Professor Rikki Kersten
Areas of expertise
- Government And Politics Of Asia And The Pacific 160606
- Studies Of Asian Society 169903
- Asian History 210302
Research interests
Modern Japanese History; political thought; foreign policy, security policy, the US-Japan alliance, the US 'rebalancing' policy, Australia-Japan relations
Rikki is attracted to the intangible realm of political thought, particularly the history of political ideas in modern Japan. She aspires to communicate and analyse Japanese political thought for non-Japanese audiences, and to integrate Japanese thinking into global scholarship in the humanities and social sciences. She works extensively with primary sources in the vernacular. Her main areas of research interest are: democracy and fascism; debates over war apologies and war guilt in Japan; contemporary Japanese politics and foreign policy; historical and philosophical revisionism. Her second area of specialisation is Japanese security policy, including Australia-Japan security relations and the US-Japan alliance.
Biography
Rikki has been educated in Wollongong, Adelaide and Oxford, with plenty of long stays in Japan at various tertiary institutions along the way, notably at the University of Tokyo's Institute of Social Science, and Keio University. She spent five years in the Australian Foreign Service, completing a posting in the Political Section of the Australian Embassy in Tokyo, before returning to academic life. Rikki has taught modern Japanese history at Sydney and Leiden Universities, and has served as Research Manager and subsequently Director of the Research Institute for Asia and the Pacific at the University of Sydney. She joined the ANU in 2006 as Dean of the College of Asia and the Pacific, and Dean of the Faculty of Asian Studies.
Career highlights
Winning the VICI large research grant from the Netherlands Scientific Research Organization with Prof Axel Schneider in 2004 to research Historical Consciousness and the Future in China and Japan; founding the Modern East Asian Research Centre with Axel Schneider at the University of Leiden in 2005; founding the Australia-Netherlands Research Collaboration focussing on the study of Southeast Asia in 2006; posting to the Australian Embassy in Tokyo 1988 – 1991.
Researcher's projects
1. Japan's place in US global strategic thinking after the pivot, conducted under the auspices of the Endeavour Executive Award 2012 and the Harold White Fellowship at the National Library of Australia, 2013-14.
2. Japan's Strategic Dilemmas. Monograph. 2013-2014.
3. Broadening and deepening the Australia-Japan security relationship. Project conducted in conjunction with the Australian Department of Defence and the National Institute for Defence Studies Japan, 2012-2013.
4. Military Force as Social Good: the legacies of Operation Tomodachi. Project led by Prof Mark Mullins at the University of Auckland 2013-2014.
5. Turning to the nation in postwar Japan: tenko and transwar Japanese political thought. Monograph (ongoing)
6. Japanese Political Thought after WWII. Contribution to Routledge Handbook of Political Thought. 2014 - 2015.
Publications
- Kersten, Rikki. 2014. 'Japanese Politics: trends and prospects', Australia and Japan in the Region. Forum of the Australia-Japan Research Centre. Vol. 2 No. 1 January 2014
- Kersten, R. 2013. 'Japan's strategic dilemmas: navigating the US "rebalance" and the rise of China', in Japan's New Trajectory: economic prospects and security challenges. AIIA Policy Commentary No. 15, November, 45 - 50.
- Kersten, R. 2013. 'Undercurrents of Sino-Japanese discord', The Interpreter 16 October.
- Tow, W, Walton, D & Kersten, R, eds, 2013, New Approaches to Human Security in the Asia-Pacific: China, Japan and Australia, Ashgate Publishing Ltd, Farnham, Surrey.
- Kersten, R 2013, 'Stretching the Japan-US alliance', in William T. Tow and Brendan Taylor (ed.), Bilateralism, Multilateralism and Asia-Pacific Security: Contending Cooperation, Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, Abingdon and New York, pp. 39-52.
- Kersten, R 2013, 'Governance and Human Security: Lessons from Fukushima', in William T. Tow, David Walton and Rikki Kersten (ed.), New Approaches to Human Security in the Asia-Pacific: China, Japan and Australia, Ashgate Publishing Ltd, Farnham, Surrey, pp. 157-174.
- Kersten, R 2013, 'Japan's turn to nationalism? Not quite'. The Interpreter. 23 July 2013.
- Kersten, R 2013, 'Japan, the US and the 'rebalance': deconstructing the Senkaku problem', Asian Currents, vol. 1, no. April 2013, pp. 2-4.
- Blaxland, J & Kersten, R 2013, 'Escalating territorial tension in East Asia echoes Europe's descent into world war', East Asia Forum, vol. 1, no. 13th February 2013, pp. 1-3.
- Kersten, R 2013, 'Abe and constitutional revision: round two', East Asia Forum, vol. 1, no. 21 February 2013, pp. 1-3.
- Kersten, Rikki 2013 trans. Kurusu Kaoru, 'In search of a more proactive international role: the political dynamism behind human security in Japan', in Tow, Walton and Kersten eds., New Approaches to Human Security in the Asia-Pacific: China, Japan and Australia. London: Ashgate, 121 - 138.
- Blaxland, J & Kersten, R 2013, East Asia tension echoes Europe's descent into world war, East Asia Forum, 13 February.
- Kersten, R 2012, 'Japan-not there yet, but on the way', Asian Currents, vol. 1, no. April/May 2012, pp. 7-8.
- Kersten, R 2012, Japan's territorial disputes: will they lead to constitutional change?, East Asia Forum, 11 September.
