsakyoku. “Sekai taisen shūryōgo ni okeru hompō zaikai dōyōshiNihon kin'yūshi shiryō: Meiji Taishō hen vol. 22. Tokyo, 1959.Google Scholar
Nihon, kokusai seiji gakkai. Taiheiyō sensō e no michi, 8 vols. Tokyo: Asahi shinbunsha, 19621923.
Nihon, seiji gakkai, ed. Nihon no shakaishugi Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1968.
Nihongakkai, seiji, ed. “Konoe shintaisei” no kenkyū”. (Nenpō seijigaku 1972) 1972. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1973.
Nihonjin, kenkyūkai. ed. Nihonjin kenkyū, 2 Tokushū: Shijiseitō betsu Nihonjin shūdan, 2. Tokyo: Shiseido, 1975.
Nish, Ian. Japan's Foreign Policy, 1868–1942: Kasumigaseki to Miyakezaka. London: Rout ledge & Kegan Paul, 1977.
Nishida, Kitarō. Zen no kenkyū. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1946.
Nishida, Yoshiaki, ed. Shōwa kyōkōka no nōson shakai undō. Tokyo: Ochanomizu shobō, 1978.
Nishida, Yoshiaki. “Kosaku sōgi no tenkai to jisakunō sōsetsu iji seisaku”. Hitotsubashi ronsō 60 (November 1968): 524–46.Google Scholar
Nishida, Yoshiaki. “Nōmin undō no hatten to jinushi sei”. Iwanami kōza Nihon rekishi, vol. 18, Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1975.Google Scholar
Nishida, Yoshiaki. “Reisai nōkōsei to jinushiteki tochi shoyū: Niigata ken ichi tezukuri jinushi no bunseki”. Hitotsubashi ronsō 63 (1970).Google Scholar
Nishida, Yoshiaki. “Shōnō keiei no hatten to kosaku sōgi”. Tochi seido shigaku, no. 38 (1968): 24–41.Google Scholar
Nishikawa, Shunsaku, ed., and Mouer, Ross, trans. The Labor Market in Japan. Tokyo: Tokyo University Press, 1980.
Nishikawa, Shunsaku. “‘Chōki keizai tōkei’ no keiryō keizaigaku –Ōkawa hoka Kokumin shotoku no tembō rombun”. Kikan riron keizaigaku 27 (August 1976): 126–34.Google Scholar
Nishimura, Kumao. San Furanshisuko heiwa jōyaku, vol. 27 of Nihon gaiko shi, ed. kenkyūjo, Kajima heiwa, Tokyo: Kajima kenkyūjo shuppankai, 1971.
Nishio, Masaru. “Gyōsei katei ni okeru taikō undō: Jūmin undō ni tsuite no ichikōsatsu”. In Nenpō seijigaku 1974 (Seiji sanka no riron to genjitsu), ed. gakkai, Nihon seiji Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1975.Google Scholar
Nishio, Masaru. “Kaso to kamitsu no seiji gyōsei”. In Nenpō seijigaku 1977 (55 -nen taisei no keisei to hōkai: Zoku gendai Nihon no seiji katei), ed. gakkai, Nihon seiji. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1979.Google Scholar
Nishio, Yōtarō. Kōtoku Shūsui. Tokyo: Yoshikawa Kōbunkan, 1959.
Nishioka, Takao. Nihon no rōdō kumiai soshiki. Tokyo: Japan Institute of Labor, 1960.
Nitobe, Inazō. Zenshō, 16 vols. Tokyo: Kyōbunkan, 19691970.
Nōmin, undōshi kenkyūkai, ed. Nihon nōmin undōshi. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1961.
Nomura, Masao. Hōsō fūunroku – ge. Tokyo; Asahi shinbunsha, 1966.
,Nōsei chōsakai nōchi kaikaku kiroku iinkai. “Shōwa 8–10 nen kijun seisan shisū. In Dai sanjō ji Nōrinshō tōkeihyō. Tokyo, 1900.
,Nōsei chōsakai nōchi kaikaku kiroku iinkai. Nōchi kaikaku tenmatsu gaiyō. Tokyo, 1951.
Notehelfer, F. G. Kōtoku Shūsui: Portrait of a Japanese Radical. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1971.
Oda, Toshiyo. Yokusan undō to Konoe-kō. Tokyo: Shunpei shobō, 1940.
Odaka, Konosuke. “Dainiji taisen zengo no kyū-Mitsubishi jūkō rōdō tōkei ni tsuite”. Hito-tsubashi ronsō 74 (1975): 1–16.Google Scholar
Odaka, Konosuke.Historical Development in the Wage-Differential Structure.” Paper presented at the Japan Economic Seminar, New York City, April 14, 1973.Google Scholar
Ōe, Shinobu. “Shokuminchi ryōyū to gunbu”. Rekishigaku kenkyō (September 1978): 10–41.Google Scholar
Ogata, Sadako. Defiance in Manchuria: The Making of Japanese Foreign Policy, 1931–1932. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1964.
Ogura, Takekazu. Tochi rippō no shiteki kōsatsu. Tokyo: Norinshō nōgy ō sōgō kenkyūjo, 1951.
Ogura, Takekazu, ed. Agricultural Development in Modern Japan. Tokyo: Fuji Publishing, 1963.
Ogura, Takekazu. Can Japanese Agriculture Survive? 2nd ed. Tokyo: Agricultural Policy Research Institute, 1980.
,Ōhara shakai mondai kenkyūjo. Nihon rōdō nenkan, vol. 50. Tokyo: Rōdō junpōsha, 1979.
Ōhashi, Takanori. Nihon no kaikyō kōsei. (Iwanami shinsho, no. 789). Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1971.
Ohkawa, Kazushi, and Rosovsky, Henry. Japanese Economic Growth: Trend Acceleration in the Twentieth Century. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1973.
Ohkawa, Kazushi, and Rosovsky, Henry. “The Role of Agriculture in Modern Japanese Economic Development.” Economic Development and Cultural Change 9 (October 1960): 43–67.Google Scholar
Ohkawa, Kazushi, with Shinohara, Miyohei, Umemura, M., Ito, M., and Noda, T. The Growth Rate of the Japanese Economy Since 1878. Tokyo: Kinokuniya, 1957.
Ohkawa, Kazushi, and Shinohara, Miyohei, with Meissner, Larry, eds. Patterns of Japanese Economic Development: A Quantitative Appraisal. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1979.
Ohkawa, Kazushi. Differential Structure and Agriculture: Essays on DualisticGrowth. Tokyo: Kinokuniya, 1972.
Ōi, Atsushi. Kaijō goeisen. Tokyo: Nihon shuppan kyōdō, 1952.
Ōishi, Kaichirō. “Nōchi kaikaku no rekishiteki igi”. In Nōchi kaikaku, vol. 6 of Sengo kaikaku, ed. kenkyūjo, Tōkyō daigaku shakaikagaku. Tokyo: Tokyō daigaku shuppankai, 19741975.Google Scholar
Oka, Toshirō. “Kindai Nihon ni okeru shakai seisaku shisō no keisei to tenkai”. Shisō 558 (December 1970): 69–88.Google Scholar
Oka, Yoshitake and Shigeru, Hayashi, eds. Taishō demokurashii ki no seiji, Matsumoto Gōkichi seiji nisshi. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1959.
Oka, Yoshitake, ed. Gendai Nihon no seiji katei. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1958.
Oka, Yoshitake.Generational Conflict after the Russo-Japanese War.” In Conflict in Modern Japanese History, ed. Najita, Tetsuo and Koschmann, Victor. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1982.Google Scholar
Okakura, Kakuzo. Ideals of the East, with Special Reference to the Art of Japan. Rutland, Vt.: Tuttle, 1970.
Okamoto, Shumpei. The Japanese Oligarchy and the Russo-Japanese War. New York: Columbia University Press, 1970.
Ōkawa, Kazushi et al. Chōki keizai tōkei – 1: Kokumin shotoku. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1974.
