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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

Events
March 1, 2022

Book exhibition ‘The City of Tokyo: Past and Present’ until 28 April

© DIJ

In 1868, the name of Edo was changed to “Tokyo Prefecture”. From which perspectives has Tokyo been viewed and researched abroad since then? In this special exhibition, the libraries of the International House of Japan, the Maison franco-japonaise and the DIJ are displaying books about the city, its past and present in English, French, and German. The joint book exhibition is open to the public from March 1 to March 31 (DIJ only: until April 28). For more information, please contact the respective library. Details and a list of books and articles at the DIJ library are available for download here.

Event Series
April 6, 2022

DIJ Study Group talk on Tokyo as world city in the 1960s

© private

Cities around the globe experienced a transformative period in the 1960s. Tokyo’s population surpassed the 10 million threshold, its citizens benefited from the Japanese economic miracle, and the 1964 Olympics symbolized Japan’s return to the global stage. Although the world’s largest metropolis struggled with negative consequences of rapid urbanization, its future was seen with great optimism. This presentation discusses Tokyo as a world city in the making and introduces imagined urban futures. Empirically, it focuses on the journal Ekistics that was launched in 1957. Its voices range from members of ‘the visible college of urbanists’ like architects Kenzo Tange and Fumihiko Maki to Tokyo’s ragpickers. Through the specific lens of Ekistics, Tokyo as a world city in the making can be observed, revealing a process without a predetermined trajectory embedded in the global exchange of knowledge. Details and registration here

Speaker:
Eric Häusler, Sophia University

Event Series
March 24, 2022

Joint DIJ-DEA Web-Forum discusses future of digital money in Asia and Europe

Central banks around the world have intensified their efforts to design their own central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) as a reaction to the competitive dynamics by cryptocurrencies and stablecoins. China has launched trials of its e-CNY project which aims at providing an efficient retail payment system to preserve monetary sovereignty. Also the Bank of Japan is in the proof of concept stage of its own digital currency and the Japan Digital Currency Forum is working on a yen-based digital currency for Japan’s private sector. In this webinar, jointly hosted by the DIJ and the Digital Euro Association (DEA), Masaki Bessho (Bank of Japan), Oriol Caudevilla (DEA), Richard Turrin (Consultant), and Hiromi Yamaoka (Future Corporation) will discuss various initiatives in Asia to promote digital money, stablecoins, and CBDCs – and their lessons for Europe. The event will be moderated by DEA’s Jonas Gross and DIJ economist Markus Heckel. Details and registration here

Events
March 15, 2022

DIJ researchers and alumni at digital technologies and digital transformation conferences

DIJ researchers Susanne Brucksch and Harald Kümmerle as well as DIJ alumna Katharina Dalko will give talks at the conference “Digital Technologies in the COVID-19 Pandemic” (14-18 March), organized by Ruhr University Bochum. On March 15, Harald will give his paper “Contextualizing Data Practices in Japan during Covid-19 Pandemic: Local and Global Entanglements” and Susanne will give a keynote on “The Locale of Japan. Approaches to the Social Study of (Digital) Health Technologies “. On the closing day, former DIJ PhD student Katharina Dalko (University Halle-Wittenberg) will give a presentation on methods to integrate patients into participatory technology development. Details and the full programme can be accessed here. Susanne will also give a talk on “Telehealth-Networks in Japan” at the workshop “Digital Transformation in East Asia. Impacts on Economy and Society II” (18-19 March), organized by the University of Bonn. At the same conference, DIJ alumni Volker Elis and Felix Spremberg (both University of Tübingen) will give papers on ideological implications of the information society in Japan and Japanese political discourse on digitalisation, respectively. Details and programme here 

