<Presenters / 報告者>
Ryan M. Irwin(ライアン M. アーウィン)
Ryan Irwin is an associate professor of history at the University at Albany. His first book, Gordian Knot: Apartheid and the Unmaking of the Liberal World Order (New York: Oxford University Press, 2017), explored how African independence altered the international system at the height of the Cold War. His current book, Vast External Realm: America and the Invention of the Free World, is a collective biography of Dean Acheson, Felix Frankfurter, Walter Lippmann, and Harold Laski, which probes some of the assumptions that underlay American world power. He's also researching a book about Daniel Patrick Moynihan and writing a series of essays about American exceptionalism.
See more at: https://www.albany.edu/history/ryan_irwin.php
Salvador Santino F. Regilme Jr.(サルバドル・サンティーノ・レヒルメ Jr.)
Salvador Santino F. Regilme Jr. is a University Lecturer of International Relations at the Institute for History, Leiden University, The Netherlands. He is the co-editor of American Hegemony and the Rise of Emerging Powers (Routledge 2017) and the author of forthcoming and published peer-reviewed articles in International Studies Perspectives, Third World Quarterly, International Political Science Review, International Relations, Human Rights Review, and the Journal of Developing Societies, among many others. He holds a joint PhD in Political Science and North American Studies (2015) from the Freie Universität Berlin, and he previously studied at Yale, Osnabrück, and Göttingen. His latest book project, with a provisional title Philanthropic Imperium: United States Foreign Aid, Diplomacy, and Human Rights, focuses on the impact of American foreign aid on state repression and physical integrity rights situation in recipient countries.
See more at: https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/staffmembers/salvador-regilme
玉置敦彦(たまき・のぶひこ Nobuhiko Tamaki)
Nobuhiko Tamaki is an assistant professor in the Faculty of Liberal Arts at Tsuru University. He also serves as a lecturer at Chuo University and as a guest researcher at Kanagawa University and the University of Tokyo. Alliance politics and international relations in the Asia-Pacific region comprise his research interest. While at the University of Tokyo, he received his LL.B., LL.M., and Ph.D. He studied at Boston University from 2009 to 2010 as a Fulbright student and at Yale University from 2011 to 2012 as a visiting assistant in research. His main works include「ジャパン・ハンズ―変容する日米関係と米政権日本専門家の視線、1965-68年」『思想』1017号(2009年)(Japan Hands: The Transformation of the U.S.-Japan Alliance and the Perception of Japan Experts in the U.S. Government, 1965–68);「ベトナム戦争をめぐる米比関係―非対称同盟と『力のパラドックス』」『国際政治』第188号(2017年)(U.S.-Philippine Relations and the Vietnam War: The Paradox of Power in Asymmetrical Alliances); 「秩序と同盟―アメリカの『リベラルな国際秩序』戦略」『国際安全保障』第45巻第4号(2018年)(In Search of Liberal International Order: Alliances in US Grand Strategy).
溝口 聡(みぞぐち・そう So Mizoguchi)
So Mizoguchi is an assistant professor at Rikkyo University. He is a historian of U.S. foreign relations. He received his Ph.D. from Michigan State University in 2018. His recent publications include “Schooling for Democracy?: Michigan State University and Cold War Education in American-Occupied Okinawa in the 1950s,” Virginia Review of Asian Studies 15 (2015), 「カーター外交とパキスタン1977-1980:人権、核拡散、新冷戦をめぐる政策調整問題」立教法学96号(2017年)(“Policy Schizophrenia: The Carter Administration and Pakistan 1977-1980,” St. Paul’s Review of Law and Politics 96 (2017)).