Ōkawa, Shūmei. “Anraku no mon”. in Gendai Nihon shisō taikei, vol. 9: Ajia Shugi, ed. Yoshimi, Takeuchi, Tokyo: Chikuma shobō, 1964.Google Scholar
Ōkawa, Shūmei. “Nihon seishin kenkyu”. In Gendai Nihon shisō taikei, vol. 31: Chōkokka shugi, ed. Bunzō, Hashikawa. Tokyo: Chikuma shobō, 1964.Google Scholar
Ōkawa, Shūmei.. “Kakumei Europpa to fukkō Ajia”. In Gendai Nihon shisō taikei, vol. 9: Ajia Shugi. ed. Yoshimi, Takeuchi. Tokyo: Chikuma shobō, 1964.Google Scholar
Okazaki, Ayakoto. Kihon kokuryoku dōtai sōran. Tokyo: Kokumin keizai kenkyū kyōkai, 1953.
Okigakari, Kibatarō denki hensan, ed. Oki Kibatarō. Tokyo: Oki Kibatarō denki hensan gakari, 1932.
Oki, Shūji. Yamashita Tomoyuki. Tokyo: Akita shoten, 1968.
,Ōkōchi Kazuo sensei kanreki kinen ronbunshū hakkō iinkai, ed. Ōkōchi Kazuo sensei kanreki kinen ronbunshū, 2, Rōdō keizai to rōdō undō. Tokyo, 1966.
Ōkōchi, Kazuo. Kurai tanima no rōdō undō. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1970.
Ōkōchi, Kazuo. Reimeiki no Nihon rōdō undō. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1952.
Ōkōchi, Kazuo. Sengo Nihon no rōdō undō, rev. ed. (Iwanami shinsho, no. 217). Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1961.
Okuda, Kenji.Managerial Evolution in Japan.” Management Japan, vol. 5, nos. 3 & 4, 19711972; vol. 6, no. 1, 1972.Google Scholar
Okudaira, Yasuhiro. “Hōsōhōsei no saihensei”. in Seiji katei, vol. 3 of Sengo kaikaku, ed. kenkyūjo, Tōkyō daigaku shakaikagaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 19741975.Google Scholar
Okumura, Kiwao. “Henkaku-ki Nihon no seiji keizai”. in Kenryoku no shisō, ed. Jirō, Kamishima, vol. 10 of Gendai Nihon shisō taikei. Tokyo: Chikumashobō, 1965. 274–90.Google Scholar
Ōkurashō, zaiseishi hensanshitsu. Shōwa zaiseishi dai 10-kan kin'yū jō. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1955.
Ōkurashō, zaiseishishitsu. Shōwa zaisei shi: shūsen kara kōwa made, vol. 20. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1982.
Ōmae, Sakurō and Shin, Ikeda. Nihon rōdō undō shiron. Tokyo: Nihon hyōronsha, 1966.
Orchard, John E. Japan's Economic Position: The Progress of Industrialization in Japan. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1930.
Ōsawa, Masamichi. Ōsugi Sakae kenkyū. Tokyo: Dōseisha, 1968.
Oshima, Harry T.Meiji Fiscal Policy and Agricultural Progress.” In The State and Economic Enterprise in Japan: Essays in the Political Economy of Growth, ed. Lockwood, William W.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1965.Google Scholar
Ōta, Masao, ed. Taishō demokurashii ronshū, vols. 1 and 2. Tokyo: Shinsuisha, 1971.
Ōta, Toshie. “Kosakunō kaikyū no keizaiteki shakaiteki jōtai”. Sangyō kumiai no. 261 (1927): 83–111.Google Scholar
Ōtani, Keijirō. Shōwa kenpeishi. Tokyo: Misuzu shobō, 1966.
Otoda, Masami. “Kōgai mondai”. In Shōwa keizai shi, ed. Hiromi, Arisawa. Tokyo: Nihon keizai shinbunsha, 1976.Google Scholar
Ōtsuka, Katsuo. “Seishigyō ni okeru gijutsu dōnyū”. In Nihon keizai no hatten, ed. Mataji, Umemura et al. Tokyo: Nihon keizai shinbunsha, 1976.Google Scholar
Ōtsuka, Katsuo. “Technological Choice in the Japanese Silk Industry: Implications for Development in LDCs.” (Working Paper Series no. A-05, mimeographed). Tokyo: International Development Center of Japan, March 1977.Google Scholar
Ōuchi, Tsutomu. “Nōchi kaikaku”. In Shōwa keizai shi, ed. Hiromi, Arisawa. Tokyo: Nihon keizai shinbunsha, 1976.Google Scholar
Ōuchi, Tsutomu. Nihon nōgyō no zaiseigaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1950.
Oyama, Azusa.Nichi-Ro sensō no gunsei shiroku. Tokyo: Fuyo shob¯, 1973.
Ōyama, Ikuo. “Kokka seikatsu to kyōdō rigai kannen”. Shin shosetsu (February 1917).Google Scholar
Ōyama, Ikuo. “Rokoku kagekiha no jisseiryoku ni taisuru kashohi to sono seiji shisō no kachi ni taisuru kadaishi”. Chūōkōron (May 1917).Google Scholar
Ōyama, Ikuo. Ōyama Ikuo zenshō, vol. 1. Tokyo: Chūō kōronsha, 1947.
Ozawa, Yūsaku. “Kyū Nihonjin jinushi no Chōsenkan”. Chōsen kenkyū (December 1968): 34–41.Google Scholar
Packard, George R., III. Protest in Tokyo: The Security Crisis of 1960. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1966.
Passin, Herbert. Society and Education in Japan. New York: Teachers College, Columbia University, 1965.
Patrick, Hugh T.Japan 1868–1914.” In Banking in the Early Stages of Industrialization, ed. Cameron, Rondo et al. London: Oxford University Press, 1967.Google Scholar
Patrick, Hugh T.The Economic Muddle of the 1920's.” In Dilemmas of Growth in Prewar Japan, ed. Morley, James W.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1971.Google Scholar
Patrick, Hugh T., and Rosovsky, Henry, eds. Asia's New Giant: How the Japanese Economy Works. Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution, 1976.
Patrick, Hugh T., ed. Japanese Industrialization and Its Social Consequences. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1976.
Peattie, Mark R. Ishiwara Kanji and Japan's Confrontation with the West. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1975.
Peattie, Mark R. Nan'yō: The Rise and Fall of the Japanese in Micronesia 1885–1945. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1988.
Pempel, T. J.Political Parties and Social Change: The Japanese Experience.” In Political Parties: Development and Decay, ed. Maizel, Louis and Cooper, Joseph. Beverly Hills, Calif: Sage, 1978.Google Scholar
Pempel, T. J., and Tsunekawa, K.Corporatism without Labor? The Japanese Anomaly.” In Trends Toward Corporatist Intermediation, ed. Schmitter, P. C. and Lehmbruch, G.. Beverly Hills, Calif: Sage, 1979.Google Scholar
Pempel, T. J., ed. Policy Making in Contemporary Japan. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1977.
Pierson, John D. Tokutomi Sohō, 1863 –1957: A Journalist for Modern Japan. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1980.
Pittau, Joseph. Political Thought in Early Meiji Japan. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1967.
Purcell, David Jr. “Japanese Expansion in the South Pacific, 1890–1935.” Ph.D. diss., University of Pennsylvania, 1967.
Pyle, Kenneth B.Advantages of Followership: German Economics and Japanese Bureaucrats, 1890–1925.” Journal of Japanese Studies I (Autumn 1974): 127–64.Google Scholar
Pyle, Kenneth B.The Technology of Japanese Nationalism.” Journal of Asian Studies 33 (November 1973): 51–65.Google Scholar
Pyle, Kenneth B. The New Generation in Meiji Japan: Problems of Cultural Identity. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1969.
Quigley, Harold S. Japanese Government and Politics: An Introductory Study. New York: Century, 1932.
