Not at all in Asia. The region still harbors the bitter resentments of the war. Just today, Chinese authorities seized two Japanese owned ships and demanded repayment for the theft of Chinese ships during the war. But frankly that's the least of our problems. WWII left conflicting interpretations of borders, island territory, and perspectives on past atrocities.
Moreover, it will be rather hard to say that the issues of WWII will ever be buried. WWII shaped the entire world in which we live. It was the foundation for so much in our lives, our maps, our institutions.
The division of the Korean peninsula into separate nations is an obvious example of a political consequence of the Second World War. The two-state situation resulted from Japanese occupation of Korea that began in 1910. With Japan's defeat at the end of the war, the U.S. and Soviet Union divided the peninsula into spheres of influence; the Soviets in the North and the Americans in the South. The division was to have been temporary, but as the French have a saying, "Nothing is so permanent as the provisional." Each of the victors setup a government according to their political tastes within their sphere of influence, and each of those governments laid claim to be the only true and legitimate government for the entire peninsula.
This led to the Korean War, when the North attempted to invade and overrun the South. The Soviet Union and People's Republic of China supported the North; and under the United Nations banner a coalition of nations supported the South. The conflict ended in a stalemate with a ceasefire along approximately the original North/South border, and there has been an uneasy peace ever since. The two nations remain technically at war to this day, and there have been frequent incidents of hostilities continuing to the present.
After experiencing political growing pains for several decades, South Korea has become a prosperous economic and industrial powerhouse. North Korea is the problem child of East Asia, often belligerent to its neighbors, and harsh and brutal to its own people, with one of the worst human rights records in contemporary history.
We'd veer into current events instead of history to discuss the present, however, so here are some resources if you wish to read further. North Korea is a particular area of interest for me and I enjoy these sites:
http://www.libertyinnorthkorea.org/learn-north-korea-history/
With the geopolitical crisis in the Ukraine and the growth of Russian militarism, the control of passage into the Black Sea via the Turkish Straits, which was a major issue for Russians in the 1940's, is still important. After all, the Turks could deny western entry into the Black Sea, or deny Russian passage into the Mediterranean.
Currently, the passage is governed by the Montreaux Convention and the history of this document is particularly fascinating, I think.
The world is still sorting out the consequences of WWI, where 4 empires collapsed, entirely new political structures arose, and countries were created out of thin air across Europe and the Middle East.
WWII was part of the "restructuring" of the WWI aftermath, and no, it's not done yet.
Open items (IMO): unstable countries in Eastern Europe (ex-WWI and WWII legacies); artificial countries all throughout the Middle East such as Iraq and Lebanon -- not to mention Israel (WWI legacy), long-term occupation grudges and some territorial issues in the Far East, such as Sakhalin (WWII legacy). There are other issues such as the decolonialization of Africa and its consequences which could be said to be related to WWII, but maybe not directly.
The entire international system, from the UN to the World Bank, evolved directly out of the Breton Woods agreements. These are a series of ideological principles that were designed to foster democratic, capitalist, and peaceful international relations. These basic principles have been shaping how states interact, how they export and import, how they receive and grant loans, how they structure governments, how they design laws, how they attract jobs and encourage growth.
Globalization and the problems related to it come directly out of Western hegemony achieved at the end of WW2. This has basically resulted in the Western world controlling the affairs of other nations, created what is known as the "Race to the Bottom," and basically raped and pillaged any nation that was not an industrial or post-industrial society at the close of WW2.
A prime example of this is the wave of democracy that swept through Africa in the 50's and 60's, which due to a cultural and historical unpreparedness for democracy (and shafting from the West), basically ended with a collapse of democratic ideals, to be replaced by tryanical dictatorships, often built on strong ethnic and tribal divisions, and maintained through violence.
The Breton Woods agreements, essentially outline what the western world, believed would create lasting peace and cooperative nations. This includes many economic and legal reforms which still control the world today. Developing states that don't have the capital to build roads, buy farm equipments, import clean drinking water, provide electricity or healthcare, are forced to adopt these regulations in order to qualify for loans, and are then usually required to pay them back with hefty interest.
So you take out a loan, reorganize your economic and ecological laws to help attract jobs to your state, or to help create infrastructure, and in the long run you end up owing more cash than you can payback. In order to help you make the best decisions with your loaned money, developing states are coached to make items for export (things they can sell to help regain the cash that they need to pay back the loans). So, your state is poor and lacking in an educated workforce, so we start simple, making t-shirts or growing corn, or something along those lines. However, now you are forced to compete with all the other poor, developing states in order to sell your low-mark-up item to the relatively few rich consumer states. You can't go straight to making computers or iPods, because they require an educated work-force, capable of producing a product that you can sell at a high price.
So all the poor states are constantly looking to cut costs, lower standards, and sell for less profit (knowing that there are many other countries that they must compete with in the market place). This causes wages to go down, environmental laws to be made less strict, workers rights dwindle....and on and on.
Thus, the outcome of WW2 has created a global divide between the North and South, with practically all of the post-industrial consumer states in the north imposing their own rules and desires onto the poor global south.
Plus, this same arrangement drives the build-up of urban living centers organized around dangerous, dirty, and poorly-paid factory or factory-farm jobs. The growth of urban centers is one of the driving factors in the spread of global overpopulation and disease in the modern world.
Another example: the Comfort Women issue. Japan made many non- Japanese women in Asia into sex slaves--euphemistically called Comfort Women. This issue has become highly politicized in recent years, particularly regarding Korea. Right wing Japanese deny the existence of Comfort Women, or claim they were willing. Koreans have been demanding compensation for the still-living Comfort Women, and have worked to have monuments to them placed in the US,Australia, and other locations, and it has been a major goal of the Japanese right wing to prevent this.
Though it wasn't directly part of WW2 the war and what happened in Germany led to the foundation of Israel. The tension between Israel and neighbouring states caused several battles and wars in the region and is still a frequent part of news to this day and does not look like it is going to resolved in the near future.
Edit: This comment looks too small, so I'll elaborate. During WW2 about a quarter million Jews fled from Germany and Europe to Palestine. During that time there were many conflicts between Arabs, Jews and the British in the region, so after the war the British left Palestine. The UN formed a commitee about the issue and proposed that there should be a new independent Arabic state and a Jewish state, but the Arab League rejected this idea. After some fighting in the region the Palestine Arab economy collapsed and many Arabs were expelled from the land. Shortly before the British Mandate endet the state of Israel was proclaimed which caused further wars between Arab countries and the newly proclaimed state of Israel.
Those tensions did last and to this day remain a troubled region