Event Series
March 16, 2022

DIJ Gender and Sexuality lecture series talk on Japanese ryokan

What does it take to produce one of Japan’s most relaxing spaces: the ryokan? In this talk, Chris McMorran will share the behind-the-scenes work required to keep a traditional Japanese inn running smoothly, from the daily tasks of cleaning, serving, and making guests feel at home, to the generational work of producing and training a suitable heir who can carry on the family business. McMorran’s insights are based on nearly two decades of research in and around Kurokawa Onsen (Kumamoto Prefecture), including a year spent welcoming guests, carrying luggage, scrubbing baths, cleaning rooms, washing dishes, and talking with co-workers and owners about their jobs, relationships, concerns, and aspirations. The talk will address how Kurokawa’s ryokan mobilize hospitality to create a rural escape in contemporary Japan and highlight the strictly gendered work found in the ryokan. It is part of the DIJ Gender and Sexualities lecture series. Registration and details here

Speaker:
Chris McMorran, National University of Singapore

Events
March 16, 2022

Celia Spoden gives online talk on cyber-physical spaces and avatar technologies

© Cabinet Office Japan

In the “Moonshot Research and Development Program” launched in 2020, the Japanese Council for Science, Technology and Innovation formulated the goal of a society in which people will be free of physical, cognitive, spatial, and temporal limitations by 2050. Elderly or physically impaired people and people with obligations such as caring for children are to be enabled to function in the labour market, regardless of restrictions due to space and time or physical and mental abilities. For this purpose, so-called cybernetic avatars and a cloud-based infrastructure are to be developed. In her talk, DIJ social scientist Celia Spoden will discuss the Government’s vision of this future society where cyberspace and the physical world are to be merged into a perfectly connected, highly efficient, and inclusive society. She will also explore what these new technologies mean for living together. Celia’s online talk is part of the OAG’s lecture series and will take place on Wednesday, March 16 online in German. Details

Events
March 2, 2022

DIJ co-sponsors virtual conference on Sustainable Societies

© GJSSS

Registration is now open for the 16th meeting of the German-Japanese Society for Social Sciences (GJSSS), held online on March, 2nd-4th, 2022, on the theme of “Sustainable Societies”. Its seven sessions will address the transition to sustainable living approaches; sustainability in the contexts of education, social systems, policy, and finance; SDGs in public communications. The virtual conference is jointly organised by former DIJ senior research fellow Carola Hommerich (Sophia University) and Masato Kimura (Toyo University). It is co-sponsored by the DIJ and Sophia University. Registration is possible via the registration form on the GJSSS website by February 20th (Sunday). Conference participation is free, but registration is mandatory. Details and Zoom information will be sent out to registered participants after February 20th.

Events
February 9, 2022

Franz Waldenberger discusses ‘performance puzzle’ of Japan’s economy

How is the underperformance of Japan’s economy during the past two decades related to corporate governance? Upon invitation by the Instituto Universitário de Pesquisas do Rio de Janeiro (IUPERJ), DIJ director Franz Waldenberger discussed this question within the IUPERJ’s Comparative Political Economy Webinar Series: Asia 2020/2022 . In his talk, Franz outlined Japan’s recent corporate governance reforms and explained their limited influence on the performance of Japan’s economy. By Japan’s ‘performance puzzle’, he refers to the country’s relatively low GDP per capita despite its excellent resource conditions. In his analysis, Franz demonstrated that institutionalized in-house careers which worked well during Japan’s economic and technological catch-up period now obstruct resource allocation at the company, industry, and international levels. In conclusion, he suggested that corporate governance reforms will only be successful if they contribute to the establishment of market based careers for higher ranked managers. The full talk, including comments by Yasushi Ueki (IDE-JETRO), can be viewed on YouTube.

Upcoming Events

17/07/2024
  • DIJ Study Group (hybrid)
    18:30 ~ 20:00

    The Role of Imagined Futures in Gendered Educational Trajectories: Adolescents’ Expectations and Uncertainty in Japanese Selective High Schools

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    Call for Submissions

    Contemporary Japan
    current issue Vol. 36, No.1
    Contemporary Japan is open year-round for rolling submissions, with accepted publications published immediately online. Please see the instructions for submission here.

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    DIJ Tokyo
    Jochi Kioizaka Bldg. 2F
    7-1 Kioicho Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo
    102-0094 Japan
    Where to find us

    +81 (0)3 3222-5077
    +81 (0)3 3222-5420
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    DIJ-ARI Asian Infrastructures Research Partnership