UTokyo Future Society Initiative (UTokyo FSI)

FSI Symposium Series

The Future Society Initiative Symposium Series lists symposiums, workshops and lectures in regard to the United Nations' 17 Sustainable Development Goals and The Future Society Initiative's activities, with the aim of promoting effective publicity and connecting to future activity.

See this page on the UTokyo Portal for information on how to list your symposium as an FSI Symposium (Internal access only).

 

FY 2022


International Women's Day Symposium “Understanding Feminist Movements Across Borders: building Transnational Solidarity”

   
Date March 31, 2023
Venue Zoom Webinar
Overview In honor of International Women's Day, Tokyo College's "Gender, Sexuality & Identity" collaborative research group will host a panel that will explore the role of translation in practices of transnational feminist solidarity. Panelists will discuss the recent protests in Iran for "Woman, Life, Freedom" as a case study for contemplating how women led movements may be translated into different contexts to facilitate multi-directional relationships of learning and solidarity.

Symposium Poster
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp


Discussion Forum “The Future of Higher Education”

   
Date March 8, 2023
Venue Zoom Webinar
Overview Challenges that both concern and span the globe, such as those indicated by the SDGs, are drawing increasing attention, and the problems resulting from pandemics and economic turmoil have grown more significant. Many of these challenges become apparent as they come in contact with issues at the local and regional level. Rather than attempting to solve individual challenges, however, more fundamental, forward-thinking social transformations are required. In this discussion forum, we explore what social responsibilities universities should fulfill in these circumstances with a special focus on the impact on knowledge production. The forum will also summarize the contents of “The Future of Higher Education” dialogue series held by Tokyo College over seven sessions from December 2022 to March 2023.

Symposium Poster
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp


Strategic Partnership Symposium

   
Date March 3, 2023
Venue Zoom Webinar
Overview The University of Tokyo proposed the “Building a Network of ‘Strategic Partnerships’ to Strengthen International Competitiveness among Japanese Universities” as a project for the Japan Forum for Internationalization of Universities and plan to widely disseminate information by sharing the challenges and good practices with other universities through the enhancement of horizontal cooperation. Through this project, the universities plan to enhance the recognition of Strategic Partnerships and the international presence of the universities of Japan.
This year's symposium will provide an opportunity to think how to deepen the Strategic Partnerships in various aspects including exchange of people with different functions such as researchers, students or non-academic staff, or synergy between bilateral partnerships and other alliances, consortia and networks of higher education institutes.
Symposium Poster
Registration Registration Form
Contact International Projects Promotion Group, The University of Tokyo
sp.uni.adm[at]gs.mail.u-tokyo.ac.jp


SDGs Symposium 2023 - Cities and nature: exploring linkages and designing solutions for sustainability 

   
Date February 28, 2023
Venue Ito Hall, Hongo Campus and Online
Overview The 2023 SDGs Symposium will explore intersections between cities and Nature, both in terms of how cities and urban activities affect Nature, as well as how Nature can help solve urban challenges. The focal point of the Symposium will be research at the interface of SDG11 (Sustainable cities and communities), SDG13 (Climate action), SDG15 (Life on earth) and SDG3 (Good health and wellbeing). 

Related link 
Registration Registration Form
Contact Symposium Secretariat,  Institute for Future Initiatives, The University of Tokyo
sdg_sympo2023[at]pco-prime.com


Tokyo College Lecture: Life Support: Youth, Life and Viability in Rural North India

   
Date February 8, 2023
Venue Zoom Meeting
Overview Professor Craig Jeffrey and Associate Professor Jane Dyson will show how young people in rural Uttarakhand, north India, attempt to make viable lives as they respond to environmental and socio-economic crises and engage in everyday social action. They will also screen Professor Dyson’s documentary film Spirit, which explores related themes.

