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Deutsches Institut für Japanstudien

German Institute for Japanese Studies

Research focused on modern Japan, in global and regional perspectives. Located in one of the important economic and political hubs of East Asia, Tokyo.

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Events and Activities

Event Series
Events
October 11, 2022

Axel Klein to discuss political populism in Japan in hybrid DIJ Study Group

© IN-EAST. Institute of East Asian Studies

Compared to other liberal democracies, Japan’s political system has a few rare characteristics, including the dominance of a single political party and the absence of an electorally relevant green party. But what about populism? Are there populist parties or populist politicians? The few studies that deal with this question have identified Ishin no Kai (Japan Restoration Party), Tomin Fāsuto (Citizens of Tokyo First), Koizumi Jun’ichirō, Hashimoto Tōru, Koike Yuriko, and Yamamoto Tarō (Reiwa Shinsengumi) as the usual suspects. This presentation will introduce the Japan track of a larger project presently underway at the University of Duisburg-Essen entitled “Populism in East Asian Democracies”. DIJ alumnus Axel Klein will address the questions above and explain his view on why there may be smoke without a fire when it comes to populism in Japan. Details and registration here

Speaker:
Axel Klein, University of Duisburg-Essen (Germany)
Events
October 6, 2022

DIJ researchers at Nichibunken Seminar on Japanese Studies

© Nichibunken

To commemorate the new academic exchange agreement between the DIJ and the International Research Center for Japanese Studies (Nichibunken), researchers from both institutes will discuss the state and future of research in Japanese Studies at the 249th Nichibunken Evening Seminar on October 6. They will discuss Japan as a research object from Japanese and foreign perspectives and address the challenges for international Japanese Studies. The DIJ delegation will include director Franz Waldenberger, deputy director Barbara Holthus, research fellows Barbara Geilhorn, Nora Kottmann, Harald Kümmerle, and David M. Malitz. The seminar will be held in hybrid format at the Nichibunken in Kyoto and online (Zoom). It will be moderated by Edward Boyle, Associate Professor at the International Research Center for Japanese Studies. Details and registration here

Event Series
Events
September 29, 2022

DIJ online talk on Minakata Kumagusu, Queer Nature, and the Microbial Paradigm

© private

This talk in the DIJ Environmental Humanities in East Asia lecture series considers the role of non-humans in the intellectual history of modern Japan through the case study of the Buddhist naturalist-polymath Minakata Kumagusu. Building on Kumagusu’s fascination over the microbe slime mold, Eiko Honda delineates the ways in which a parallel paradigm of interdisciplinary knowledge production emerges when the historian places microbes as the basis for the historical actor’s truths (‘queer nature’). The paper reveals a novel account of civilization theory and evolutionism that eventually formulated what she calls the ‘microbial paradigm’ that existed in history, but not in historiography. The talk reflects on what’s at stake when one does or does not decentre the focal point of knowledge production in history, and what kind of implications it may have on present-day research and teaching in area studies. Details and registration here

Speaker:
Eiko Honda, Aarhus University
Event Series
Events
September 22, 2022

DIJ Method Talk on Delphi Survey, Technology, and Unpaid Domestic Work

© DomesticAI

The future of work has emerged as a prominent topic for research and policy debate. In this session of the DIJ Method Talk series, Lulu Shi and Nobuko Nagase will discuss and present results from their Delphi survey to predict how technology may transform unpaid domestic work. On average, 65 AI experts from the UK and Japan predicted that 39 percent of the time spent on 17 housework and care work tasks will be automatable within ten years. The survey provides the first quantitative estimates concerning the future of unpaid work and demonstrates how such predictions are socially contingent, with implications to forecasting methodology. It also investigates how willingness to use smart technologies varies across gender, household income, time pressure, type of domestic work, and its price. Details and registration here

Speakers:
Lulu Shi, Oxford University and Nobuko Nagase, Ochanomizu University
Events
September 13, 2022

Franz Waldenberger discusses Global Knowledge Infrastructures

© DJW

The sheer volume of numbers, data, and facts is growing and the speed of generating scientific knowledge is ever accelerating. As access to knowledge is becoming more global and digital through open-source projects, its reliability, verifiability, and accessibility has been called into question. But establishing a sustainable knowledge infrastructure can also be a key to securing economic growth, welfare, and individual well-being. Together with Thomas Elm (Managing Director Europe, Goodpatch GmbH), DIJ director Franz Waldenberger will discuss how a stable knowledge infrastructure can be created and sufficiently maintained. What are the challenges to providing this infrastructure for and with an intercultural Japanese-German background? What is the potential of the digital transformation for growth and a reliable knowledge infrastructure? This on-site event takes place on September 13 at the Japanese-German Center Berlin as part of the ‘Hiru no kai’ discussion series, organised by the Japanese-German Business Association (DJW). Details and registration here

