Graduate Thesis Or Dissertation
Japan's Black Market: Yakuza, SCAP, and the Culture of the Yami'ichi Public Deposited
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- Abstract
- On July 18, 1946, The New York Times published an article stating that Army fiscal offices had "transferred to the United States $35,000,000 more than the entire occupation [had] been paid." GHQ quickly discovered that U.S. soldiers were actively involved in selling American goods on the black market and sending their profits home. Although SCAP implemented a number of policies to discourage U.S. soldiers from illegally selling American goods, these policies failed to eliminate black marketeering during the Occupation of Japan (1945-1952). I argue that these policies failed for two reasons. First, SCAP failed to crack down aggressively on the organized crime syndicates that ran the black markets in Japan. Second, a black market culture had developed throughout Japan and the high demand for American goods coupled with the GI's willingness to sell these goods to Japanese civilians made it difficult for SCAP to stop black marketeering.
- Creator
- Date Issued
- 2012
- Academic Affiliation
- Advisor
- Committee Member
- Degree Grantor
- Commencement Year
- Subject
- Dernière modification
- 2019-12-02
- Resource Type
- Déclaration de droits
- Language
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Articles
La vignette | Titre | Date de téléchargement | Visibilité | actes |
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japansBlackMarketYakuzaScapAndTheCultureOfTheYamii.pdf | 2019-11-17 | Public | Télécharger |