Includes bibliographical references (pages 210-213).
Contents:
Preface : Why remember Gotō as a foreign policy leader? -- Medical student and public health administrator -- Civilian governor of Taiwan -- President of the South Manchuria Railway -- Bureaucratic government and party politics -- World War I and Japan -- Lost opportunities.
Summary:
"The Meiji era (1868-1912) produced numerous geniuses in Japan and one who certainly earns his name on the list is Gotō Shinpei. Gotō, who was a prominent figure in Japan's political scene, showed exceptional talent in various fields. Starting off his career as a physician, he became a leading figure in public health and successfully organized a massive quarantine in 1895 for returning soldiers of the First Sino-Japanese War. Later, he was appointed as civilian governor of Taiwan and following this he became the first president of the South Manchuria Railway, showing ingenuity in colonial management which was remarkably different from that of Western countries. He built the basis of the Japanese railway system as director-general of the Railway Agency and as home minister presented a grand vision for urban planning immediately after the Great Kantō Earthquake of 1923"-- Back cover.
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