Ranis, Gustav. “The Financing of Japanese Economic Development.” In Agriculture and Economic Growth: Japan's Experience, ed. Ohkawa, Kazushi et al. Tokyo: Tokyo University Press; and Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1969.Google Scholar
Redford, Lawrence H., ed. The Occupation of Japan. Norfolk, Va.: MacArthur Memorial, 1980.
Reischauer, Edwin O. The United States and Japan, rev. ed. New York: Viking 1957.
Reynolds, Lloyd G., and Gregory, Peter. Wages, Productivity and Industrialization in Puerto Rico. Homewood, Ill.: Irwin, 1965.
Rikugunshō, . “Jūyō sangyō gokanen keikaku jisshi ni kansuru seisaku taikō (an)”. In Gendaishi shiryō – 8: Nitchū sensō 8:, ed. Toshihiko, Shimada and Masao, Inaba. Tokyo: Misuzu shobō, 1964.Google Scholar
Roden, Donald.Baseball and the Quest for National Dignity in Meiji Japan.” American Historical Review 85 (June 1980): 511–34.Google Scholar
,Rōdō daijin kambō tōkei jōhō bu, ed. Nihonjin no kinrōkan Tokyo: Shiseidō, 1974.
,Rōdō undō shiryō iinkai, ed. Nihon rōdō undō shiryō vol. 3. Tokyo: Rōdō undō shiryō kankō iinkai, 1968.
,Rōdō undō shiryō iinkai, ed. Nihon rōdō undō shiryō, vol. 10. Tokyo: Rōdō undō shiryō kankō iinkai, 1959.
,Rōdō undō shiryō iinkai, ed. Nihon rōdō undō shiryō, vols. 6 and 9. Tokyo: Rōdō undō shiryō kankō iinkai, 1965.
,Rōdō undō shiryō iinkai. Rōdō sekai. Tokyo: Rōdō undō shiryō kankō iinkai, 1960.
,Rōdō undōshi kenkyūkai.Chokugen Tokyo: Meiji bunken shiryō kankōkai, 1960.
Rōdō, undōshi kenkyūkai Shinkigen. Tokyo: Meiji bunken shiryō kankōkai, 1961.
Rōdōshō, 1954-nen kojinbetsu chingin chōsa 1954. Tokyo: Rōdōshō, 1955.
Rōdōshō, 1961-nen chinginjittai sōgō chōsa 1961. Tokyo: Rōdōshō, 1962.
,Rōdōshō – Daijin kanbō rōdō tōkei chōsabu. Chinginkōzō kihon tōkei chōsa hōkoku. Tokyo: 1965–.
Rōyama, Masamichi. Nichi-Man kankei no kenkyū. Tokyo: Shibun shoin, 1933.
Saburō, Ienaga. Taiheiyō sensō. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1968.
Sagara, Shunsuke. Akai yūhi no Masunogahara ni. Tokyo: Kōjinsha, 1978.
Saigusa, Hiroto. Nihon no yuibutsuronsha. Tokyo: Ei hōsha, 1956.
Saitō, Takao. Saitō Takao seiji ronshū. Izushi-machi, Izushi-gun, Hyōgo-ken: Saitō Takao sensei kenshōkai, 1961.
Saitō, Yoshie. Azamukareta rekishi. Tokyo: Yomiuri shinbunsha, 1955.
Sakaguchi, Akira. “Iki fukikaesu zaikai”. In Shōwa keizai shi, ed. Hiromi, Arisawa. Tokyo: Nihon keizai shinbunsha, 1976.Google Scholar
Sakamoto, Fujiyoshi. Nihon koyōshi. Tokyo: Chūō keizaisha, 1977.
Sanbō, honbu, ed. Sugiyama Memo, 2 vols. Tokyo: Hara shobō, 1967.
Sanpei, Takako. Nihon mengyō hattatsu shi. Tokyo: Keiō shobō, 1941.
Sansom, G. B. Japan: A Short Cultural History. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1957.
Sartori, Giovanni. Parties and Party Systems: A Framework for Analysis. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1976.
Sashihara, Yasuzō. Meiji seishi, vol. 8. Tokyo: Fuzanbō shoten, 1893.Google Scholar
Satō, Kenryō. Tōjō Hideki to Taiheiyō sensō Tokyo: Bungei shunjū shinsha, 1960.
Satō, Kenyrō. Dai Tōa sensō kaikoroku. Tokyo: Tokuma shoten, 1966.
Satō, Motohide. “Tōhō kaigi to shoki Tanaka gaikō”. Kokusai seiji, no. 66 (1980).Google Scholar
Satō, Susumu. Nihon no zeikin. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1979.
Satō, Tatsuo. Nihonkoku kenpō seiritsu shi, 2 vols. Tokyo: Yūhikaku, 1962, 1964.
Satō, Tetsutarō. Teikoku kokubō shi ronshō. Tokyo: Tōkyō insatsu kabushiki gaisha, 1912.
Sawyer, M. Income Distribution in OECD Countries. Paris: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, 1976.Google Scholar
Saxonhouse, Gary S.Country Girls and Communication Among Competitors in the Japanese Cotton-Spinning Industry.” In Japanese Industrialization and Its Social Consequences, ed. Patrick, Hugh T.. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1976.Google Scholar
Scalapino, Robert A.Elections and Political Modernization in Prewar Japan.” In Political Development in Modern Japan, ed. Ward, Robert E.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1968.Google Scholar
Scalapino, Robert A. Democracy and the Party Movement in Prewar Japan: The Failure of the First Attempt. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1962.
Scalapino, Robert A. The Japanese Communist Movement, 1920–1966. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1967.
Scalapino, Robert A., and Masumi, Junnosuke. Parties and Politics in Contemporary Japan. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1962.
Scalapino, Robert A., ed. The Foreign Policy of Modern Japan. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1977.
Schaller, Michael. The U.S. Crusade in China, 1938–1945. New York: Columbia University Press, 1979.
Schroeder, Paul W. The Axis Alliance and Japanese–American Relations. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press. 1971.
Seki, Hiroharu. “Taigai kankei no kōzōhenka to gaikō”. In Nenpō seijigaku “977 (55-nen taisei no keisei to hōkai: Zoku gendai Nihon no seiji katei) 55—, ed. gakkai, Nihon seiji. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1979.Google Scholar
Seki, Kanji. “Manshū jihen zenshi”. In Taiheiyō sensō e no michi, vol. I, ed. kenkyūbu, Nihon kokusai seiji gakkai Taiheiyō sensō gen'in. Tokyo: Asahi shimbunsha, 1962.Google Scholar
Semple, Elizabeth C.Japanese Colonial Methods.Bulletin of the American Geographical Society (April 1913).Google Scholar
senshishitsu, Bōeichō bōei kenshūjo. Daihon'ei riku-gunbu, 2 vols. Tokyo: Asagumo shinbunsha, 19671968.
senshishitsu, Bōeichō bōei kenshūjo. Senshi sōsho, 102 vols. Tokyo: Asagumo shinbunsha, 19661980.
Shibagaki, Kazuo. “Zaibatsu kaitai to shūchū haijo” In Keizai kaikaku, vol. 7 of Sengo kaikaku, ed. kenkyūjo, Tōkyō daigaku shakaikagaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 19741975.Google Scholar
Shibusawa, Keizo, comp. and ed. Japanese Life and Culture in the Meiji Era, trans. Terry, Charles S.. In Japanese Culture in the Meiji Era, vol. 5, ed. Council, Centenary Cultural. Tokyo: Ōbunsha, 1958.
Shidehara, heiwa zaidan, ed. Shidehara Kijūrō. Tokyo: Shidehara heiwa zaidan, 1955.
Shigemitsu, Mamoru. Japan and Her Destiny, ed. Piggott, F. S. G. and trans. Oswald White. London: Hutchinson, 1958.
Shillony, Ben-Ami. Politics and Culture in Wartime Japan. Oxford, England: Clarendon Press, 1980.
Shillony, Ben-Ami. Revolt in Japan. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1973
Shima, Yasuhiko et al. Chōson gappei to nōson no henbō. Tokyo: Yūhikaku, 1958.