Symposium Poster
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp



Aeon-Todai-Satoyama-Lab Symposium: New Satoyama Challenges Creating the Earth's Future: "Healthy Long Life and Happy Long Life through Regional Contribution"

   
Date February 4, 2023
Venue Yasuda Auditorium, Hongo Campus and Online
Overview Health is one of the most important factors for regional sustainability. In this symposium, we will propose the collaboration of health care activities and satoyama activities (conservation activities in socio-ecological production landscapes and seascapes). The collaboration of frailty prevention activities and satoyama activities will contribute to healthy and happy long life in regional areas. Eventually, we would like to construct a model for creating regional sustainability.

Symposium Poster (Japanese language only)
Related link  (Japanese language only)
Registration Registration Form (On-site participation)
Registration Form (Online participation)
Contact Symposium Secretariat,  Institute for Future Initiatives, The University of Tokyo
aeon-toudai-satoyama-lab[at]ifi.u-tokyo.ac.jp


The University of Tokyo Communication Center (UTCC) Series [No. 4] What is the umami of yeast that transcends boundaries?

   
Date January 31, 2023
Venue SHIBUYA QWS CROSS PARK and Online
Overview “Onaka", which was newly launched on 15 October 2022 at the UTCC, is a new type of sake created through the yeast research carried out at the Graduate School of Agriculture and Life Sciences, the University of Tokyo. We have invited the yeast researcher for this sake, as well as the representative of a winery famous for its spontaneous fermentation wine brewing that conducted joint research on wild wine yeast, and the representative of a long-established sake brewer in Toyama who brewed “Onaka", to talk about the relationship between yeast and sake from their respective positions. Then, the three speakers will discuss the potential for new sake from a scientific perspective. This will be a lecture that can be listened to with interest by the public.

Symposium Poster (Japanese language only)
Related link (Japanese language only)
Registration Registration Form (Japanese language only)
Contact External Relations Promotion Group, The University of Tokyo
shakairenkeika.adm[at]gs.mail.u-tokyo.ac.jp


Asian Cities and the Human-Centered Society

   
Date January 31, 2023
Venue Zoom Webinar
Overview This symposium discusses the trajectory of human-centered society development in Asia through interdisciplinary and transnational dialogues. To what extent can technology support human-centered approaches to urban living? Does the trajectory for human-centered society development address human interests, values, and well-being, or simply the technology itself? Where are cultural, societal, and heritage values situated within this trajectory?

Symposium Poster
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp


Mitigation and Adaptation Options for Climate Change: Societal and Energy Resilience

   
Date December 22, 2022
Venue Online
Overview Since the start of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, international interest in energy security and stable energy supply has increased. While on the one hand, there is a sense of stalemate in the actual energy policy, on the other hand, researchers are proposing a variety of ideas from various angles for discussion.
Meanwhile, the effects of climate change are becoming more severe every year, and afflictions and disasters such as heat stroke and floods are increasing.
We need to realize a stable energy supply, while at the same time promoting climate change mitigation, adaptation, and disaster prevention measures in parallel. This symposium does not propose a specific direction, but rather aims to review various proposals from an academic perspective, provide a reference point for future discussions on policies and technologies, and stimulate further debate.

Symposium Poster (Japanese language only)
Related link [1] [2] (Japanese language only)
Registration Registration Form (Japanese language only)
Contact Symposium Secretariat
sympo-energy-climate-group[at]g.ecc.u-tokyo.ac.jp


Symposium on Data-Driven Future 2022

   
Date December 20, 2022
Venue Zoom Webinar
Overview Society 5.0, which Japan is aiming for, is an inclusive society where everyone can enjoy the benefits of data utilization without anxiety. In order to realize this Society 5.0, it is important to work together with the public and private sectors to develop information infrastructures that can be used for a wide range of purposes and to create a human network that links people who want to analyze data with analysis technologies and public data, with universities and research institutions that play a central role in knowledge aggregation as hubs.
A secure and high-speed computing platform "mdx: a platform for the data-driven future" was established at the Kashiwa II campus of the University of Tokyo at the end of FY2020. mdx is jointly operated by 9 universities and 2 research institutes and has been used for various research projects since its trial operation started in September 2021.
In this symposium, experts from a wide range of fields will give lectures on advanced initiatives to promote data utilization, and use cases in various regions and fields, as well as tutorials on the use of mdx.

