@article{oai:oiu.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000088, author = {長澤, 彰彦 and ナガサワ, アキヒコ and Nagasawa, Akihiko}, issue = {2}, journal = {国際研究論叢 : 大阪国際大学紀要, OIU journal of international studies}, month = {Jan}, note = {P(論文), As a major part of Japan's "public diplomacy," the Japanese administration is promoting tourism. Given that "tourism" is one way to direct attention to and raise interest in Japan among foreigners, combined with the fact that it is the general population that bears the main responsibility for providing tourism services, it can be said that it is one activity where the essential figure of public diplomacy becomes visible. However, Japanese people have a tendency to form prejudiced or stereotypical ideas concerning foreigners, by overbroadly conceiving of "nation" as "home," and "people" as "family." As a result, in Japan the distinction between the concepts of "public" and "private" is unclear. Even if the government promotes tourism, it is the general public that actually carries it out and the concept of "public" in relation to tourism promotion is a paradox in the Japanese context. The aim of this paper is to clarify the general idea of public space in relation to tourism by examining what the Japanese administration has called a "tourism-based country" from the viewpoint of public diplomacy.}, pages = {105--118}, title = {「観光立国」における公共性とパブリック・ディプロマシーの問題}, volume = {24}, year = {2011} }