Fumimaro Konoe was a Japanese diplomat and later prime minister who justified Japan's imperial expansion as a necessary response to Western powers monopolizing the world's colonies and resources, making him AP World's go-to example of a non-Western rationale for imperialism (Topic 6.1).
Fumimaro Konoe was a Japanese aristocrat, diplomat, and political insider who eventually served as prime minister in the late 1930s and early 1940s. In AP World, though, he matters most for an argument he made on paper. Around the end of World War I, Konoe wrote that the Anglo-American powers had already grabbed most of the world's colonies and were now preaching peace to lock in their advantage. Japan, in his view, was a resource-poor latecomer being told to play by rules written by the winners. Expansion, then, wasn't greed. It was survival.
That's why he shows up in Topic 6.1 (Rationales for Imperialism). Most of the ideologies you study there, like Social Darwinism and the civilizing mission, justified European empires. Konoe gives you the mirror image, an imperial ideology built by an industrializing Asian power that felt shut out of the colonial game. Same imperialist logic, different flag.
Konoe lives in Unit 6: Consequences of Industrialization and supports learning objective AP World 6.1.A, which asks you to explain how ideologies contributed to imperialism from 1750 to 1900. The essential knowledge for 6.1 lists Social Darwinism, nationalism, and the civilizing mission as justifications for empire. Konoe is your proof that these rationales weren't a Europe-only phenomenon. His blend of nationalism and resource anxiety shows how an industrialized Japan adopted, and adapted, the imperialist playbook. He also bridges units. The expansion he justified plays out in Japanese imperialism in Korea, Manchuria, and China, which feeds directly into the causes of World War II in Unit 7. If you can use Konoe, you can write the kind of cross-period argument that earns complexity points. For the full ideological landscape, start with the [6.1 Rationales for Imperialism study guide](topic 6.1).
Keep studying AP® World Unit 6
Meiji Era (Units 5-6)
Meiji-era industrialization is the prequel to Konoe. Japan modernized its economy and military in the late 1800s precisely so it wouldn't be colonized, and Konoe's generation took the next step by arguing that an industrial Japan needed colonies of its own to feed its factories.
Social Darwinism (Unit 6)
Both are ideologies that dress up empire as necessity. Social Darwinism said strong nations naturally dominate weak ones, and Konoe flipped that logic into a grievance, claiming Japan was a strong nation being artificially held down by Western powers hoarding the spoils.
Scramble for Africa (Unit 6)
The Scramble is the 'Western monopolization' Konoe was complaining about. By the time Japan industrialized, Europe had carved up Africa and much of Asia, so Konoe argued the only colonial real estate left for Japan was in East Asia and the Pacific.
Resource Extraction (Unit 6)
Konoe's core argument is economic. Japan lacked coal, oil, iron, and rubber, so empire became a supply chain. This is the same extraction logic Western powers used in their colonies, just framed as a have-not nation catching up to the haves.
Konoe is most useful on free-response questions about the motives behind imperialism, especially Japanese imperialism. The 2024 DBQ asked you to evaluate the extent to which economic motives were the leading cause of Japanese imperialism circa 1900-1945, and it opened with a document quoting Japanese businessmen pushing for war against Russia. Konoe's resource-scarcity argument is exactly the kind of evidence and sourcing analysis that question rewards. You can use his perspective (an elite insider framing expansion as national survival) to analyze point of view, or use him as outside evidence that Japanese imperialism mixed economic motives with nationalist ideology. On multiple choice, expect a stimulus excerpt from a writer like Konoe paired with questions asking you to identify the rationale for imperialism or compare it to European justifications like the civilizing mission. The move you need to make is the same every time. Don't just name him, explain what his argument reveals about why industrialized states pursued empire.
Konoe and Tojo were both Japanese prime ministers in the run-up to World War II, but they play different roles in your essays. Konoe is the ideologue who articulated why Japan deserved an empire and led the government during the escalation in China. Tojo replaced him in October 1941 and led Japan into Pearl Harbor and the Pacific War. Use Konoe for rationales for imperialism (Unit 6) and the causes of conflict, and Tojo for the war itself (Unit 7).
Fumimaro Konoe was a Japanese diplomat and later prime minister who justified Japan's imperial expansion as a response to Western powers monopolizing the world's colonies.
His core argument was that resource-poor Japan needed colonies to survive, which makes him a prime example of economic and nationalist rationales for imperialism under AP World 6.1.A.
Konoe matters because he shows imperialist ideology wasn't only European; industrialized Japan built its own justification for empire using the same logic the West used.
He frames Western-led peace efforts after World War I as a way for the haves to lock out have-not nations like Japan, a perspective worth analyzing for point of view on a DBQ.
Konoe bridges Unit 6 and Unit 7, since the rationale he articulated fed directly into Japanese expansion in Asia and the causes of World War II.
The 2024 DBQ on the economic motives of Japanese imperialism (circa 1900-1945) is exactly the kind of prompt where Konoe works as evidence or sourcing analysis.
Konoe was a Japanese aristocrat, diplomat, and prime minister who argued that Japan's imperial expansion was a justified response to Western powers monopolizing colonies and resources. AP World uses him in Topic 6.1 as a non-Western example of imperialist ideology.
He argued that the Anglo-American powers had already seized most of the world's colonies and were using calls for peace to freeze that advantage in place. For a resource-poor 'have-not' nation like Japan, he claimed, expansion was a matter of national survival, not aggression.
No. Konoe resigned as prime minister in October 1941, weeks before the attack, after failing to negotiate a settlement with the United States. Hideki Tojo, his successor, led Japan into the Pacific War.
Meiji-era leaders (late 1800s) focused on modernizing Japan's economy and military so it wouldn't be colonized. Konoe, writing a generation later, built on that success to argue Japan now deserved its own empire. Meiji is the industrialization story in Unit 5; Konoe is the imperial rationale in Unit 6.
Unit 6 covers the rationales powers used to justify imperialism, and Konoe articulated Japan's version of those rationales. His argument extends the same nationalist and economic logic from the 1750-1900 period, which is why he appears alongside ideologies like Social Darwinism and the civilizing mission.
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