The meaning of the Japanese emperor in japan’s constitutional system

This paper is intended to discuss the meaning of the Japanese Emperor in Japan’s constitutional system. Many scholars in Japan have long argued that the existence of the Emperor is incompatible with the Constitution’s principle of popular sovereignty because the legitimacy of the Emperor ultimately...

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Main Author: Eto, Shohei
Other Authors: Asian constitutional law recent developments and trends : Vietnam, Hanoi, 6th and 7th December 2019. Volume 1
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:Vietnamese
Published: Đại học Quốc Gia Hà Nội 2020
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Online Access:http://repository.vnu.edu.vn/handle/VNU_123/94783
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Institution: Vietnam National University, Hanoi
Language: Vietnamese
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spelling oai:112.137.131.14:VNU_123-947832020-10-16T06:55:44Z The meaning of the Japanese emperor in japan’s constitutional system Eto, Shohei Asian constitutional law recent developments and trends : Vietnam, Hanoi, 6th and 7th December 2019. Volume 1 the Japanese Emperor Japan Marxism This paper is intended to discuss the meaning of the Japanese Emperor in Japan’s constitutional system. Many scholars in Japan have long argued that the existence of the Emperor is incompatible with the Constitution’s principle of popular sovereignty because the legitimacy of the Emperor ultimately resides in the Shinto religion, not the people. Yet, it seems that the former Emperor, Akihito, who has just abdicated managed to succeed in thriving his status as the nation’s symbol by way of committing to the fundamental values of the Constitution, especially its Pacifist character. He did so by performing activities such as consoling the souls of the war dead and visiting victims in disaster-stricken areas. Some experts welcomed his new role, saying that the Emperor had shown us that the monarchy and the people can co-exist. But this argument is problematic. The Constitution only allows the Emperor to perform formal and ceremonial acts and his new role may exceed his constitutional authority as it may amount to the task of personal “integration” as Rudolf Smend once argued. The question is whether this integrational function can be the Emperor’s legitimate task under the principle of popular sovereignty. This paper intends to answer this question by focusing on the question of symbolism in the Constitution. 2020-10-16T06:53:48Z 2020-10-16T06:53:48Z 2019 Conference Paper Eto, S. (2019). The meaning of the Japanese emperor in japan’s constitutional system. In Asian constitutional law recent developments and trends : Vietnam, Hanoi, 6th and 7th December 2019. Volume 1 http://repository.vnu.edu.vn/handle/VNU_123/94783 vi p. 308 - 316 application/pdf Đại học Quốc Gia Hà Nội
institution Vietnam National University, Hanoi
building VNU Library & Information Center
continent Asia
country Vietnam
Vietnam
content_provider VNU Library and Information Center
collection VNU Digital Repository
language Vietnamese
topic the Japanese Emperor
Japan
Marxism
spellingShingle the Japanese Emperor
Japan
Marxism
Eto, Shohei
The meaning of the Japanese emperor in japan’s constitutional system
description This paper is intended to discuss the meaning of the Japanese Emperor in Japan’s constitutional system. Many scholars in Japan have long argued that the existence of the Emperor is incompatible with the Constitution’s principle of popular sovereignty because the legitimacy of the Emperor ultimately resides in the Shinto religion, not the people. Yet, it seems that the former Emperor, Akihito, who has just abdicated managed to succeed in thriving his status as the nation’s symbol by way of committing to the fundamental values of the Constitution, especially its Pacifist character. He did so by performing activities such as consoling the souls of the war dead and visiting victims in disaster-stricken areas. Some experts welcomed his new role, saying that the Emperor had shown us that the monarchy and the people can co-exist. But this argument is problematic. The Constitution only allows the Emperor to perform formal and ceremonial acts and his new role may exceed his constitutional authority as it may amount to the task of personal “integration” as Rudolf Smend once argued. The question is whether this integrational function can be the Emperor’s legitimate task under the principle of popular sovereignty. This paper intends to answer this question by focusing on the question of symbolism in the Constitution.
author2 Asian constitutional law recent developments and trends : Vietnam, Hanoi, 6th and 7th December 2019. Volume 1
author_facet Asian constitutional law recent developments and trends : Vietnam, Hanoi, 6th and 7th December 2019. Volume 1
Eto, Shohei
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Eto, Shohei
author_sort Eto, Shohei
title The meaning of the Japanese emperor in japan’s constitutional system
title_short The meaning of the Japanese emperor in japan’s constitutional system
title_full The meaning of the Japanese emperor in japan’s constitutional system
title_fullStr The meaning of the Japanese emperor in japan’s constitutional system
title_full_unstemmed The meaning of the Japanese emperor in japan’s constitutional system
title_sort meaning of the japanese emperor in japan’s constitutional system
publisher Đại học Quốc Gia Hà Nội
publishDate 2020
url http://repository.vnu.edu.vn/handle/VNU_123/94783
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