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Topic: Katayama Tetsu


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In the News (Wed 23 Dec 09)

  
 Social Democratic Party (Japan) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The party became the largest political party in the general election of 1947, and a government was formed by Katayama Tetsu, forming a coalition with the Democratic Party of Japan, Occupation and another minor party.
However, due to the rebellion of Marxist tendencies in the party, the Katayama government collapsed.
As a result, the party was split into the Rightist Socialist Party of Japan, formed of socialists more to the center, while the Leftist Socialist Party of Japan was formed by hardline left-wingers and Marxist-socialists.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Social_Democratic_Party_(Japan)   (553 words)

  
 Tetsu Katayama - Wikipedia
Tetsu Katayama (片山 哲 Katayama Tetsu, 28 juli 1887 - 30 mei 1978) was een Japanse politicus.
Katayama was een christen en lid van de Japanse Socialistische Partij (JSP)en leidend persoon binnen het Japanse christen-socialisme.
Na de Tweede Wereldoorlog werd Katayama in 1946 voorzitter van de Japanse Socialistische Partij.
nl.wikipedia.org /wiki/Tetsu_Katayama   (118 words)

  
 Tetsu Katayama -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-19)
Katayama joined the (Click link for more info and facts about Japan Socialist Party) Japan Socialist Party and was elected to the House of Representatives, representing (Click link for more info and facts about Kanagawa Prefecture) Kanagawa Prefecture, in 1930.
Following the 1947 elections, in which the Socialist Party came in first, Katayama formed a coalition government with the (The older of two major political parties in the United States) Democratic Party and the Citizens' Cooperation Party.
After his resignation, Katayama became a member of the (Click link for more info and facts about Democratic Socialist Party) Democratic Socialist Party and advocated the maintenance of the pacifist constitution, election reform, and formation of a global commonwealth.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/t/te/tetsu_katayama.htm   (323 words)

  
 Katayama Tetsu   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-19)
Katayama Tetsu (de julio el 28 de 1887 - de mayo el 30 de 1978) era político japonés y el 46.o primer ministro del de mayo 24 de 1947 al de marcha 10 de 1948.
Katayama ensambló el partido socialista de Japón y fue elegido a la cámara de representantes, representando la prefectura de Kanagawa, en 1930.
Después de su dimisión, Katayama sintió bien a un miembro del partido socialista democrático y abogó el mantenimiento de la constitución del pacifist, la reforma de la elección, y la formación de una Commonwealth global.
www.yotor.net /wiki/es/ka/Katayama%20Tetsu.htm   (250 words)

  
 Shigeru Yoshida - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-19)
His pro-United States and pro-British ideals and his knowledge of Western societies, gained through education and politcal work abroad are what made him the perfect candidate in the eyes of the Post-WWII Allied Occupation.
After being replaced with Tetsu Katayama on May 24, 1947, he returned to the post as the 48th prime minister on October 15, 1948.
He was retained in three succeeding elections (49th: February 16, 1949; 50th: October 30,1952; and 51st: May 21, 1953), and was finally ousted on December 10,1954, when he was replaced by Ichiro Hatoyama.
www.bonneylake.us /project/wikipedia/index.php/Yoshida_Shigeru   (288 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Tetsu Katayama (Japanese History, Biography) - Encyclopedia
You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Japanese History, Biographies > Tetsu Katayama
Tetsu Katayama[tet´soo kAtAyA´mA] Pronunciation Key, 1887–1978, Japanese statesman.
More articles from AllRefer Reference on Tetsu Katayama
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/K/Katayama.html   (186 words)

  
 Katayama Tetsu Encyclopedia Article, Definition, History, Biography   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-19)
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www.karr.net /search/encyclopedia/Katayama_Tetsu   (535 words)

  
 National Review: Good news from Dartmouth. (Sarah Sully resigns) @ HighBeam Research
Most people have forgotten that the Socialists were the first party to be elected to office in postwar Japan, when Mr.
Tetsu Katayama headed a short-lived coalition government in 1947-48.
The dramatic rise of the Socialist leader, Miss Takako Doi, is good news for Japanese women, now emerging from sexist near-helotry, and the male-dominated LDP had better take note.
www.highbeam.com /library/doc0.asp?DOCID=1G1:7917145&refid=ip_encyclopedia_hf   (1372 words)

  
 Japan Socialist Party biography .ms   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-19)
As opposition parties formed, ranging from conservative parties such as the Liberals (even though they were conservative) or the Democrats, with a more agrarian agenda.
In 1947, Katayama Tetsu, a socialist, was elected prime minster, and the socialists won a majority.
The government collapsed in 1948 because of Marxist rebellion within the party, and by the end of the 1940's, the JSP had split into two parties - the Rightist Socialist Party of Japan, made up of moderate social-democrats, and the Leftist Socialist Party of Japan, made up of Marxist-socialists.
japan-socialist-party.biography.ms   (587 words)

