Tanaka was born in
Shiki, Saitama, in August 1954. He obtained his bachelor's degree in international relations at the
University of Tokyo in 1977 and Ph.D. in political science at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1981. Soon after his graduation, he joined the Research Institute for Peace and Security (RIPS) as a researcher, and in 1983 he started lecturing at the University of Tokyo. Tanaka's academic research has been interdisciplinary, comprising theoretical essays, historical description, and computer programs designed to analyze and predict developments in international politics. During his studies at MIT, Tanaka was influenced by professors
Lucian Pye and
Hayward Alker. Combining China studies and computer programs, he produced research on the negotiating process of the
Treaty of Peace and Friendship between Japan and China (concluded in 1978), and a computer program named CHINA_WATCHER. Underlying the program was a decision-making model that assumed that both the decision-makers' preexisting worldview and precedent for current situation constitute the basis of their decisions. Tanaka incorporated findings derived from this program in his PhD dissertation, “Chinese International Conflict Behavior, 1949-1978”. Having returned to Japan in 1981, Tanaka joined the Research Institute for Peace and Security (RIPS), where he was mainly in charge of editing an annual report, “Asian Security.” Influenced by the work of Professors Inoki Masamichi and Kosaka Masataka, then two of Japan's most prominent scholars of international politics, Tanaka—who had been mostly occupied with theoretical work and computer programming until then—came to acknowledge that analysis of current affairs was an “important area of work for scholars of international politics.” In the summer of 1982, as the Textbook Problem came to strain the
relations between Japan and China, Tanaka wrote a paper examining the reasons behind China's vocal objection to Japanese textbooks. Around the same time, Tanaka had collaborated with Professor Kumon Shumpei in researching the world system as a unit of analysis. In their work, they argued that during the 19th and 20th century, three “social games” emerged, developed and declined in the following order: power game, wealth game, and knowledge game. Later, Tanaka developed this paper into the book
Sekai shisutemu [The World System] (Tokyo: University of Tokyo Press, 1989). In 1994, Tanaka received the Ushiba Fellowship and spent a year at
St. Antony College, Oxford, where he dedicated most of his time to the manuscript of a book speculating on the direction of the contemporary world system,
Atarashii chūsei: 21-seiki no sekai shisutemu (Tokyo: Nikkei Keizai Shimbun Shuppansha, 1996), and translated as
The New Middle Ages: The World System in the 21st Century (Tokyo: The International House of Japan, 2002). In the book, he draws on
Hedley Bull’s new medievalism and
Robert Keohane’s and
Joseph Nye’s complex interdependence, and classifies the world order into three spheres (new medieval, modernization, and chaotic; he later changed their names to the liberal, realist, and fragile, respectively). Tanaka argues that while every part of the world system moves toward the first sphere of “new medievalism”, all three spheres will characterize the world system for the foreseeable future. Among Tanaka's other publications are numerous books and articles on world politics and security issues in Japanese and English, including
Ni-Chū kankei 1945-1990 [Japan-China Relations 1945-2000] (Tokyo: University of Tokyo Press, 1991);
Anzen hoshō: Sengo 50-nen no mosaku [Security: Searching 50 Years after the War] (Tokyo: Yomiuri Shimbunsha, 1997);
Ajia no naka no Nihon (Tokyo: NTT Shuppan, 2007), and translated as
Japan in Asia: Post-Cold-War Diplomacy (Tokyo: Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture, 2017);
An East Asian Community and the United States co-edited with Ralph A. Cossa (Washington, D.C.: Center for Strategic and International Studies, 2007), and "The Yasukuni Issue and Japan's International Relations" in
East Asia’s Haunted Present: Historical Memories and the Resurgence of Nationalism, edited by Hasegawa Tsuyoshi and Togo Katsuhiko (Westport, CT: Praeger, 2008). Since 1994, Tanaka has been developing the database “The World and Japan”, which stores over 12,000 historical documents dealing with Japan's domestic and international politics in the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries. The database's website registers about 150,000 hits per month. == Administrative, professional, and advisory career ==