Shamshad A. Khan

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Archive data: Person was Research Assistant at IDSA from June 2009 to September 2013

Joined IDSA
June 1, 2009
Expertise
Japan: Re-militarization debate in Japan, Japan’s role in international security, Constitution and internal politics, India -Japan relations
Education
PhD, School of International Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi
Backgrounder
Shamshad Ahmad Khan was Government of Japan’s Mombusho Fellow and was affiliated with Waseda University, Tokyo, as research student during his fellowship. He has completed his PhD on “Political debates on amending Japanese Pacifist Constitution” and MPhil on “Japanese Constitution: Relevance of Pacifism in the Post Cold War Period”. He also takes keen interest in Pakistan especially its internal politics and analyses Pakistan’s Urdu Press.
He is multi-lingual; apart from English, he also knows and speaks Hindi, Urdu, Arabic and Japanese.
He was associated with Radio Japan NHK as a programme monitor and content analyst from February 1998 to March 2007. Prior to joining IDSA, he worked with the Press Trust of India, a premier Indian news agency, as a journalist at its New Delhi office. He was also Visiting Research Fellow at the Hokkaido University, Japan from December 1, 2010 to March 2, 2011.
In 2011, he got Nakasone Award for his contribution to Japanese studies in India.
Some Publications

Research Assistant
Email:- shamshadnhk[at]gmail[dot]com
Phone:- +91 11 2671 7983

Publication

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Japan’s quest for East Asian Community

Japan is seeking to forge an East Asian Community inline with the European Union. But the optimism that East Asia will realize the goal of European Union (EU) type integration does not seem realistic since historical issues still impede normal diplomatic relations.

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Political Change in Japan: Implications for Foreign and Defence Policies

The Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), an ensemble of liberals and conservatives, has unseated the Liberal Democratic party (LDP) in the general elections held on August 30, ending the LDP’s almost half a century of uninterrupted rule over the country. Though the DPJ has been elected primarily because of people’s dissatisfaction with the LDP’s domestic and economic policies, it is likely to alter Japan’s foreign and defence policies.

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Japan rethinks its pacifist security policy

Japan seems set to overhaul its pacifist security policy with the ongoing formulation of a new National Defense Programme Guidelines (NDPG) for fiscal 2010-2014. The NDPG lays out Japan’s basic policy on its defence strength. The current NDPG expires at the end of this year.

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Political convulsions in Japanese politics

Since the early 1950s, two factors have remained constant in Japan - the political domination of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and the continuation of the Japan-US security alliance. The first factor is expected to undergo a change as the LDP is likely to give way to the opposition Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) in the forthcoming elections for the lower House. Given this prospective political change, one might see a perceptible shift in Japan’s foreign policy, particularly its relationship with the US.