Related link (Japanese language only)
Registration Registration Form (Japanese language only)
Contact Data Platform Initiative, Future Society Initiative
dp.jimu[at]itc.u-tokyo.ac.jp


Dialogue Series “The Future of Higher Education”

   
Date From December 16, 2022 to March 1, 2023
Venue Zoom Meeting
Overview Higher education around the world is experiencing vast changes in its multiple environments as a result of numerous factors, including globalization, shifts in the boundary conditions of truth, the effects of technology, geopolitical uncertainties, and calls for ‘decolonisation’. Moderated by Tokyo College Professor Ahmed BAWA, this dialogue series explores the impact of these factors on the future of higher education.

Symposium Poster
Related link [1][2][3][4][5][6]
Registration Registration Form [3][4][5][6]
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp


Three important factors for SU to scale global - from US/JP SU comparison

   
Date December 13, 2022
Venue SHIBUYA QWS SCRAMBLE HALL and Online
Overview The University of Tokyo Institute for Future Initiatives, Sumitomo Life Insurance Company and the Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO) conduct joint research and disseminate information through seminars and symposiums with the aim of creating university startups that can expand globally.
The results of last year's research revealed that there are three key elements to creating a global startup ecosystem: "overseas mentors and investors", "serial entrepreneurs" and "diversity". In this seminar, we will invite speakers from Japan and the U.S. who will explain the importance of these three elements. After an overview of this year's research, we will discuss why these three elements are necessary for fostering a "global" startup ecosystem in Japan from the perspectives of universities, public institutions, and companies.

Related link (Japanese language only)
Registration Registration Form (Japanese language only)
Contact University Industry and University Society Partnership Research Unit Secretariat, Institute for Future Initiatives, The University of Tokyo
wlab[at]ifi.u-tokyo.ac.jp


Digital Revolution: Data-led Prosperity in the 21st Century

   
Date December 10, 2022
Venue Yasuda Auditorium, Hongo Campus and Online(Zoom Webinar)
Overview The special lecture will be presented by the Chairman of the Tata Group, one of India’s foremost business leaders. It will highlight learnings from its heritage that made it successful for over 150 years. It will also outline a vision for thriving in the future, adapting to the challenges of AI, jobs and data security, including India and Japan collaboration.

Symposium Poster
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp


“Pre-earthquake Preparation Processes” Lecture by Prof. Yehuda BEN-ZION

   
Date December 6, 2022
Venue Zoom Webinar
Overview The lecture discusses several initiatives to clarify physical processes leading to large earthquakes by geophysical observations, experiments, and modeling; and to improve society’s preparation for large earthquakes through upgrades of instrumental monitoring and early warning alerts, developing better building codes, and community education activities.

Symposium Poster
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp

 


“Pre-earthquake Preparation Processes” Lecture by Prof. Yehuda BEN-ZION

   
Date December 4, 2022
Venue SHIBUYA QWS SCRAMBLE HALL and Online
Overview Two professional Go players (ŌHASHI Hirofumi 7-dan, UENO Asami 4-dan), two AI researchers (Professor MATSUBARA Hitoshi, Project Professor NAGAI Yukie), and one humanities researcher (Tokyo College Director HANEDA Masashi) take a deep dive into the relationship between Go and AI, compare AI (i.e., artificial intelligence) and the human brain, and engage in a thorough public discussion on the potentials and limitations of AI.

Symposium Poster (Japanese language only)
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp


Tokyo Forum 2022

   
Date December 1-2, 2022
Venue Yasuda Auditorium, the University of Tokyo
*A hybrid format with offline and online delivery is planned.
Overview Tokyo Forum was inaugurated in 2019 between the University of Tokyo, Japan, and Chey Institute for Advanced Studies, Republic of Korea, as a global forum to promote discussion on the global challenges which the Earth and humanity face. The forum has been conducted annually with an overarching theme of “Shaping the Future”.
Tokyo Forum 2022 will focus on the theme “Dialogue between World Philosophy and Science: In a World Facing War and Pandemic”. Keynote speeches and panel discussions will be given by prominent figures from various fields with a view to future society.

