Author:Toyokichi Iyenaga

Works

 * The Constitutional Development of Japan, 1853–1881 (1891)
 * “Lectures on the Situation in the Far East” (1902)
 * “Situation in the Far East” (1903)
 * “Peace in Asia,” in The Editorial Review, 5 (1911)
 * “Japan in South Manchuria,” in The Journal of Race Development, 2(4) (1912)
 * “Japan’s Annexation of Korea,” in The Journal of Race Development, 3(2) (1912)
 * “The Ghost of War,” in Oriental Review, 3(7) (1913)
 * “What is Kiaochau Worth?,” The Independent, 80(3437) (1914)
 * “Why Japan Is in this War,” in Why Europe is at War (1915)
 * “International Development—America and Japan,” in “Addresses of Hon. William H. Taft and Hon. James M. Beck At the Annual Dinner of the Traffic Club of New York Held at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, February 21, 1916; also the address of Dr. T. Iyenaga Before the Club, January 25, 1916” (1916)
 * Japan’s Real Attitude toward America (1916)
 * “Japan, America and Durable Peace,” in The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 72 (1917)
 * “Address by Dr. Toyokichi Iyenaga,” in Annual Report of the Silk Association of America, 65 (1917)
 * “Discrimination with Reference to Citizenship and Land Ownership,” Proceedings of the Academy of Political Science in the City of New York, 7(3) (1917)
 * “Resident Aliens and Treaty Obligations: Discussion” (contributor), Proceedings of the Academy of Political Science in the City of New York, 7(3) (1917)
 * Remarks, “The Press of the Orient,” in The Editor and Publisher, 50(19) (1917)
 * “Japan’s Part in the War,” in The Forum, 61(1) (1919)
 * “The Shantung Question” (1919)
 * “The Case of Japan in the Peace Treaty,” in Treaty of Peace with Germany (1919)
 * “Japan and the Japanese-California Problem,” in Current History, 13(1) (1920)
 * “The Case for Japan in the Californian Situation,” in The Christian Register, 100(15) (1921)
 * Japan and the California Problem (1921)
 * “A Japanese View” (1921), reprinted in Selected Articles on Disarmament

Works about Iyenaga

 * Day, Takako: “Toyokichi Iyenaga: Japanese Publicist in Chicago,” parts 1, 2, 3