<Discussants / コメンテーター>
青野利彦(あおの・としひこ Toshihiko Aono)
Toshihiko Aono is an associate professor of international history at Hitotsubashi University, Tokyo. His publications include: 『「危機の年」の冷戦と同盟――ベルリン、キューバ、デタント, 1961–1963年』(有斐閣,2012年)(The Cold War and the Western Alliance during the Crisis Years: Berlin, Cuba, and Détente, 1961-63. Tokyo: Yuhikaku, 2012); 『国際政治史――主権国家体系のあゆみ』(共著:有斐閣、2018年)(An Introduction to International History. co-authored with Hiroyuki Ogawa and Takumi Itabashi. Tokyo: Yuhikaku, 2018); “Leading from Behind: Berlin, the Jupiters and Third Party Mediation during the Cuban Missile Crisis,” in An International History of the Cuban Missile Crisis: A 50-year Retrospective, eds. David Gioe, Len Scott, and Christopher Andrew (London: Routledge: 2014); “‘It is not easy for the United States to carry the whole load’: Anglo-American Relations during the Berlin Crisis, 1961–1962,” Diplomatic History 34, no. 2 (April 2010).
井形彬(いがた・あきら Igata Akira)
Akira IGATA is currently a Visiting Professor at Center for Rule-making Strategies (CRS), Tama University. He is also a Senior Policy Analyst at Deloitte Exponential and an Adjunct Fellow at Pacific Forum International.He oversees the Economic Statecraft Program and takes part in the Cyber Security Program at CRS.He received his undergraduate training at Georgetown University (one-year exchange program, Heiwa Nakajima Foundation scholar) and International Christian University (Chris-Wada scholar). He subsequently received his MA in political science from Columbia University (Japanese government fellowship scholar). He was awarded the Aoi Global Research Award to study at the Faculty of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, Cambridge University in 2016. He is currently writing his Ph.D dissertation at the Department of Law, Keio University. He was a recipient of the security studies fellowship from the Research Institute for Peace and Security (2010-2012) and has been involved in several projects by the Rebuild Japan Initiative Foundation. He notably contributed, as a researcher, to The Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station Disaster: Investigating the Myth and Reality (Routledge, 2014) and co-authored a chapter with Michael J. Green entitled, “The Gulf War and Japan’s National Security Identity” in Barak Kushner Eds. Examining Japan’s Lost Decades (Routledge, 2015).His research interests include: Japanese security and foreign policies; Japan-U.S. alliance; Economic statecraft; and International politics in the Indo-Pacific.
草野大希(くさの・ひろきHiroki Kusano)
Hiroki Kusano is an associate professor of international politics in the Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences at Saitama University. He earned his Ph.D. in International Relations from Sophia University in 2007. His research and teaching interests are in the areas of U.S. foreign policy, especially U.S. interventionism, humanitarian intervention, international relations theories, and global governance. His recent publications include 『アメリカの介入政策と米州秩序―複雑システムとしての国際政治』(東信堂、2011年)(U.S. Interventionist Policy and International Order in the Western Hemisphere : International Politics as a Complex System, Toshindo (2011)), 「アメリカの介入と国際正義―20世紀初頭の米州における介入の正当性をめぐる社会的相互作用」『国際政治』第171号 (2013年)(‟U.S. Intervention and International Justice: Social Interactions among the States of the Americas over the Legitimacy of Intervention in the Early Twentieth Century,” International Relations, Vol. 171 (2013)), and 「オバマ政権の介入政策における『アメリカ例外主義』-不安定な世界におけるアメリカの自画像の再構築―」『アメリカ研究』第51号(2017年)(“American Exceptionalism in Obama’s Interventions: Redefining American Self-Image in a Turbulent World,” The American Review, vol.51(2017). He studied at the Weatherhead East Asian Institute at Columbia University as a Fulbright visiting scholar from 2013 to 2014.
藤岡真樹(ふじおか・まさき Masaki Fujioka)
Masaki Fujioka is a part-time lecture at Kyoto, Kyoto. He specializes in American History. He received his Ph.D. from Kyoto University in 2015. His recent publications include 『アメリカの大学におけるソ連研究の編制過程』(法律文化社,2017年)(The Process of Organizing Soviet Studies in American Universities. Kyoto: Horitu Bunnka-sha, 2012)and "Understanding the History of American Universities during the Cold War Era: The Validity of the Concept of 'Tension'." 『社会システム研究』第19号、2016年(Socialsystems : Political, Legal and Economic Studies, vol. 19 (2016))