Related link
Contact Tokyo Forum 2022 Secretariat
tokyo.forum.adm[at]gs.mail.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


Green Transformation (GX), Carbon Markets & Blockchain: A Dialogue with the World Bank and Chia Network

   
Date November 30, 2022
Venue Zoom Webinar
Overview This event will explore areas of overlapping innovation: in Climate Change and Sustainability, and Blockchain and Data/IT. Leading Silicon Valley technologist Bram COHEN, CEO of Chia Network, and Gemma Torras VIVES of the World Bank will discuss the pioneering use of decentralized blockchain technology to empower a new global carbon market infrastructure.

Symposium Poster
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp


Japan’s Economy: Changing Views from Outside

   
Date November 24, 2022
Venue Zoom Webinar
Overview Outsiders have been fascinated by Japan’s economy since Marco Polo described Cipangu as a land of gold. Centuries later Columbus sailed to discover it. External observers’ descriptions may not always have been accurate but they have often been influential. This lecture will look at some of the most important discussions in the English language literature on Japan’s economy and will reflect on how the major themes have changed over the last half century.

Symposium Poster
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp


Language and Identity Workshop Series: “Becoming White: The “Japanese” Language in the Modern Global Order”

   
Date November 18, 2022
Venue Zoom Webinar
Overview Language, Nation, Race explores the many language reforms at the onset of modernity in Japan, when the “national language” (kokugo) was produced in order to standardize the Japanese language. In the mid-to late-1800s, the literacy level was low, written and spoken languages were disparate, and multiple dialects existed, the disparity of which impeded basic communication among the inhabitants of the Japanese archipelago. Faced with the threat of Western colonialism, Meiji intellectuals proposed various reforms—whether it be the rejection of Chinese characters, the use of Romanized syllabic scripts, or even the adoption of English as the national language—to standardize the language in order to quickly educate the illiterate masses with new forms of knowledge imported from the West. This was a chaotic moment in the history of modern Japan. 
In this talk, I focus on Ueda Kazutoshi’s reform. I depart from prior studies of his reforms by specifically examining his tropes of racialization. Meiji was a race war. It is crucial to inscribe race in our investigation since no analysis of imperialism or nationalism is possible without the concept of race.

Symposium Poster
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp


Modern Women and Medieval Witches: New Perspectives on Feminism

   
Date November 9, 2022
Venue Ito Hall, Ito International Research Center, Hongo Campus
Overview Ms. Mona Chollet is a journalist and essayist who has had an immense influence on feminist debates in Europe. At the invitation of the Embassy of France in Tokyo, she is in Japan to celebrate the translated edition of her bestseller Sorcières: La puissance invaincue des femmes (English title: In Defense of Witches: The Legacy of the Witch Hunts and Why Women Are Still on Trial). In this work, she uncovers the history of the witch-hunts that swept through Europe in the Middle Ages and Early Modern Period and discusses it in connection with the modern social calamity known as “misogyny.” Professor UENO Chizuko, pioneer of women’s studies in Japan and longtime feminist leader, will engage in an in-depth discussion with Ms. Chollet on women today and where to go from here.

Symposium Poster 
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp



Symposium of Presidential Endowed Chair for "Platinum Society"

   
Date November 4, 2022
Venue Zoom Webinar
Overview A symposium will be held by Presidential Endowed Chair for "Platinum Society" under the theme of “Gathering the hope,  creating the future - Knowledges, persons and places of the university utilizing the potential of diversity-”. We will report the 10 years' achievements from the establishment and inform the start of the 3rd-period activities to the participants inside and outside the university.

Symposium Poster (Japanese language only)
Related link (Japanese language only)
Registration Registration Form (Japanese language only)
Contact Symposium Secretariat
platinum.symposium[at]pco-prime.com


A Nobel Laureate against Nuclear Power: Hannes Alfvén and the Public Image of a 20th-Century Scientist

   
Date November 4, 2022
Venue Zoom Webinar
Overview In 1970 the physicist Hannes Alfvén was awarded the Nobel Prize. This recognition by the international scientific community strengthened his national status and critique of the Swedish nuclear policy. His resignation in 1980 from the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences illustrates conflicting views on nuclear politics which still haunts us today.