Shimada, Toshihiko. Kantōgun. Tokyo: Chūō shinsō, 1965.
Shimane ken nōrinbu, nōchi kaitakuka, ed. Shimane ken nōchi kaikaku shi. Hirata: Shimane ken, 1959.
Shimane, Kiyoshi. “Tsuihō kaijo o yōsei suru ronri”. In Kyōdō kenkyū: Nihon senryō, ed. kenkyūkai, Shisō no kagaku. Tokyo: Tokuma shoten, 1972 Google Scholar
Shimizu, Mutsumi. “Kenpō ‘kaisei’ to gikai-seido kaikaku”. in Seiji katei, vol. 3 of Sengo kaikaku, ed. kenkyūjo, Tōkyoō daigaku shakaikagaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 19741975.Google Scholar
Shimomura, Kainan. Shūsenki. Tokyo: Kamakura bunko, 1948.
Shimura, Yoshikazu —. “Antei kyōkō”. In Shōwa keizai shi, ed. Hiromi, Arisawa. Tokyo: Nihon keizai shinbunsha, 1976.Google Scholar
Shinji, Sudō. “Tōjō naikaku to Nichi-Bei kōshō”. Kyōto sangyō daigaku ronshū 10 (1980).Google Scholar
Shinmyō, Takeo. Kaigun sensō kentō kaigi kiroku: Taiheiyō sensō kaisen no keii. Tokyo: Mainichi shin bunsha, 1976.
Shinohara, Hajime — and Ryūji, Miyazaki. “Sengo kaikaku to seiji karuchā” –. In Kadai to shikaku, vol. 1 of Sengo kaikaku, ed. , Tōkyō daigaku shakaikagaku kenkyūjo. Tokyo: Tokyo daigaku shappankai, 19741975 Google Scholar
Shinohara, Hajime —. Gendai Nihon no bunka henyō: Sono seijigakuteki kōsatsu. Tokyo: Renga shobō, 1971.
Shinohara, Miyohei, and Naomichi, Funahashi. eds. Nihon gata chinginkōzō no kenkyū Tokyo: Rōdō hōgaku kenkyūjo, 1961.
Shinohara, Miyohei. Chki keizai tōkei – 10: Kokōgyō 10:. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1972.
Shinohara, Miyohei. Growth and Cycles in the Japanese Economy. Tokyo: Kinokuniya, 1962.
Shiota, Shōbei. Sutoraiki no rekishi. Tokyo: Shin Nihon shuppansha, 1966.
Shiraki, Masayuki. Nihon seitō shi: Shōwa hen Tokyo: Chūō kōronsha, 1949.
Shisō, kagaku kenkyūikai, ed. Kyōdō kenkyū: Nihon senryō kenkyu jiten (Kyōdō kenkyū: Nihon senryōgun, ap pendix) Tokyo: Tokuma shoten, 1978.
Shōda, Tatsuo. Jūshintachi no Shōwa shi, 2 vols. Tokyo, 1981.
Shōwa, dōjinkai ed. Waga kuni kanzenkoyō no igi to taisaku. Tokyo: Shōwa dōjinkai, 1957.
Shōwa shi no tennō, 30 vols. Tokyo: Yomiuri shinbunsha, 19671975
Shūgiin, and Sangiin, , eds. Gikai seido shichijū-nen shi, vols. Tokyo: Ōkurashō insatsukyoku. 19601962.
Shunpōkō, tsuishōkai. Itō Hirobumi den, vol. 2. Tokyo: Shunpōkō tsuishōkai, 1940.
Silberman, Bernard, and Harootunian, H. A., eds. Japan in Crisis: Essays on Taishō Democracy. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1974.
Sinha, R. P.Unresolved Issues in Japan's Early Economic Development.Scottish Journal 0f Political Economy 16 (June 1969): 141–8.Google Scholar
Smethurst, Richard J.The Military Reserve Association and the Minobe Crisis in I935-” In Crisis Politics in Prewar Japan: Institutional and Ideo logical Problems of the 1930s, ed. Wilson, George M.. Tokyo: Sophia Univer sity Press, 1970.Google Scholar
Smethurst, Richard J. A Social Basis for Prewar Japanese Militarism: The Army and the Rural Community. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of Califor nia Press, 1974.
Smith, Henry A., II. Japan's First Student Radicals. Cambridge, Mass.: Har vard University Press, 1972.
Smith, Robert J. Kurusu: The Price of Progress in a Japanese Village, 1951 1975. Folkestone, Kent: Dawson, 1978.
Smith, Thomas C. Political Change and Industrial Development in Japan: Gov ernment Enterprise 1868–1880. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1955
Soda, Osamu. Chihō sangyō no shisō to undō Kyoto: Minerva shobō, 1980.
Soda, Osamu. Maeda Masana. Tokyo: Yoshikawa kōbunkan, 1973
Soma, Masao. “Senkyo seido no kaikaku”. in Seiji vol. 3 of Sengo kaikaku, ed. kenkyūjo, Tōkyō daigaku shakaikagaku. Tokyo: Tokyo daigaku shuppankai, 19741975 Google Scholar
Sōrifu, tōkeikyoku, ed. Nihon no tōkei. Tokyo: ōkurashō insatsu kyoku, annual.
Spaulding, Robert A. Jr.The Bureaucracy as a Political Force, 1920–1945.” In Dilemmas of Growth in Prewar Japan, ed. Morley, James W.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1971.Google Scholar
Spaulding, Robert A. Jr. Imperial Japan's Higher Civil Service Examinations. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1967.
Spaulding, Robert A. Jr.Japan's ‘New Bureaucrats,’ 1932–1945.” In Crisis Politics in Prewar Japan: Institutional and Ideological Problems of the 1930s, ed. Wilson, George M.. Tokyo: Sophia University Press, 1970.Google Scholar
Stanley, Hornbeck. Memorandum, September 5, 1941. Hornbeck papers, Box 254, Hoover Institution, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif.Google Scholar
Stanley, Thomas A. ōsugi Sakae: Anarchist in Taishō Japan. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1982.
Steiner, K., Krauss, E., and Flanagan, S. C., eds. Political Opposition and Local Politics in Japan. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1980.
Steiner, Kurt. Local Government in Japan. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1965.
Stephan, John. Sakhalin: A History. Oxford, England: Clarendon Press, 1971.
Steven, R. P. G.Hybrid Constitutionalism in Prewar Japan.Journal of Japanese Studies 3 (Winter 1977): 183–216.Google Scholar
Stockwin, J. A. A. Japan: Divided Politics in a Growth Economy. New York: Norton, 1975.
Stockwin, J. A. A. The Japanese Socialist Party and Neutralism: A Study of a Political Party and Its Foreign Policy. Carlton, Victoria, Australia: Melbourne University Press, 1968.
Storry, G. Richard. The Double Patriots: A Study of Japanese Nationalism. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1957.
Storry, G. Richard. Japan and the Decline of the West in Asia, 1894–1943. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1979.
Suehiro, Izutarō. Nihon rōdō kumiai undōshi. Tokyo: Chūō kōronsha, 1954.
Sugihara, Masami. Atarashii Showa shi. Tokyo: Shin kigensha, 1958.
Sugihara, Masami. Kokumin soshiki no seiji-ryoku. Tokyo: Modan Nipponsha, 1940.
Suh, Chang–chul. Growth and Structural Change in the Korean Economy 1910–1940. Cambridge, Mass: Council on East Asian Studies, Harvard University, 1978.
Sumiya, Etsuji. Nihon keizaigaku shi– zōteiban. Kyoto: Minerva shobō, 1967.
Sumiya, Mikio, ed. Nihon rōshi kankei shiron. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1977.
Sumiya, Mikio. Nihon chinrodō shiron. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1955.
Sumiya, Mikio. Shōwa kyōkō. Tokyo: Yūhikaku, 1974.
Sumiya, Mikio. Social Impact of Industrialization in Japan. Tokyo: UNESCO, 1963.
Sumiya, Mikio, and Koji, Taira, eds. An Outline of Japanese Economic History, 1603–1940. Tokyo: Tokyo University Press, 1979.
