Global History 2006
DOI: 10.1007/978-0-230-20741-7_4
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The Cosmopolitanism of National Economics: Friedrich List in a Japanese Mirror

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Cited by 8 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…But many of the Meiji initiatives went far beyond the proposals outlined by European and American thinkers. Moreover, the ideas of those and other Meiji officials were initially shaped less by List, Hamilton and Carey than by a set of local ideas known as 'kokueki thought' that had emerged in the distinctive political environment of Tokugawa Japan (Roberts 1998: 24;Metzler 2006, Sagers 2006).…”
Section: Classical Economic Nationalismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…But many of the Meiji initiatives went far beyond the proposals outlined by European and American thinkers. Moreover, the ideas of those and other Meiji officials were initially shaped less by List, Hamilton and Carey than by a set of local ideas known as 'kokueki thought' that had emerged in the distinctive political environment of Tokugawa Japan (Roberts 1998: 24;Metzler 2006, Sagers 2006).…”
Section: Classical Economic Nationalismmentioning
confidence: 99%