Symposium Poster 
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp


"Soooo fabulous than we really are!!!" Engineering Technology Wireless Power Supply Champagne Tower 2022 In Shibuya!

   
Date November 3, 2022
Venue SHIBUYA QWS SCRAMBLE HALL and Online
Overview The "Engineering x (cross)" event aims to create a new future by crossing engineering with other cultures. The first event will be a cross between engineering and one of Shibuya's cultures, "gyaru" (gal). Using wireless power supply to light up a champagne tower! Experiments and a live talk show by the people involved will be streamed.

Related link (Japanese language only)
Registration Registration Form (Japanese language only)
Contact Public Relations Office, Graduate School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo
Inquiries to Public Relations Office (u-tokyo.ac.jp)


At the Age of Pandemics: Contextualizing Cleanliness and Hygiene in the Past and Present

   
Date November 2-9, 2022
Venue Zoom Webinar
Overview This event explores the cultural and medical context behind cleanliness and hygiene. The first symposium investigates “where do our idea of cleanliness come from?” across time and space. The second analyzes “how do we face the contemporary and future challenge of hygiene?” contributing to a better public health system.

Symposium Poster
Related link Day 1 Day 2
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp


The Future of Nostalgia in Tokyo

   
Date October 28, 2022
Venue SHIBUYA QWS CROSS PARK and Online
Overview With the increasing concentration of population in urban areas across the world, how to incorporate memories of various places that make up our fast-changing cities - the collective consciousness of what our predecessors and we have done there - into place making is becoming an important global issue. In this workshop, we focus on "nostalgia" as a clue to explore place memories. Through dialogue with participants, we investigate what kind of places people feel nostalgic for in the metropolis of Tokyo, and how we can draw on such nostalgia for place making.

Symposium Poster (Japanese language only)
Related link (Japanese language only)
Registration Registration Form (Japanese language only)
Contact External Relations Promotion Group, The University of Tokyo
shakairenkeika.adm[at]gs.mail.u-tokyo.ac.jp


GX's current location at UTokyo

   
Date October 11, 2022 (EDT)
October 12, 2022 (JST)
Venue UTokyo NY / Zoom Webinar
Overview The "UTokyo Compass“, which lays out the basic policy surrounding the philosophy and direction that the University of Tokyo should pursue under President Teruo Fujii, positions Green Transformation (GX) as one of the pillars of its action plan. The University of Tokyo, as a business entity, will formulate a roadmap to achieve virtually zero GHG emissions and work in partnership with the campus and the local communities, as well as accelerating the concrete efforts to achieve this goal. UTokyo will present and discuss the university’s current initiatives and concrete action plans to achieve this goal.

Symposium Poster
Registration Registration Form (Zoom Webinar Participation)
Registration Form (On-site Participation)
Contact The University of Tokyo New York Office
nyo.adm[at]gs.mail.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


International Symposium "Towards sustainable and inclusive society: Visualizing the diverse values of Nature"

   
Date October 11, 2022
Venue Media hall, Kashiwa Campus and Online
Overview Our society is heavily dependent on various contributions from nature (such as food, timber, etc.) which are traded in markets. However, the value of nature is not limited to these monetary values. There are multiple and complex values to nature. For example, water purification provided by wetlands is not something that is traded on the market. But our society reaps the benefit, i.e. the good quality water. Furthermore, we cannot put dollar signs to all the values provided by nature. People, at times, refuse to put a monetary value on the forests that are deemed to be sacred. They consider it is not 'right' to trade something sacred on the market. In order to emphasize these diverse and complex values of nature, IPBES, the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services, has produced the Values Assessment Report in 2022.
At the same time, in Japan, there are communities where local stakeholders use these diverse and complex values of nature to attract stakeholders and achieve local sustainability. These measures are especially important as many rural communities are ageing, and their populations are decreasing. In this symposium, researchers involved in the preparation of the IPBES value assessment report and the Japanese stakeholders who are involved in the regional revitalization are invited. It will discuss how we can build a sustainable and inclusive society by finding the junction between the scientific evaluation of diverse and complex values in the international arena and the practice of regional revitalization in Japanese regions.