Suzuki, Masayuki. “Nichi-Ro sengo no nōson mondai no tenkai”. Rekishigaku kenkyū (1974 special issue): 150–61.Google Scholar
Suzuki, Masayuki. “Taishōki nomin seiji shisō no ichi sokumen – jō“—. Nihonshi kenkyū, no. 173 (January 1977): 1–26.Google Scholar
Szal, Richard, and Robinson, Sherman. “Measuring Income Inequality.” In Income Distribution and Growth in the Less-Developed Countries, ed. Frank, Charles R. Jr., and Webb, Richard C.. Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution, 1977.Google Scholar
Tachibana, Kōsaburō. “Nihon aikoku kakushin hongi”. In Gendai Nihon shiso taikei, vol. 31: Chōkokka shugi, 32, ed. Bunzō, Hashikawa. Tokyo: Chikuma shobō, 1964.Google Scholar
Tachibanaki, Toshiaki. “Shūnyū bunpai to shotoku bunpai no fubyōdō”. Kikan gendai keizai, no. 28 (1977): 160–75.Google Scholar
Taikakai, , ed. Naimushō shi, 4 vols. Tokyo: Chihō zaimu kyōkai, 1970.
Taira, Koji.Education and Literacy in Meiji Japan: An Interpretation.Explorations in Economic History 8 (July J971): 371–94.Google Scholar
Taira, Koji. “Characteristics of Japanese Labor Markets.Economic Development and Cultural Change 10 (January 1962): 150–68.Google Scholar
Taira, Koji. Economic Development and the Labor Market in Japan. New York: Columbia University Press, 1970.
Taiyō 16 (November 1910).
Takabatake, Michitoshi. “Taishū undō no tayōka to henshitsu”. In Nenpō seijigaku 1977 (55-nen taisei no keisei to hōkai: Zoku gendai nihon no seiji katei) 55—, ed. gakkai, Nihon seiji. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1979.Google Scholar
Takagi, Sōkichi. Shikan: Taiheiyō sensō. Tokyo: Bungei shunjūsha, 1969.
Takagi, Sōkichi. Taiheiyō sensō to riku-kaigun no kōsō. Tokyo: Keizai ōraisha, 1967.
Takahashi, Hiroshi and Suzuki, Kunihiko. Tennōke no misshi tachi: “Hiroku senryō” to kōshitsumdash;. Tokyo: Tokuma shoten, 1981.
Takahashi, Hisashi. “Tōa kyōdōtai ron”. in Nihon no 1930 nendai —, ed. Kimitada, Miwa. Tokyo: Sōryūsha, 1980.Google Scholar
Takahashi, Iichirō — and Shirakawa, Kiyoshi, eds. Nōchi kaikaku to jinushi sei. Tokyo: Ochanomizu shobō, 1955.
Takahashi, Kamekichi. Nihon zaibatsu no kaibō. Tokyo: Chūō kōronsha, 1930.
Takahashi, Kamekichi. Taishō Shōwa zaikai hendōshi, 3 vols. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1954.
Takahashi, Korekiyo. Zuisōroku. Tokyo: Chikura shobō, 1936.
Takamura, Naosuke. Nihon bōsekigyō shi josetsu. Tokyo: Hanawa shobō, 1971.
Takanaka, Emiko. “Kyōkō to sensōka ni okeru rōdō shijō no henbō”. Koza Nihon shihonshugi hattatsu shiron, vol. 3: Kyōkō kara sensō e, ed. Ichirō, Kawai — et al. Tokyo: Hyōronsha, 1968.Takeuchi Yoshimi. Hōhō to shite noAjia: Waga senzen, sencha, sengo. Tokyo: Sōkisha, 1978.Google Scholar
Takasuka, Yoshihiro. Gendai Nihon no bukka mondai, rev. ed. Tokyo: Shinhyōron, 1975.
Takayama, Shinobu ;. Sambō honbu sakusenka: sakusen ronsd no jissō to hansei. Tokyo: Fuyō shobō, 1978.
Takayoshi, Matsuo. “Katayama Sen, Miura Tetsutarō, Ishibashi Tanzan”. In Kindai Nihon to Chōgoku – ge. ed. Yoshimi, Takeuchi and Bunzō, Hashikawa. Tokyo: Asahi shimbunsha, 1974.Google Scholar
Takekoshi, Yosaburō, Tsuyoshi, Inukai, et al. “Chōsen shidan zōsetsu mondai”. Taiyō 17 (August 1911): 81–92.Google Scholar
Takekoshi, Yosaburo. “Japan's Colonial Policy.” In Japan to America, ed. Naoichi, Masaoka. New York: Putnam, 1915.Google Scholar
Takemae, Eiji. “1949-nen rōdōhō kaisei zenshi: Senryō seisaku o chūshin to shite1949—. in Senryōki nihon no keizai to seiji, ed. Takafusa, Nakamura. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1979.Google Scholar
Takemae, Eiji. “Reddo pāji” —. in Kyōdō kenkyū: Nihon senryōgun: Sono hikari to kage, vol. 1, ed. kenkyūkai, Shisō kagaku. Tokyo: Tokuma shoten, 1978.Google Scholar
Takemae, Eiji. Senryō sengo shi: Tai-Nichi kanri seisaku no z'enyō. Tokyo: Keisō shobō, 1980.
Takeuchi, Yoshimi, and Tetsutarō, Kawakami, eds. Kindai no chōkoku. Tokyo: Fuzambo, 1979.
Takeuchi, Yoshitomo and Suzuki, Tadashi. “ ‘Shinkō kagaku no hata no moto ni’ to ‘Yuibutsuron kenkyū’ “. Shisō 465 (March 1963): 108–19.Google Scholar
Takeuchi, Yoshitomo. Shōwa shisōshi. Tokyo: Minerva shobō, 1958.
Tamura, Yoshio, ed. Hiroku Dait¯a sens¯. Tokyo: Fuji shoen, 19521955.
Tanaka, Giichi –. “Zuikan zatsuroku” (1906). In Tanaka Giichi bunsho in the possession of Yamaguchi ken bunsho kanzōGoogle Scholar
Tanaka, Manabu. “Nōchi kaikaku to nōmin undō“. In Nōchi kaikaku, vol. 6 of Sengo kaikaku, ed. kenkyujo, Tōkyō daigaku shakaikagaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 19741975.Google Scholar
Tanaka, Manabu. “Rōdōryoku chōtatsu kikō to rōshi kankei”. in Kaikakugo no Nihon keizai, vol. 8 of Sewgo kaikaku, ed. kenkyūjo, Tōkyō daigaku shakai kagaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 19741975.Google Scholar
Tanaka, Ryukichi. Haiin o tsuku: Gunbatsu sen'ō no jissō. Tokyo: Sansuisha, 1946.
Tanaka, Sōgorō, ed. Shiryō: Taishō shakai undōshi. Tokyo: San'ichi shobō, 1970.
Tanemura, Sakō. Daihonei kimitsu nisshi. Tokyo: Diamondosha, 1979.
Tanizaki, Junichirō. In Praise of Shadows, trans. Edward Seidensticker and Thomas Harper. New Haven, Conn.: Leete's Island Books, 1977.
Taro, Yayama. “The Newspapers Conduct a Mad Rhapsody over the Textbook Issue.Journal of Japanese Studies 9 (Summer 1983): 301–16.Google Scholar
Teishinshō, , ed. Tetsudō kokuyū shimatsu ippan. in Nihon sangyō shiryō taikei, vol. 11, ed. Seiichi, Takimoto – and Shikamatsu, Mukai. Tokyo: Chūgai shōgyō shinpōsha, 1927.
tekkō, Nihon renmei. Sengo tekkō shi. Tokyo: Nihon tekkō renmei, 1959.
Tendō, Akira. Sangokai daikaisen: Kantai jūgun hiroku. Tokyo: Masu shobō, 1956.
Terasaki, Gwen. Bridge to the Sunr Harmonds worth, England: Penguin, 1962.
