Abstract: In March 1944, China’s central administration employed 6,398 individuals, ranging from junior section staff ( keyuan ) to senior ministers. Among them, 402 officials had earned university degrees from Japan, comprising a significant segment of the highly educated elite within the Nationalist government. This study examines the educational backgrounds, professional trajectories, and administrative roles of these Japan-educated officials near the end of the Second Sino-Japanese War. On the basis of data from a 1944 government directory and the employment of sequence analysis, the article highlights patterns in their career mobility, institutional affiliations, and public visibility via the newspaper Shen bao . The analysis underscores their concentrated expertise in law and economics, prominent representation in key organizations like the Ministries of Justice and Transportation, and enduring reliance on regional networks from eastern and central China. By tracing these officials’ educational profiles and career dynamics, the study provides valuable insights into the composition and administrative readiness of China’s wartime bureaucracy.
Christian Henriot (Thu,) studied this question.