- Kersten, R 2012, 'The Koizumi-Abe Revolution in Japanese Security Policy: Normative Transformation and Democratic Maturity', in William T Tow and Rikki Kersten (ed.), Bilateral Perspectives on Regional Security: Australia, Japan and the Asia-Pacific Region, Palgrave Macmillan Ltd, Hampshire, England, pp. 29-45.
- Tow, W & Kersten, R 2012, 'Conclusion', in William T Tow and Rikki Kersten (ed.), Bilateral Perspectives on Regional Security: Australia, Japan and the Asia-Pacific Region, Palgrave Macmillan Ltd, Hampshire, England, pp. 241-244.
- Tow, W & Kersten, R 2012, 'Introduction', in William T Tow and Rikki Kersten (ed.), Bilateral Perspectives on Regional Security: Australia, Japan and the Asia-Pacific Region, Palgrave Macmillan Ltd, Hampshire, England, pp. 1-10.
- Tow, W & Kersten, R, eds, 2012, Bilateral Perspectives on Regional Security: Australia, Japan and the Asia-Pacific Region, Palgrave Macmillan Ltd, Hampshire, England.
- Kersten, R 2011, 'Deepening Intra-Spoke Relations: The Australia-Japan Security Relationship', IFANS Review (Institute of Foreign Affairs and National Security), vol. 19, no. 2, pp. 139-163.
- Kersten, R & Tow, W 2011, 'Evolving Australian Approaches to Security Architectures in the Asia-Pacific'. Recent Articles from the Tokyo Foundation Website, May, Tokyo: Tokyo Foundation, pp34-45.
- Kersten, R 2011, 'Australia and Japan: Mobilising the Bilateral Relationship', in James Cotton and John Ravenhill (ed.), Middle Power Dreaming: Australia in World Affairs 2006-2010, Oxford University Press, Australia, pp. 94-110.
- Kersten, R 2011, 'In the shadow of Fukushima'. ANU Reporter, Spring, p.12 .
- Kersten, R 2011, 'Japan after the triple emergency', Asian Currents, May, pp. 1-3.
- Kersten, R 2011, 'Japan, the US Alliance and Asia'. ANU_MASI Policy Background Paper, No. 1, August
- Kersten, R trans & Ueda, M 2011, 'An Idea of Postwar Japan: Hitoshi Ashida and Japanese Liberalism'. ANU Japanese Studies Online, No. 2
- Kurusu, K & Kersten, R 2011, 'Japan as an Active Agent for Global Norms: The Political Dynamism Behind the Acceptance and Promotion of �??Human Security�??', Asia-Pacific Review, vol. 18, no. 2, pp. 115-137. R, Kersten trans.
- Kersten, R. 2011, 'Japanese security policy formation: assessing the Koizumi revolution', Australian Journal of International Affairs, vol. 65, no. 1, pp. 5-23.
- Kersten, R 2010, 'Rethinking the intellectual legacy of Maruyama Masao', International House of Japan Bulletin, vol. 30, no. 1, pp. 35-51.
- Kersten, R 2010, Japan faces political upheaval as jaded voters look to 'new politics', Asian Currents, November, p. 3.
- Kersten, R 2009, 'Japan' in R.J.B. Bosworth ed., Oxford Handbook of Fascism. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 526 - 544.
- Kersten, R 2009, 'The Intellectual Culture of Postwar Japan and the 1968-1969 University of Tokyo Struggles: Repositioning the Self in Postwar Thought', Social Science Japan Journal, vol. 12, no. 2, 227-245.
- Kersten, R 2008, 'Deciphering Maruyama Masao: The Challenge of Originality', Social Science Japan Journal, vol. 11, no. 1, pp. 123-126.
- Kersten, R 2008, 'The Emperor and the Left in interwar Japan', in Ben-Ami Shillony (ed.), The Emperors of Modern Japan, Brill Academic Publishers, Leiden and Boston, 111-131.
- Kersten, R 2007, 'Maruyama Masao (1914-96) and Britain: An Intellectual in Search of Liberal Democracy', in Hugh Cortazzi (ed.), Britain and Japan: Biographical Portraits v. 6, Global Oriental (Brill), Folkestone, Kent, UK, pp. 322-332.
- Kersten, R 2006 with D. Williams eds, The Left in the Shaping of Japanese Democracy. London: Routledge.
- Kersten, R 2006, 'Painting the Emperor Red: The Emperor and the Socialists in the 1930s', in David Williams and Rikki Kersten (ed.), The Left in the Shaping of Japanese Democracy: Essays in Honour of J.A.A. Stockwin, London: Routledge, 18-36.
- Kersten, R 2006, 'The Social Imperative of Pacifism in Postwar Japan: Shimizu Ikutaro and the Uchinada Movement', Critical Asian Studies, vol. 38, no. 3, pp. 303-328.
- Kersten, R 2004, 'Defeat and the intellectual culture of postwar Japan', European Review, vol. 12, no. 4, pp. 497-512.
- Kersten, R 2003, 'Revisionism, reaction and the 'symbol emperor' in post-war Japan', Japan Forum, vol. 15, no. 1, pp. 15-31.
- Kersten, R 2003. Japan: three scenarios for the 21st century. Groningen: Centre for Japanese Studies.
- Kersten, R 2001. 'Australia and Japan', in J. Cotton and J. Ravenhill eds., The National Interest in a Global Era: Australia in World Affairs 1996 - 2000. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 72 - 90.
- Kersten, R 1999. 'Neo-nationalism and the "liberal school of history"', Japan Forum 11:2, 191 - 203.
- Kersten, R 1996. Democracy in Postwar Japan: Maruyama Masao and the search for autonomy. London: Routledge.