Tetsudö, jihökyoku, ed. 10-nen kinen Nihon no tetsudō ron 10. Meiji-ki tetsudōshi shiryō, suppl. vol. 1, ed. Masaho, Noda, Harada Katsumasa and Aoki Eiichi –. Tokyo: Nihon keizai hyōronsha, 1981.
Tetsudōin, , ed. Hompō tetsudō no shakai oyobi keizai ni oyoboseru eikyō. Tokyo: Tetsudōin, 1930.
Tezuka, Kazuaki. “Kyū-rōdōkumiaihō no keisei to tenkai: Shoki rōdō iinkai no kinō bunseki o chūshin to shite”. in Rōdō seisaku, vol. 5 of Sengo kaikaku, ed. kenkyūjo, Tōkyō daigaku shakaikagaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 19741975.Google Scholar
Thayer, Nathaniel B. How the Conservatives Rule Japan. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1969.
Thorne, Christopher. Allies of a Kind: The United States, Britain, and the War Against Japan, 1941–1943. New York: Oxford University Press, 1978.
Tiedemann, Arthur E.Big Business and Politics in Prewar Japan.” In Dilemmas of Growth in Prewar Japan, ed. Morley, James W.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1971.Google Scholar
Tōa, dōshikai remmei. “Shōwa ishin ron”. In Gen-dai Nihon shisō taikei, vol. 31: Chōkokka shugi ed. Bunzō, Hashikawa. Tokyo: Chikuma shobō, 1964.Google Scholar
Tōbata, Seiichi –. “Jinushi no shohanchū”. Kokka gakkai zasshi 55 (June 1941) : 37–56.Google Scholar
Tobata, Seiichi – and Kazushi, Ōkawa, eds. Nihon no keizai to nōgyō, vol. 1. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1956.
Tobata, Seiichi –, ed. , Nōgyō ni okeru senzai shitsugyō. Tokyo: Nihon hyōronsha, 1956.
Tōgō, Minoru. Nihon shokumin ron. Tokyo: Bunbudo, 1906.
Tōgō, Shigenori. The Cause of Japan, trans. Tōgō, F. and Blakeney, B. B.. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1956.
Tōkyōkenkyūjo, daigaku shakai kagaku, eds. Nachisu keizai to nyuu deiiru, vol. 3 of Fuashizumuki no kokka to shakai. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shup-pankai, 1979.
Tōkyō, daigaku shakaikagaku kenkyūjo, eds. Yooropa no hōtaisei, vol. 4 of Fuashizumuki no kokka to shakai. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1979.
Tominaga, Ken'ichi. “Shakai kaisō to shakai idō no sūsei bunseki”. In Nihon no kaisō kōzō, ed. Ken'ichi, Tominaga –. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1979.Google Scholar
Totten, George A., III, ed. Democracy in Prewar Japan: Groundwork of Façade? Lexington, Mass.: Heath, 1965.
Totten, George A., III. “Collective Bargaining and Works Councils as Innovations in Industrial Relations in Japan during the 1920s.” In Aspects of Social Change in Modern Japan, ed. Dore, Ronald P.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1967.Google Scholar
Totten, George A., III. “Japanese Industrial Relations at the Crossroads: The Great Noda Strike of 1927–1928.” In Japan in Crisis: Essays on Taishō Democracy, ed. Silberman, Bernard and Harootunian, H. D.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1974.Google Scholar
Totten, George A., III. The Social Democratic Movement in Prewar Japan. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1966.
Toyama, Saburō. Dai Tōa sensō to senshi no kyōkun. Tokyo: Hara shobō, 1979.
Toyama, Saburo.Lessons from the Past.” U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings, September 1982.Google Scholar
Tōyō, keizai shinpōsha. Shōwa kokusei sōran, 2 vols. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai Shinpōsha, 1980.
Tōyō, keizai shinpōsha, ed. Meiji Taishō kokusei sōran. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1927.
Toyoda, . Namimakura ikutabizo. Tokyo: Kōdansha, 1973.
Tsuchiya, Takao. Nihon no keieisha seishin. Tokyo: Keizai ōraisha, 1959.
Tsuchiya, Takao. Zaibatsu o kizuita hitobito. Tokyo: Kōbundō, 1955.
Tsuda, Sōkichi. Bungaku ni arawaretaru waga kokumin no shisō. Tokyo: Rakuyōdō, 19181921.
Tsuji, Kiyoaki. “Sengo kaikaku to seiji katei”. In Seiji katei, vol. 3 of Sengo kaikaku, ed. kenkyūjo, Tōkyō daigaku shakaikagaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 19741945.Google Scholar
Tsuji, Masanobu. Guadalcanal. Tokyo: Kawade shobō, 1967.
Tsukuda, Jitsuo. “Yokohama kara no shōgen”’. In Kyōdō kenkyū: Nihon senryō, ed. ken-kyūkai, Shisō kagaku, Tokyo: Tokuma shoten, 1972.Google Scholar
Tsukui, Tatsuo, ed Nippon seiji nenpō: Shōwa jūshichi-nen vol. 1. Tokyo: Shōwa shobō, 1942.
Tsunoda, Fusako. Issai yume ni gozasōrō: Honma Masaharu chūjō den. Tokyo: Chūō kōronsha, 1973.
Tsunoda, Jun, ed. Ishiwara Kanji shiryō: Kokubōronsaku. Tokyo: Hara shobō, 1967.
Tsunoda, Ryusaku, Bary, Theodore et al. Sources of Japanese Tradition. New York: Columbia University Press, 1958.
Tsurumi, E. Patricia. Japanese Colonial Education in Taiwan, 1895–1945. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1977.
Tsuruta, Yoshimasa. Sengo Nihon no sangyō seisaku. Tokyo: Nihon keizai shinbunsha, 1982.
Tsurutani, Taketsugu. Political Change in Japan. New York: McKay, 1977.
Tsūshō, sangyōshō jūkōgyō kyoku. Tekkōgyō no gōrika to sono seika. Tokyo: Kōgyō tosho shuppan, 1963
Tsūshō, sangyōshō, ed. Shōkō seisaku shi, vol. 17: Tekkō. Tokyo: Shōkō seisakushi kankōkai, 1970.
Tsūshō, sangyōshō, ed. Shōkō seisaku shi, vol. 15: Sen'i kōgyō. Tokyo: Shōkō seisakushi kankōkai, 1968.
Tsūshō, sangyōshō. Sangyō gorika hakusho. Tokyo: Nikkan kōgyō shinbunsha, 1957.
Tung, Hsien-kuang. Shō Kai-seki, trans. Terashima Masashi and Okuno Masami. Tokyo: Nihon gaisei gakkai, 1956.
,U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey (Pacific), Military Analysis Division. Japanese Air Power. Washington, D.C.: USGPO, 1947.
,U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey (Pacific), Naval Analysis Division. Interrogations of Japanese Officials, 2 vols. Washington, D.C.: USGPO, 1946.
,U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey, Military Analysis Division. Air Campaigns of the Pacific War. Washington, D.C.: USGPO, 1946.
Uchikawa, Yoshimi. “Masukomi jidai no tenkai to seiji katei”. In Nenpō seijigaku 1977 (55-nen taisei no keisei to hōkai: Zoku gendai Nihon no seiji katei) 55, ed. gakkai, Nihon seiji. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1979.Google Scholar
Uehara, Nobuhiro. “Nōchi kaikaku katei to nōchi kaikaku ron”. in Nōchi kaikaku, vol. 6 of Sengo kaikaku, ed. kenkyūjo, Tōkyō daigaku shakaikagaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 19741975.Google Scholar
Ueno, Hiroya. Nihon no keizai seido. Tokyo: Nihon keizai shinbunsha, 1978.
Uesugi, Shinkichi. Teikoku kenpō chikujō kōgi Tokyo: Nihon hyōronsha, 1935.
Ueyama, Shunpei. Dai Tōa sensō no imi. Tokyo: Chūō kōronsha, 1964.
