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Deutsches Institut für Japanstudien
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DIJ Study Group

Die DIJ Study Group versteht sich als Forum für Wissenschaftler und Wissenschaftlerinnen sowie Promovierende, die zu einem sozial- oder geisteswissenschaftlichen Thema mit Bezug zu Japan arbeiten. Sie finden in der Regel hybrid statt.

In einem etwa 45-minütigen Vortrag werden laufende Forschungsarbeiten vorgestellt und daran anschließend diskutiert. Vortragssprache ist in der Regel Englisch.

Kontakt: studygroup@dijtokyo.org

Die DIJ Study Group vereinigt seit Mai 2024 die DIJ Business & Economics Study Group, die DIJ History & Humanities Study Group und die DIJ Social Science Study Group

 

2024

26. November 2024
Sustainability at Risk: Unraveling Yakushima's Complex Layers of Realities

Mathieu Gaulène, University of Nîmes


6. November 2024
"Just Like Defeated Soldiers": The Imperial Japanese Military and the Looting of Post-Surrender Japan

Samuel P. Porter, Independent Scholar


7. Oktober 2024
The Coordination State: Industrial Policy and Technology Transfer During Japan’s Postwar Economic Boom, 1950-76

Jonathan Krautter, HU Berlin


4. Oktober 2024
Lost in Plain Sight: Gaspar Cassadó’s Iberian Legacy

Rosi Song, Durham University / Katie Tertell, Durham University


30. September 2024
From Providers to Nurturers – Depictions of Male Care Work in Japanese Manga

Ralf Windhab, University of Vienna/DIJ Tokyo


27. September 2024
Fathers Need Friends: Changing Paradigms of Sociality and Family Engagement among Japanese Men Involved in Parenting-Focused Groups

Evan T. Koike, Tokyo College, University of Tokyo


19. September 2024
Secret Agreements, Public Consequences: The 1960s Deportation Crisis of Taiwanese Dissidents

Wolfgang G. Thiele, Free University of Berlin/DIJ Tokyo


18. September 2024
Attitudes Toward Facial Analysis AI: A Cross-National Study Comparing Argentina, Kenya, Japan, and the USA

Chiara Ullstein, Technical University of Munich


21. August 2024
Between tradition and pop culture: The meaning of traditional Japanese materials and techniques in the practice of contemporary artists in Kyoto

Alexandra Faust, Academy of Fine Arts Vienna / DIJ Tokyo


17. Juli 2024
The Role of Imagined Futures in Gendered Educational Trajectories: Adolescents’ Expectations and Uncertainty in Japanese Selective High Schools

Fumiya Uchikoshi, Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, Harvard University


20. Juni 2024
Fairness in Law: A Comparative Analysis of the Abuse of Rights Principle in Japan and Germany

Felix Dröll, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt/DIJ Tokyo


13. Juni 2024
Southeast Asia and the Indo-Pacific Construct Securing Strategic Autonomy in the South China Seas: FOIP and BRI as Hedging Strategies

Stephen R. Nagy, International Christian University (ICU)


15. Mai 2024
Inhabiting the Interstice: the Regulation of Post-Bubble Housing Insecurity in Tokyo

Lenard Görögh, Freie Universität Berlin