Other
August 11, 2022

Job opening: Research Fellow in Asian Infrastructures at NUS

Screenshot ARI

The Asia Research Institute (ARI) at the National University of Singapore (NUS) invites applications for one Research Fellowship (Postdoctoral/Research Fellow) in Asian Infrastructures. This position is funded by a new research partnership between the DIJ and ARI which was concluded in July 2022. The position is based at NUS and the successful applicant is expected to commence duties in January 2023, or as soon as possible thereafter. Applicants are expected to hold a PhD degree (or awaiting conferment) and have research interests in a relevant area of the social sciences and a record of publication (or potential to deliver) in high impact journals and/or reputable publishing houses. The initial appointment will be for a period of two years, with the possibility of renewal for two more years. Closing date for applications is 30 September 2022. For more details on this position and the application procedure see here

Event Series
Events
September 8, 2022

DIJ Study Group with Cornelia Storz compares flexible and rigid retrenchment strategies

© private

Firms in many advanced economies practice flexible retrenchment strategies to react to a crisis or to adjust to organisational decline in order to lower labour costs. Building on signalling theory and the neo-institutional and resource-based view, this presentation analyses two research questions: (1) What are the effects of “flexible retrenchment strategies” (such as wage-based and functional flexibility) on investor reactions as compared to “rigid strategies” (such as pure downsizing)? (2) How do a firm’s knowledge assets shape the relationship between investor reactions to flexible strategies as compared to rigid strategies? Using a novel data set of 242 retrenchment announcements by Japanese firms, the study finds that flexible strategies are significantly and positively associated with a higher likelihood that the firm value of retrenchers increases. This suggests that investors perceive flexible strategies as a capability signal, rewarding innovative firms depending heavily on the knowledge of their employees. Details and registration here

Speaker:
Cornelia Storz, Goethe University Frankfurt
Events
August 24, 2022

DIJ researchers and alumni at 18th Japanologentag

Programme Cover © hhu

Six DIJ researchers and more than 30 DIJ alumni will be active at the 18th German-speaking Japanese Studies Conference (Deutschsprachiger Japanologentag) as panelists, chairs, and section organisers. Harald Kümmerle (“Die japanische Initiative ‘Data Free Flow With Trust’ aus infrastruktureller und begriffsgeschichtlicher Perspektive”), Markus Heckel (“Die unkonventionelle Geldpolitik der Bank von Japan”), and Celia Spoden (“Soziale Chancen und Risiken digitaler Technologien: Cybernetische Avatare und cyberphysische Räume als neue Möglichkeiten zur Partizipation an der Arbeitswelt”) will give presentations in the Economics section. Harald will also present a paper on “Big Data” (“Wissenschaftsgeschichtliche Verortung von ‘Big Data’ und Implikationen für die Verwendung digitaler Methoden in der Japanologie”) in the panel on Digital Methods. Together with co-editor and DIJ alumnus Hanno Jentzsch, Sonja Ganseforth will give a book talk on Rethinking Locality in Japan in the Ethnology section. Barbara Holthus and Nora Kottmann are convenors of the Sociology section. The conference takes place online from 24-26 August, 2022. Details and programme (in German) here

Upcoming Events

02/12/2024
  • Workshop
    09:00 ~ 19:00

    Economics of ageing: Macroeconomics and economic policy, Lessons from the Japanese experience

04/12/2024
  • Symposium
    15:00 ~ 19:00

    Innovation for GX – dream or real?

08/12/2024
  • UTCP-DIJ Kaffeekränzchen
    15:30 ~ 17:30

    Kaffeekränzchen „Philosophie-Jause“

10/12/2024
  • DIJ Study Group
    18:30 ~ 20:00

    Exploring Desirable Socio-Technical Futures in Japan: Perceptions of genAI and Cybernetics-induced Societies

12/12/2024
  • DIJ Study Group
    18:00 ~ 19:30

    Higher Education, Lower Satisfaction: Hypogamy and Traditional Household Attitudes in Japan

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    Contemporary Japan
    current issue Vol. 36, No.2
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    DIJ Tokyo
    Jochi Kioizaka Bldg. 2F
    7-1 Kioicho Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo
    102-0094 Japan
    Where to find us

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    DIJ-ARI Asian Infrastructures Research Partnership