<p>This paper focuses on how space and relationships co-produce one another within the Japanese foreign policy language of the Indo-Pacific. By reframing Agent-Structure dynamic, by which actors and social structures reproduce one another, into Watsuji Tetsurō’s idea of aidagara (“inter-relationships”) consisting of the Agent-Structure relationship being mutually constitutive with space within which the relationship is situated, this paper fills the gap in the literature on international politics by bringing space back into the discussions on international political dynamics. I analyze Japanese government narratives appearing in official pronouncements and media reports to show that Japan’s foreign relations are apprehended as a function of space, and vice versa. These narratives show that the Indo-Pacific takes on a double-meaning: (1) as a geographical space within which the A-S dynamics are playing out; and as (2) denoting what the space means for Japanese diplomacy. By reframing the Agent-Structure relationships into aidagara, we can start to rethink of an interpenetrating dynamic involving the Indo-Pacific as a space reproducing Japan’s evolving political relationships, and the relationships reproducing space.</p>
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