Symposium Poster
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Strategic Planning Office, Graduate School of Frontier Sciences, The University of Tokyo
spo[at]edu.k.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


Inaugural symposium of the UTokyo Center for Climate Solutions (UTCCS)

   
Date October 7, 2022
Venue Ito Hall, Ito International Research Center, Hongo Campus and Online
Overview In an effort to reduce the negative effects of global warming, the reducing of net carbon dioxide emissions to zero (carbon neutrality), is becoming an international trend. The issue of climate change or global warming is already extending beyond the realm of natural science, and the need for tranformative science is growing; science that encompasses a variety of approaches, such as the understanding and prediction of climate change and the assessment of its impact on ecosystems, the designing of future social systems, the reduction of social disparities as represented by climate justice, and behavioral change toward carbon neutrality.
The University of Tokyo has therefore established the Collaborative Research Organization "UTokyo Center for Climate Sollutions (UTCCS)" in July 2022 for the purpose of developing research in the natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities in order to realize a sustainable society under a continuously changing climate. This symposium will feature lectures and panel discussions by leading researchers associated with UTCCS, who will introduce the current state of research and discuss its prospects for the future. For details of the program, please visit the UTCCS website. We look forward to your participation.

Symposium Poster (Japanese language only)
Related link (Japanese language only)
Registration Registration Form (Japanese language only)
Contact Symposium Secretariat, UTokyo Center for Climate Solutions
utccs_sympo[at]aori.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


Tokyo College Lecture: The Ritual Environment

   
Date October 6, 2022
Venue Zoom Webinar
Overview This study examines sacred rituals as models for largescale environmental dilemmas, bridging ancient and modern worlds. Sacrificial rituals create waste, as sanctuaries become filled with residues and byproducts of unused animal and vegetable materia sacra. Three distinct attitudes towards such leftovers are indicative of three distinct ritual-environmental conceptions. On the one hand, such materials can be viewed as invested with sacrality that must be exhausted, as every particle of holiness must be recycled within the ritual arena, allowing no material to go to waste. On the other hand, sacred leftovers can be viewed as dangerous, powerful waste that must be excluded from the sacred domain, shipped off and stowed away at a great distance from human habitation. A third possibility is to reconceptualize such materials as neutralized, non-sacred and nondangerous, whereby they can become freely available for public use. The example of the treatment of ritual byproducts and residues demonstrates the potential of an exploration of the intellectual space between two ancient “sciences of ritual”: early Jewish discourse on sacrificial texts in rabbinic literature, and the South Asian Mīmāṃsā tradition dedicated to the hermeneutics of Vedic sacrificial texts.

Symposium Poster
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


UTokyo Symposium on Regional Collaboration - UTokyo's Aim for Regional Collaboration

   
Date October 3, 2022
Venue Zoom Webinar
Overview The University of Tokyo has been conducting a number of community relations projects as social contribution activities by the university as a whole, as well by its various departments. The UTokyo Compass, which outlines the University of Tokyo's basic policy regarding the principles and direction that the University should pursue under President Teruo Fujii, includes a specific action plan for co-creation with society and aims to create new value in collaboration with local communities with consideration for global environment and inclusiveness. To achieve this goal, the Regional Collaboration Task Force was established under the Social Collaboration Subcommittee of the Future Society Initiative (FSI).
This symposium is intended to provide a forum for information sharing among projects currently being developed by the university and its departments, and to promote collaboration among projects being conducted in regions with similar challenges.

