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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Japanese Political Geography > Japan
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Japan, Japanese Political Geography

Related Category: Japanese Political Geography

Japan[jupan´] Pronunciation Key - Japanese Society


Japan is an extremely homogeneous society with non-Japanese, mostly Koreans, making up less than 1% of the population. The Japanese people are primarily the descendants of various peoples who migrated from Asia in prehistoric times; the dominant strain is N Asian or Mongoloid, with some Malay and Indonesian admixture. One of the earliest groups, the Ainu, who still persist to some extent in Hokkaido, are physically somewhat similar to Caucasians.

Japan's principal religions are Shinto and Buddhism; most Japanese adhere to both faiths. While the development of Shinto was radically altered by the influence of Buddhism, which was brought from China in the 6th cent., Japanese varieties of Buddhism also developed in sects such as Jodo, Shingon, and Nichiren. Numerous sects, called the "new religions," formed after World War II and have attracted many members. One of these, the Soka Gakkai, a Buddhist sect, grew rapidly in the 1950s and 60s and became a strong social and political force. Less than 1% of the population are Christians. Confucianism has deeply affected Japanese thought and was part of the generally significant influence that Chinese culture wielded on the formation of Japanese civilization (see Japanese architecture; Japanese art; Japanese literature).

The Japanese educational system, established during the Allied occupation after World War II, is one of the most comprehensive and effective in the world. Nine years of schooling is compulsory, although the great majority of citizens are in school much longer. The two leading national universities are at Tokyo and Kyoto. The standard of living improved dramatically from the 1950s on, and the Japanese have the highest per capita income of all Asians (excluding the citizens of the major oil producers). Programs for social welfare and health insurance are fairly comprehensive. Since 1961, Japan has had a health-insurance system that covers all of its citizens. Major concerns confronting policy planners are the large and growing portion of the population that is elderly and the overcrowding of the nation's habitable land.

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The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press.
Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.




Topics that might be of interest to you:

Ainu
Akihito
Asia
Bonin Islands
Buddhism
bushido
Caroline Islands
Comintern
Confucianism
daimyo
diet, parliamentary body
extraterritoriality
Saint Francis Xavier
Fuji, Mount
Ryutaro Hashimoto
Tsutomu Hata
Ichiro Hatoyama
Hideyoshi
Hirohito
Hokkaido
Honshu
Morihiro Hosokawa
Ieyasu
Hayato Ikeda
Inland Sea
Japanese architecture
Japanese art
Japanese literature
Toshiki Kaifu
kamikaze
Tetsu Katayama
Nobusuke Kishi
Kobe
Junichiro Koizumi
Fumimaro Konoye
Korea
Kuril Islands
Kyushu
Liberal Democratic party, Japanese political party
Douglas MacArthur
Marshall Islands
Meiji
Meiji restoration
mikado
Kiichi Miyazawa
Yoshiri Mori
Tomiichi Murayama
Nagoya
Yasuhiro Nakasone
naval conferences
Nobunaga
Northern Mariana Islands
Keizo Obuchi
Osaka
Matthew Calbraith Perry
Persian Gulf Wars
Pescadores
Potsdam Conference
Portsmouth, Treaty of
Russo-Japanese War
Ryukyu Islands
Sakhalin
samurai
Eisaku Sato
Seiyukai
Shikoku
Shinto
shogun
Sino-Japanese War, First
Sino-Japanese War, Second
Soka Gakkai
Zenko Suzuki
Taiwan
Noboru Takeshita
Kakuei Tanaka
Hideki Tojo
Tokugawa
Tokyo
Twenty-one Demands
World War II
Yokohama
Yoritomo
Shigeru Yoshida
zaibatsu

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