著者
宮本 盛太郎
出版者
京都大学教養部
雑誌
人文 (ISSN:04398947)
巻号頁・発行日
no.26, pp.p34-55, 1980
著者
山田 義顕
出版者
大阪府立大学人文学会
雑誌
人文学論集 (ISSN:02896192)
巻号頁・発行日
no.12, pp.63-77, 1994-03-01

砂原教男教授停年退官記念
著者
ラーン ヴェルナー 山田 義顕
出版者
大阪府立大学人文学会
雑誌
人文学論集 (ISSN:02896192)
巻号頁・発行日
no.28, pp.1-21, 2010-03-31

Rahn, Werner. "Strategische Probleme der deutschen Seekriegsführung 1914-1918" の翻訳
著者
笹岡 伸矢
出版者
明治大学大学院
雑誌
政治学研究論集 (ISSN:13409158)
巻号頁・発行日
no.17, pp.117-135, 2002

本稿の目的は、民主化一般において軍隊がいかなる役割を担ったのか、もしくは担うのか、という点にある。1970年代から始まった世界規模での民主化の進展は、軍事体制だけでなく、個人独裁や一党支配体制の民政移管を含んでいる。民主化における軍隊の問題は、決して軍部による政治支配からの移行に限定されるわけではなかった。S.ハンチントンは、民主化と政軍関係について、おおよそ楽観的な視点を提供している。すなわち、彼は新生民主主義体制における定着作業は、経済問題や新体制下の犯罪・人権の問題、言論の自由、政党制の定着といった問題においては非常に難航しているが、政軍関係については権威主義体制のときより悪化したところはないと述べている1。
著者
中西 嘉宏
出版者
東南アジア学会
雑誌
東南アジア -歴史と文化- (ISSN:03869040)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.2006, no.35, pp.22-52, 2006

This article examines the state ideology formation of the Ne Win regime (1962-1988) in Burma. Drawing on military documents and interviews with key figures, it depicts the interaction between the faction fighting within the military in the 1950s and early 1960s and the development of the future state ideology. I argue that understanding the military institution and the dynamics of military politics is essential to understanding the process and nature of the regime fromation.<br>After March 2nd coup d'&eacute;tat in 1962, the Revolutionary Council announced the organization of the Burma Socialist Programme Party (BSPP) as the only political party for guiding the revolution. BSPP's official ideology was <i>The System of Correlation of Man and His Environment</i> (SCME). SCME had been the state ideology until the fall of Ne Win's regime in 1988.<br>SCME was written by U Chit Hlaing who belonged to the Directorate of Psychological Warfare, the Ministry of Defence. He received the order from General Ne Win in November 1962 and wrote the draft based on his articles, a series of &ldquo;nam&agrave; rup&agrave; wad&agrave;&rdquo;, published in <i>Myawaddy Magazin</i> in 1957 and 1958. Chit Hlaing wrote those articles as anti-communism and pro-constitutionalism propaganda under the intra-military leadership of Brigadier Aung Gyi and Colonel Maung Maung. They launched a number of initiatives to reform the military in the 1950s. One of them was to forge the military doctrine to ensure anti-communism and pro-constitutionalism.<br>However, the political structure of the military changed in the early 1960s. Colonel Maung Maung was removed in 1961 and Lt-General Aung Gyi lost his leadership in the military. General Ne Win formed an alliance with the hard-liners. It enabled the military took over the state on March 2nd, 1962. General Ne Win rejected pro-constitutionalism. But they were unclear as to the guiding ideology which would be taken to achieve &ldquo;Burmese Way to Socialism&rdquo;. Therefore General Ne Win ordered Chit Hlaing to make out a draft of the BSPP's offical ideology. It is ironic that the articles written under the principle of anti-communism and pro-constitutionalism became the document to legitimate one-party rule and political intervention by the military for 26 years.
著者
中西 嘉宏
出版者
京都大学東南アジア地域研究研究所
雑誌
東南アジア研究 (ISSN:05638682)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.56, no.2, pp.240-246, 2019

伊野憲治『ミャンマー民主化運動 --学生たちの苦悩, アウンサンスーチーの理想, 民のこころ』(めこん, 2018, 442p.)
著者
山本 元
出版者
一般財団法人 日本国際政治学会
雑誌
国際政治 (ISSN:04542215)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.2007, no.147, pp.132-148,L14, 2007

After the end of the Cold war era, domestic conflicts became a key issue facing international society. However, there exist cases actually left untouched for several years. Theorists of international politics also have not paid much attention to such cases as the subject of their research, with the result that we have not accumulated knowledge about &ldquo;pretermitted conflicts&rdquo; and the dynamics of the peace negotiation.<br>The purpose of this paper is to explain the sudden change in the behavior of a government in a peace negotiation even though international society sits still and watches. As Gurr points out, however, domestic conflicts have also occurred in quasi-states. This institutional character makes international intervention difficult and justifies the non-intervention of international society.<br>Making a point of being a quasi-state, the author characterizes the government as a player that tries to maximize public support. Inside the government organization, however, the army, which keeps the capability to overturn the peace agreement between the government and the proindependence militant, exists and opposes a move to the peace agreement. People not directly concerned with the domestic conflict determine support (or nonsupport) for their government after observing the will for peace and the ability to control the armed forces (civil-military relations). But the reality of civil-military relations is the private information of the government. Based upon this setting, the model on a peace negotiation was formulated as an incomplete information game.<br>After analyzing this model, the author derives two kinds of equilibrium paths to reach a peace agreement. One is a separating equilibrium, in which the government <i>H</i> aving control over the national military (<i>H</i>) proposes the peace plan, but the government <i>L</i>acking control over it (<i>L</i>) does not when the militant's belief that the government is <i>H</i> is high, and the militant will accept it. The other is a pooling equilibrium that both <i>H</i> and <i>L</i> propose when the belief is low and the militants will reject it. The first is a trivial outcome. However, <i>L</i> can propose it because <i>L</i> can appeal to the people's will for peace without exposing the low ascendancy of L on the separating equilibrium.<br>Finally, the author explains the dynamics of peace negotiations in Indonesia and the Philippines and points out that civil-military relations could be a useful explanatory variable. And as they are also policy implications for avoiding further humanitarian crisis, international society should not castigate <i>L</i> for a passive stance on the separating equilibrium, and it should notcastigate separates for it in regards to the pooling equilibrium. In this way, by seeing the effect of civil-military relations on the dynamics of a peace process, the optimal reply of international society to the government's and the militant's behavior must be changed to effect a prompt and appropriate response to avoid further massacre or the violation of human rights.