<Presenters / 講演者・報告者>
Melissa Borja(メリッサ・ボルハ)- 公開講演・ワークショップ報告
Melissa Borja is Assistant Professor in the Department of American Culture at the University of Michigan. She researches the history of religion, race, ethnicity, and politics, with special focus on how migration, pluralism, and the modern American state have shaped Asian American religion. Her first book, Follow the New Way: Hmong Refugee Resettlement and American Religious Pluralism, is under contract with Harvard University Press. She received her Ph.D. from Columbia University, her M.A. from the University of Chicago, and her B.A. from Harvard University. Before her appointment at the University of Michigan, she taught at the City University of New York.
Lauren Richardson(ローレン・リチャードソン) - 公開講演・ワークショップ報告
Lauren Richardson joined the Department of Asian Studies, University of Edinburgh in 2015. She holds a bachelor’s and master’s degree in Asian Studies from Monash University (Australia), and a master’s degree in Political Science from Keio University (Japan). She earned a PhD in International, Political and Strategic Studies at the Australian National University, which entailed one year of fieldwork in each of Korea and Japan. She has been a visiting fellow at the Japan Institute of International Affairs and Keio University and has participated in a number of security and strategic dialogues in the Asia Pacific. She has taught and convened courses on international relations and academic writing at Keio University, and Japanese politics at the Australian National University. At Edinburgh she teaches Korean peninsula politics and Japan-Korea relations in the MSc in East Asian Relations programme.
詳細: http://www.ed.ac.uk/profile/lauren-richardson
佐原彩子(さはら・あやこ Ayako Sahara) - ワークショップ報告
Ayako Sahara is an associate professor at Ohtsuki City College in Ohtsuki, Yamanashi, Japan. She obtained Ph.D. in the Department of Ethnic Studies at University of California, San Diego in March 2012. Publications include 『「ヘイト」の時代のアメリカ史:人種・民族・国籍を考える』(共著、彩流社、2017年)(Chapter 11 "Issues of American Refugee Policy" in Ayumu Kaneko and Yoshiyuki Kido eds. American History in the Age of 'Hate': On Race, Ethnicity and Nationality, Sairyusha, 2017) and 『難民を知るための基礎知識』(共著、明石書店、2017年)(Chapter 9 "Refugee Issues and the Crisis of American Human Rights Politics" in Hiroshi Komai and Yasuhiro Hitomi eds. Immigration and Diaspora Studies 6, Akashi Shoten, 2017). With the funding of Grant-in-aid for Scientific Research by Japan Promotion for the Promotion of Science, she has been working on the relation between humanitarian aid and the U.S. government in U.S. involvement in Indochina in the 1950s.
土屋智子(つちや・ともこ Tomoko Tsuchiya)- ワークショップ報告
Tomoko Tsuchiya is an assistant professor at Japan Women’s University. She specializes in American Studies, Migration Studies, and Women’s History. She received her Ph.D. from the Ethnic Studies Department, University of California, San Diego in 2011, with a dissertation titled "Cold War Love: Producing American Liberalism in Interracial Marriages between American Soldiers and Japanese Women." She has recently published「アメリカの学問領域における同化理論の考察」『英米文学研究』第51号(2016年)("Recent Trends in Ethnic Minorities in the U.S.," Japan Women's University, Studies in English and American Literature vol. 51 (2016)). In March 2016, she organized a symposium "Three Women’s Life Histories Traced in Lucy Craft’s Documentary – Having Global Perspective."
<Discussants / ワークショップ コメンテーター>
浅野豊美(あさの・とよみ Toyomi Asano)
ASANO Toyomi is a professor of political history and international relations at Waseda University. He graduated from doctoral course of the Graduate school of Advanced Social and International Studies in the University of Tokyo in 1998, affiliated as a research associate with Asia-Pacific Research Center of Waseda University 1998-2000, inaugurated to be a professor in Chukyo University in 2000, receiving Ph.D. from the University of Tokyo in 2009. He had also been affiliated with Graduate School of Arts and Sciences of Harvard University as a visiting fellow 1994- 1995, Modern Chinese History research Center in Academica Sinica in Taiwan 1999, Sigur Center in Elliot School of George Washington University 2006-2007, Asiatic Research Center in Korea University 2009 as a visiting scholar. He won the 25th Masayoshi Ohira Memorial Prize in June 2009 and the Yoshida Shigeru Prize in March 2009 as an author of 『帝国日本の植民地法制 – 法域統合と帝国秩序』(名古屋大学出版会、2008年) (Teikoku Nihon-no Shokuminchi Housei (Japanese Empire in the Nation State System by Legal Analysis), The University of Nagoya Press, 2008).
See more at: http://researchmap.jp/_tasano/?lang=english
佐藤清子(さとう・せいこ Seiko Sato)
Seiko Sato is a lecturer at Seijo University. She specializes in religious studies and history of religions in the United States. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Tokyo in 2017. Her doctoral thesis titled「アンテベラム期合衆国プロテスタントの信教の自由概念―反カトリシズムとの関係から―」(2017年、東京大学人文社会系研究科提出)(“Protestants’ understanding of Religious Liberty and Anti-Catholicism in the Antebellum United States”) was on anti-Catholicism and religious liberty in the antebellum United States. Her forthcoming article is titled「現代合衆国における歴史認識と信教の自由理解―キリスト教国論をめぐって―」『東京大学宗教学年報』第34号、(2017年、近日刊行)(“‘Christian Nation,’ History, and Religious Liberty in the 21st Century United States,” Annual Review of Religious Studies vol. 34 (forthcoming in 2017). She is currently interested in historical development of religious liberty in the United States and the world.
志村真弓(しむら・まゆみ Mayumi Shimura)
Mayumi Shimura is a Ph.D. student at the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the University of Tokyo. She specializes in international politics. Her recent publications include 「『保護する責任』言説をめぐる行動基準論争―補完性原則と必要性原則の政治学的分析―」『国際政治学』第176号(2014年)("The Contested Interpretations of the Emerging Norm of the Responsibility to Protect: Politics of the Principle of Complementarity and the Principle of Necessity," International Relations vol. 176 (2014))、「『保護する責任』を果たす意思と能力―シリア人道危機に直面する国際社会―」『平和研究』第47号(2016年)("A State's Ability and Willingness to Fulfill the Responsibility to Protect its People: The International Community Facing the Syrian Humanitarian Crisis," Peace Studies vol. 47 (2016))
関口洋平(せきぐち・ようへい Yohei Sekiguchi)
Yohei Sekiguchi is a lecturer at Meiji Gakuin University and the Tokyo University of Science. He specializes in American literature and culture, and his research interest centers on the history and representation of "American families." His dissertation in progress analyzes representation of the "nurturing father" in the late twentieth century from perspectives of race, class, neo-liberalism, and melodrama. His recent publications include 「「イクメン」の誕生と新自由主義―20世紀後半アメリカにおける白人中流階級の父親の表象について」『アメリカ研究』第51号(2017年)"The Birth of the 'Nurturing Father' and Neoliberalism: The Representation of White Middle-class Fathers in Late Twentieth Century America," The American Review vol. 51 (2017).