Virtual talk 11/13・11/14: Too Much But Never Enough: Administrative Capacity and Backlashes to State-building in Medieval Japan

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Paula R. Curtis

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Nov 12, 2025, 9:39:59 PM (7 hours ago) Nov 12
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Hello all,

I am sharing a talk that was recently brought to my attention by Amy Catalinac. You can find the website, registration link, and time conversions at: https://japanpastandpresent.org/en/global-events/too-much-but-never-enough-administrative-capacity-and-backlashes-to-state-building-in-medieval-japan

Title: “Too Much But Never Enough: Administrative Capacity and Backlashes to State-building in Medieval Japan”


Presenter: Erik Wang (New York University)


Abstract: How does state-building fail? Existing scholarship emphasizes both territorial reach and administrative capacity as keys to state-building, but these dimensions do not always progress in tandem. We argue that when territorial penetration outpaces administrative capacity, it will generate governance demands that the state is ill-equipped to manage, ultimately fueling unrest. We test this argument in Japan under the Kamakura Shogunate (1185 – 1333). In preparation for the Mongol invasions, the Shogunate expanded direct rule into previously autonomous regions, despite its own underdeveloped bureaucratic infrastructure. Our difference-in-differences analyses show that this effort triggered rebellions against the Shogunate, identifying increased governance burdens as the key mechanism. These centrifugal forces culminated in long-term state decay, evidenced by the proliferation of castles after the Shogunate’s collapse particularly in those regions. Our findings highlight the conundrum of premature state-building: without sufficient administrative capacity, efforts to strengthen central authority can paradoxically weaken the state’s long-term viability.


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Dr. Paula R. Curtis
Academic Administrator
Department of Asian Languages & Cultures, UCLA

Operations Leader, Japan Past & Present
Yanai Initiative for Globalizing Japanese Humanities

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