  
 1947-48. 2001. The Encyclopedia of World History
In the House of Representatives, the Social Democrats received the largest number of seats.
On May 23, the Diet elected Socialist Katayama Tetsu to head a coalition government.
The Katayama government resigned because of friction within the Socialist Party.
www.bartleby.com /67/4224.html   (326 words)

  
 Historical Figures
Following the dissolution of the Katayama Cabinet in March of 1948, he assumed the dual role of Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs, but he was ousted as a result of the Showa Electric Scandal.
A statesman who was active in the social movement, Tetsu Katayama was born in Wakayama Prefecture.
After the Katayama and the Ashida Cabinets, he returned to the Cabinet again in 1948, where he held the position of Prime Minister until 1954.
www.ndl.go.jp /constitution/e/etc/figures.html   (4032 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-19)
KATAYAMA TETSU 8 2 4 2 79.14 412896 60589 1 1958 521750.
KINOSHITA TETSU 7 2 2 2 82.27 360890 76499 1 1958 438680.
KATAYAMA TETSU 9 1 5 4 74.06 414439 48541 1 1960 565840.
dodgson.ucsd.edu /lij/asia/japan/data/access58-90.dat   (18009 words)

  
 JPRI Occasional Paper No. 27
Japan's Socialist Party had won a plurality of seats and its leader - Katayama Tetsu - was therefore in line to become prime minister.
MacArthur, in his official congratulatory comment, emphasized that Katayama was a Christian and, by implication, a democrat and a pacifist.
The Katayama Cabinet's twelve-month tenure was probably the apex of political reform under the aegis of the Occupation.
www.jpri.org /publications/occasionalpapers/op27.html   (6289 words)

  
 30th Anniversary of Normalization of Sino-Japanese Ties - china.org.cn   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-19)
Mao Zedong met with former Japanese PM Ishibashi Tanzan and his wife in 1963.
Mao Zedong received a Japanese delegation headed by former Japanese PM Katayama Tetsu in 1959.
Mao Zedong received in Wuhan a delegation from the Socialist Party of Japan in 1959.
www.china.com.cn /english/features/43844_7.htm   (137 words)

  
 wikien.info: Main_Page   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-19)
Ashida Hitoshi (November 15, 1887 – June 20, 1959) was a Japanese politician and the 47th Prime Minister of Japan, holding the office from March 10, 1948 to October 15, 1948.
Preceded by:Katayama Tetsu Prime Minister of Japan1948 Succeeded by:Yoshida Shigeru..
Ashida Kim is the pseudonym of self-proclaimed ninja Christopher Hunter, best known for his books on ninjitsu and martial arts published during the 1970s and 1980s.
pardus.info /browse.php?title=A/AS/ASH   (10798 words)

  
 A Heart at Leisure from Itself: Caroline Macdonald of Japan. by A. Hamish Ion   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-19)
One of her closest was her fellow Canadian and ywca worker Emma Kaufman (herself worthy of a biography), who generously helped Macdonald financially after she left the employ of the ywca in 1915.
Among her Japanese friends were trade unionists such as Suzuki Bunji, socialist politicians like Katayama Tetsu and Abe Isoo, and Christian educators, including Nitobe Inazo, Tsuda Ume, and Kawai Michi.
Macdonald was much influenced by Uemura Masahisa, the outstanding Presbyterian minister whose Fujimicho Church in Tokyo she attended.
www.utpjournals.com /product/chr/781/heart31.html   (792 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-19)
A new constitution was adopted in 1946 and went into effect in 1947; the emperor publicly disclaimed his divinity.
The general conservative trend in politics was tempered by the elections of 1947, which made the Social Democratic party headed by Tetsu Katayama the dominant force in a two-party coalition government.
In 1948 the Social Democrats slipped to a secondary position in the coalition, and in 1949 they lost power completely when the conservatives took full charge under Shigeru Yoshida.
www.greatestcities.com /go.bml?journal=gikky&itemid=12664&dir=prev   (4194 words)

  
 FOREIGN OFFICE FILES FOR JAPAN AND THE FAR EAST, Series 3
May Katayama Tetsu, leader of the Japan Socialist Party, becomes Prime Minister.
Later in the year the anti-trust Economic Deconcentration Law, designed to break up the “Zaibatsu” groups, was introduced by Katayama’s Government.
SCAP puts pressure on the new leadership to reverse social legislation; in particular to withdraw from government employees the rights to collective bargaining and to strike.
www.adam-matthew-publications.co.uk /digital_guides/fo_japan_series3/brief_chronology.aspx   (1045 words)