Ugaki, Kazushige. Ugaki Kazushige nikki, vol. 2. Tokyo: Misuzu shobō, 1970.
Umemura, Mataji et al. Chōki keizai tōkei – suikei to bunseki, vol. 9: Nōringyō . Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1966.
Umemura, Mataji. “Sangyōbetsu koyō no hendō 1880–1940 nen18801940. Keizaikenkyū 24 (April 1973): 107–16.Google Scholar
Umemura, Mataji. Sengo Nihon no rōdōyoku. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1964.
Umemura, Mataji. “Population and Labor Force.” In Patterns of Japanese Economic Development: A Quantitative Appraisal, ed. Ohkawa, Kazushi, Shinohara, Miyohei et al. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1979.Google Scholar
Umihara, Osamu. Senshi ni manabu. Tokyo: Asagumo shinbunsha, 1970.
Uraki, Shin'ichi. Nihon nōmin no henkan katei. Tokyo: Ochanomizu shobō, 1978.
Ushiomi, Toshitaka et al. Nihon no nōson. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1957.
Usui, Katsumi. Manshū jihen. Tokyo: Chūō kōronsha, 1974.
Usui, Katsumi. Nitchō gaikō shi: Hokubatsu no jida. Tokyo: Hanawa shobō, 1971.
Usui, Katsumi. Nitchū sensō. Tokyo: Chūō kōronsha, 1967.
Usui, Katsumi.On the Duration of the Pacific War.Japan Quarterly (October–December 1981): 479–88.Google Scholar
Utley, Freda. Japan's Feet of Clay. New York: Norton, 1937.
Wada, Hidekichi. Nissan kontserun tokuhon. Tokyo: Shunjūsha, 1937.
Ward, Robert E.Reflections on the Allied Occupation and Planned Political Change in Japan.” In Political Development in Modern Japan, ed. Ward, Robert E.. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1968.Google Scholar
Ward, Robert E. Political Development in Modern Japan. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1968.
Waswo, Ann.In Search of Equity: Japanese Tenant Unions in the 1920s.” In Conflict in Modern Japanese History: The Neglected Tradition, ed. Najita, Tetsuo and Koschmann, Victor. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1982.Google Scholar
Waswo, Ann. Japanese Landlords: The Decline of a Rural Elite. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1977.
Watanabe, Akio. “Dai 61 -dai: Dai 1 -ji Satō naikaku: ‘Kan'yō to nintai’ kara ‘kan'yō to chōwa’ e”. In Nihon naikakushi roku. vol. 6, ed. Shigeru, Hayashi. Tokyo: Daiichi hōki, 1981.Google Scholar
Watanabe, Akio. “Dai 62-dai: Dai 2-ji Satō naikaku: Jūjitsu shita 3-nen kan”. In Nihon naikakushi roku, vol. 6, ed. Shigeru, Hayashi. Tokyo: Daiichi hōki, 1981.Google Scholar
Watanabe, Akio. “Dai 63-dai: Dai 3-ji Satō naikaku: Gekidō no 70-nendai e no hashi watashi”. In Nihon naikakushi roku, vol. 6, ed. Shigeru, Hayashi. Tokyo: Daiichi hōki, 1981.Google Scholar
Watanabe, Haruo. Nihon marukusushugi undō no reimei. Tokyo: Aoki shoten, 1957.
Watanabe, Shin'ichi. Nihon no keiei kōzō – senzen hen. Tokyo: Yushōdō, 1971.
Watanabe, Toru. “Nihon no marukusushugi undō ron”. In Kōza marukusushugi, vol. 12. Tokyo: Nihon hyōronsha, 1974.Google Scholar
Watanabe, Yōzō. “Nōchi kaikaku to sengo nōchihō”. in Nōchi kaikaku, vol. 6 of Sengo kaikaku, ed. kenkyūjō, Tōkyō daigaku shakaikagaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 19741945.Google Scholar
Watanabe, Yōzō. “Sengo kaikaku to Nihon gendaihō”. In Kadai to shikaku, vol, 1 of Sengo kaikaku, ed. kenkyūjo, Tōkyō daigaku shakaikagaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 19741975.Google Scholar
Watanabe, Akio.Japanese Public Opinion and Foreign Policy, 1964–1973.” In The Foreign Policy of Modern Japan, ed. Scalapino, Robert A.. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1977.Google Scholar
Watanabe, Hisamaru. “Shōchō tennōsei no seijiteki yakuwari”. In Tennōsei to minshū, ed. Yasushi, Gotō. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1976.Google Scholar
Watanuki, Jōji. “Kōdo seichō to keizai taikokuka no seiji katei”. in Nenpō seijigaku 1977 (55-nen taisei no keisei to hōkai: Zoku gendai nihon no seiji katei) 55. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1979.Google Scholar
Watsuji, Tetsurō. Koji junrei. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1947.
Watsuji, Tetsurō. Nihon kodai bunka. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1920.
Watsuji, Tetsurō. Nihon seishinshi kenkyū. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1970.
Watsuji, Tetsurō. Climate, trans. Bownas, Geoffrey. Tokyo: Hokuseido Press, 1961.
White, James W. The Sōkagakkai and Mass Society. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1970.
Whitney, Courtney. MacArthur: His Rendezvous with History. New York: Knopf, 1956.
Williams, David E.Beyond Political Economy: A Critique of Issues Raised in Chalmers Johnson's MITI and the Japanese Miracle. Social and Economic Research on Modern Japan, Occasional Paper no. 35. Berlin: East Asian Institute, Free University of Berlin, 1983.Google Scholar
Wilson, George M. Radical Nationalist in Japan: Kita Ikki, 1883 –1937. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1969.
Wilson, George A., ed. Crisis Politics in Prewar Japan: Institutional and Ideological Problems of the 1930s. Tokyo: Sophia University Press, 1970.
Wray, William D. Mitsubishi and the N. Y.K., 1870–1914: Business Strategy in the Japanese Shipping Industry. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1985.
Yabe, Teiji ed. Konoe Fumimaro, 2 vols. Tokyo: Kōbundō, 1952.
Yamabe, Kentarō. Nihon tōchika no Chōsen. Tokyo: Iwanami shinso, 1975.
Yamabe, Kentaro. “Nihon teikokushugi to shokuminchi”. In Iwanami kōza rekishi, vol. 19, ed. kōza, Iwanami. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1963.Google Scholar
Yamada, Junzō. “Senjichū no rōdōsha”. In Gendai Nihon shihonshugi taikei IV: Rōdō ed. Shigeru, Aihara. Tokyo: Kōbundō, 1958.Google Scholar
Yamada, Saburō. “Nōgyō” In Nihon keizai ron - Keizai seichō 100-nen no bunseki ed. Kōichi, Emi –and Yūichi, Shionoya. Tokyo: Yūhikaku, 1973.Google Scholar
Yamada, Yūzō. Nihon kokumin shotoku suikei shiryō, rev. ed. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1957.
Yamada, Saburo, and Yujiro, Hayami. “Agriculture.” In Patterns of Japanese Economic Development: A Quantitative Appraisal, ed. Ohkawa, Kazushi and Shinohara, Miyohei et al. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1979.Google Scholar
Yamada, Saburō. A Century of Agricultural Growth in Japan, Its Relevance to Asian Development. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press; and Tokyo: Tokyo University Press, 1965.
Yamaguchi, Jūji. Manshū teikoku. Tokyo: Gyōsei tsūshinsha, 1975.