  
 KtB - Red Flags and Christian Soldiers
But these pathetic attempts at fairness were undercut by MacArthur himself.
In 1947, when the Christian leader of the Socialist Party, Tetsu Katayama, was elected Prime Minister of Japan, MacArthur declared the election a sign of "human progress" that proved Christianity was "an invincible spiritual barrier" against the "infiltration" of foreign ideologies.
My parents and their closest missionary friends shared little of these religious and political sentiments.
www.killingthebuddha.com /dogma/red_flags4.htm   (1475 words)

  
 A Chronology of Japanese History   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-19)
The Diet passes the Fundamental Law of Education, which liberalized the curriculum and promoted coeducational egalitarianism.
Katayama Tetsu (of the Socialist Party) becomes Prime Minister.
The Diet passes the Law for Elimination of Excessive Concentration of Economic Power, thus giving the Holding Company Liquidation Commission (HCLC) the power to dissolve the Zaibatsu.
users.lac.uic.edu /~dturk/japanhistory/showahistory.html   (4736 words)

  
 The Ministry
In its campaign to achieve a conservative national budget balance, the ministry has been instrumental in the downfall of at least two postwar prime ministers.
Tetsu Katayama was prime minister from 1947 to 1948, and Morihiro Hokosawa held that office from 1993 to 1994.
Its proudest claims are that it has held pork-barrel politicking in check and curbed bureaucratic growth to keep government small.
compuserve.businessweek.com /chapter/ministry.htm   (10971 words)

  
 History Americas Home   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-19)
Nor could he adjust easily to the spirit of the new peace constitution which, although it stripped him of all political powers, had been largely established for his benefit.
The conservative party politician and diplomatic historian Ashida Hitoshi served as foreign minister in the first socialist cabinet of Katayama Tetsu in 1947 and was prime minister in his own cabinet in 1948.
His seven volume diary, published in 1986, has shed important light on the imperial institution during the entire occupation period.
www.amersol.edu.pe /_dmunro/ib/articles/ww2_10.htm   (3929 words)

  
 Katayama, Tetsu - ENCYCLOPEDIA - The History Channel UK
Katayama, Tetsu - ENCYCLOPEDIA - The History Channel UK or LOGIN
Our search facility includes over 50,000 fully cross-referenced historical entries.
THE HISTORY CHANNEL and BIOGRAPHY are trademarks of AandE Television Networks used under license ©2004 AandE Television Networks.
www.thehistorychannel.co.uk /site/search/search.php?searchtext=alaska&word=Katayama   (212 words)

  
 Asia Times: Japan's sleeping giant awakes : Rental Car Reservations
Under the occupation of the Allied Powers immediately after the Asia-Pacific War, these political independents were very active in politics, enthusiastically supporting the Japanese Communist Party and the Japanese Socialist Party.
The latter became so popular that its chairman, Katayama Tetsu, became Japan's first socialist prime minister in 1947.
The Cold War structure allowed Japan to avoid playing an active, independent role in international affairs.
www.atimes.com /japan-econ/CC15Dh01.html   (1060 words)

  
 Katayama Tetsu : Tetsu Katayama   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-19)
Katayama Tetsu : Tetsu Katayama
Katayama Tetsu : Tetsu Katayama
article at Free Euro Online Encyclopedia
It uses material from the wikipedia article Katayama Tetsu : Tetsu Katayama.
www.eurofreehost.com /te/Tetsu_Katayama.html   (113 words)

  
 Monthly Review January 2003 William K. Tabb
Conservatives argue that the new constitutional order was imposed at gunpoint.
“Perhaps, but we should remember,” Takemae writes quoting Christian socialist Katayama Tetsu, that “it was imposed on reactionaries, not the people, and that most Japanese recognized that singular fact.”
In restructuring the economy, SCAP not only took measures to purge militarists from the large zaibatsu, but also to break up powerful conglomerates like Mitsubishi and Mitsui.
www.monthlyreview.org /0103tabb.htm   (2055 words)

  
 JPRI Occasional Paper No. 29
All that changed after the April, 1947, General Election.
The Japan Socialist Party won a slim plurality in the House of Representatives and Katayama Tetsu, its leader, became Prime Minister of a coalition Cabinet with the conservatives in the Democratic Party.
Suzuki Yoshio, a leading Socialist, became Minister of Justice.
www.jpri.org /publications/occasionalpapers/op29.html   (5218 words)

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