Yamaji, Aizan. “Genji no shakai mondai oyobi shakaishugisha”. In Shakaishugi shiron, ed Eitarō, Kishimoto. Tokyo: Aoki shoten, 1955.Google Scholar
Yamakawa, Hitosh. “‘Kaizō Nihon’ to musan kaikyū undō”. in Yamakawa Hitoshi zenshū, vol. 5, ed. Kikue, Yamakawa and Shinsaku, Yamakawa. Tokyo: Keisōshobō, 1968.Google Scholar
Yamakawa, Hitoshi. “Musan kaikyū undō no hōkō tenkan”. In Yamakawa Hitoshi zenshū vol. 4, ed. Kikue, Yamakawa and Shinsaku, Yamakawa. Tokyo: Keisō shobō, 1967.Google Scholar
Yamakawa, Hitoshi. “Rōdō undō ni taisuru chishiki kaikyū no chii”. In Yamakawa Hitoshi zenshū, vol. 3, ed. Kikue, Yamakawa and Shinsaku, Yamakawa. Tokyo: Keisō shobō, 1967.Google Scholar
Yamakawa, Hitoshi. “Rōdō undō no shakaiteki igi”. In Yamakawa Hitoshi zenshū, vol. 2, ed. Kikue, Yamakawa and Shinsaku, Yamakawa. Tokyo: Keisō shobō, 1966.Google Scholar
Yamakawa, Hitoshi. “Tami o moto to sezaru Yoshino hakase to Ōyama Ikuo shi no minponshugi”. In Yamakawa Hitoshi zenshū, vol. 2, ed. Kikue, Yamakawa and Shinsaku, Yamakawa. Tokyo: Keisō shobō, 1966.Google Scholar
Yamamoto, Kiyoshi. “Sengo rōdō kumiai no shuppatsuten”. in Nihon rōshi kankei shiron, ed. Mikio, Sumiya. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1977.Google Scholar
Yamamoto, Kiyoshi. Sengo rōdō undō shiron, vol. 1. Tokyo: Ochanomizu shobō, 1977.
Yamamura, Kōzō. “Kikai kōgyō ni okeru seiō gijutsu no dōnyū”, trans. Takafusa, Nakamura In Washinton taisei to Nichibei kankei, ed. Chihiro, Hosoya and Makoto, Saitō Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1978.Google Scholar
Yamamura, Kozo.Success Illgotten? The Role of Meiji Militarism in Japan's Technical Progress.” Journal of Economic History 37 (March 1977).Google Scholar
Yamamura, Kozo.The Founding of Mitsubishi: A Case Study in Japanese Business History.Business History Review 41 (1967): 141–60.Google Scholar
Yamanouchi, Yasushi. “Iwayuru shakai ishiki keitai ni tsuite”. Shisō 568, 569 (October 1971 –November 1971).Google Scholar
Yamazawa, Ippei and Yūzō, Yamamoto. Chōki keizai tōkei –14: Bōeki to kokusai shūshi. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1974.
Yamazumi, Masumi.Textbook Revision: The Swing to the Right.Japan Quarterly (October–December 1981): 472–8.Google Scholar
Yanagida, Izumi. Kinoshita Naoe. Tokyo: Rironsha, 1955.
Yanagida, Kunio. Tōno monogatari. Tokyo: Kyōdo kenkyūsha, 1938.
Yanaihara, Tadao. “Sōsetsu”. in Sengo nihon shōshi, vol. 1, ed. Tadao, Yanaihara. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1958.Google Scholar
Yano, Tōru. Nihon no Nan'yō shikan. Tokyo: Chūō shinsho, 1979.
Yano, Tsuneta kinenkai, ed. Nihon kokusei zue. Tokyo: Kokuseisha, 1981.
Yasuba, Yasukichi. “Senzen no Nihon ni okeru kōgyō tōkei no shim-pyōsei ni tsuite”. Ōsaka daigaku keizaigaku (19771978).Google Scholar
Yasuba, Yasukichi.The Evolution of Dualistic Wage Structure.” In Industrialization and Its Social Consequences, ed. Patrick, Hugh T.. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1976.Google Scholar
Yasuda, Tsuneo. Nihon fuashizumu to minshū undō. Tokyo: Renga shobō shinsha, 1979.
Yasuda, Yōjūrō. “Bunmei kaika no ronri no shūen”. in Kindai no chōkoku, ed. Yoshimi, Takeuchi and Tetsutarō, Kawakami. Tokyo: Fuzanbō, 1979.Google Scholar
Yasuda, Yojūrō. “Nihon no hashi”. Bungakukai (October 1936).Google Scholar
Yatsugi, Kazuo. Rōdō sōgi hiroku. Tokyo: Nihon kōgyō shinbunsha, 1979.
Yawata, seitetsusho, ed. Yawata seitetsusho 50-nen shi. Tokyo: Yawata seitetsusho, 1950.
Yoda, Seiichi. “Sengo kazoku seido kaikaku to shinkazokukan no seiritsu”. In Kadai to shikaku, vol. 1 of Sengo kaikaku, ed. kenkyūjo, Tōkyō daigaku shakaikagaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 19741975.Google Scholar
Yoda, Seiichi. “Senryō seisaku ni okeru fujin kaihō”. in Senryōki Nihon no keizai to seiji, ed. Takafusa, Nakamura. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1979.Google Scholar
Yokoyama, Gen'nosuke. Nihon no kasō shakai. Tokyo: Kyōbunkan, 1899.
Yokoyama, Keiji. “Toshi saikaihatsu to shimin sanka no seidoka”. In Nenpō seijigaku 1974 (Seiji sanka no riron to genjitsu), ed. gakkai, Nihon seiji. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1975.Google Scholar
Yokusan kokumin undō shi, ed. kankōkai, Yokusan undō shi, Tokyo: Yokusan undō shi kankōkai, 1954.
Yoshida, Katsumi. “Nōchi kaikakuhō no rippō katei: Nōgyō keiei kibo mondai o chūshin to shite”. In Nōchi kaikaku, vol. 6 of Sengo kaikaku, ed. kenkyūjo, Tōkyō daigaku shakaikagaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 19741975.Google Scholar
Yoshida, Kei. Denryoku kanrian no sokumen shi. Tokyo: Kōtsū keizaisha shuppanbu, 1938.
Yoshida, Shigeru. Kaisō jūnen, 4 vols. Tokyo: Shinchōsha, 1957.
Yoshida, Shigeru. The Yoshida Memoirs. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1962.
Yoshihara, Kunio. Japanese Economic Development: A Short Introduction. Tokyo: Oxford University Press, 1979.
Yoshii, Hiroshi. Shōwa gaikō shi. Tokyo: Nansōsha, 1975.
Yoshimura, Michio. Nihon to Roshia. Tokyo: Harashobō, 1968.
Yoshino, Sakuzō. “Minponshugi, shakaishugi, kagekishugi”. Chūō kōron. (June 1919).Google Scholar
Yoshino, Toshihiko. Rekidai Nihon ginkō sōsai ron. Tokyo: Mainichi shinbunsha, 1976.
Yoshino, Shinji.Our Planned Economy.Contemporary Japan 6 (December 1937): 369–677.Google Scholar
Yoshiō, Andō and Hirofumi, Yamamoto, eds. Kōgyō iken hoka Maeda Masana kankei shiryō. Tokyo: Kōseikan, 1971.
Yoshiō, Andō, ed. Shōwa seiji keizai shi e no shōgen, 3 vols. Tokyo: Mainichi shinbunsha, 1972.
Yuasa, Yasuo. Watsuji Tetsurō. Tokyo: Minerva shobō, 1981.
Yui, Masaomi. “Gunbu to kokumin tōgō” In Fuashizumuki no kokka to shakai, vol. 1 of Shōwa kyōkō, ed. kenkyūjo, Tōkyō daigaku shakaikagaku. Tokyo: Tōkyō daigaku shuppankai, 1978.Google Scholar
Yui, Tsunehiko. Chūshō kigyō seisaku no shiteki tenkai. Tokyo: Tōyō keizai shinpōsha, 1964.

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Works Cited
  • Edited by Peter Duus
  • Book: The Cambridge History of Japan
  • Online publication: 28 March 2008
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CHOL9780521223577.016
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Works Cited
  • Edited by Peter Duus
  • Book: The Cambridge History of Japan
  • Online publication: 28 March 2008
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CHOL9780521223577.016
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Works Cited
  • Edited by Peter Duus
  • Book: The Cambridge History of Japan
  • Online publication: 28 March 2008
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CHOL9780521223577.016
Available formats
×