Symposium Poster (Japanese language only)
Registration Registration Form (Japanese language only)
Contact External Relations Promotion Group, The University of Tokyo
shakairenkeika.adm[at]gs.mail.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


“Tell Me the Truth About Technology” - Our Relationship with Technology, Technology and Society

   
Date September 30, 2022
Venue Zoom Webinar
Overview The talk will look at key themes to understand our daily relationship with technology and more broadlythe role of technology in society, emphasizing both changes and historical continuity. The following topics will be addressed, challenging widespread stereotypes in contemporary public discourse about technology:
・How technology changes us
・Why technology is not neutral
・The reason not only digital technology matters
・Why society and politics are often displaced by technology

Symposium Poster
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


“What Does It Mean by Designing Sustainable Society?”

   
Date September 14, 2022
Venue Online
Overview The University of Tokyo Graduate School of Frontier Sciences established the "Sustainable Society Design Center" attached to the Graduate School in April 2022. The center provides a full range of sustainability education for post-graduate students and working adults with the aim of contributing to research and human resource development related to the design of a sustainable society, which is an urgent issue facing the international community. Meanwhile, various efforts are already being made inside and outside the university regarding net-zero and sustainability, thus cooperation with these existing efforts is indispensable.
At this symposium, we will introduce aim of the center and future activity plans, and invite key persons in charge of related activities inside and outside the university to discuss possible cooperation.

Symposium Poster (Japanese language only)
Related link (Japanese language only)
Registration Registration Form (Japanese language only)
Contact Symposium Secretariat
sympo[at]k.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


Tokyo College Lecture: Family and Inequality: “Diverging Destinies” in Japan?

   
Date September 13, 2022
Venue Zoom Webinar
Overview “Diverging destinies” is a term used by family demographers and sociologists to describe growing socioeconomic differentials in family behavior. Drawing primarily on evidence from the U.S., research on diverging destinies has demonstrated that those at the lower end of the socioeconomic spectrum are increasingly engaging in family behaviors that are associated with reduction in the resources available to their children (e.g., nonmarital childbearing) while those at the upper end of the spectrum are engaging in family behaviors associated with increased resources (e.g., stable marriage). This pattern of family bifurcation has potentially important implications for inequality in opportunities for success across generations. Despite tremendous interest in both family change and growing socioeconomic inequality in Japan, efforts to link these trends are limited.
In this talk, I summarize the results of several recent papers (both published and in progress) on socioeconomic differences in family demographic behavior and children’s well-being in Japan. In general, the findings of these studies show patterns of family bifurcation consistent with predictions of the diverging destinies framework, but of a magnitude that is less pronounced than observed in the U.S. Among the most pronounced differences in Japan are a strong negative educational gradient in divorce and substantial differences in the well-being of children in single-mother and two-parent families. In thinking about the relevance of diverging destinies in Japan, I stress the theoretical and empirical value of considering intergenerational family relationships, gender inequality, and the changing economic environment.

Symposium Poster
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


How will information science change virus research? ~Virus & Information Science "Wakate" Researchers Networking~

   
Date August 30-31, 2022
Venue SHIBUYA QWS CROSS PARK
Overview Life sciences have long since entered the era of big data, and virology is no exception. Especially since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, data in virology has been growing in scale and complexity, and there is an urgent need to integrate the fields of virology and information science, and to foster young researchers with expertise in both. In this event, young researchers involved in virology and information science will gather to exchange latest findings and deepen the possibilities for collaboration. The event will also discuss the changes that information science can bring to virus research.

Related link (Japanese language only)
Registration Registration Form (Japanese language only)
Contact External Relations Promotion Group, The University of Tokyo
shakairenkeika.adm[at]gs.mail.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


A New Era in early childhood education and care: Sending from Shibuya

   
Date August 28, 2022
Venue SHIBUYA QWS SCRAMBLE HALL / Online
Overview The Graduate School of Education of the University of Tokyo and Shibuya City signed an agreement in May 2018 and have since been mutually collaborating and cooperating for the development of childcare and education as well as for the enhancement of their research. This event has been set up to provide you information about their efforts. In Part I “Starting from the Atelier: Childcare to Explore with Children”, a report on efforts of Reggio Inspire’s Approach to Exploration Activities in Shibuya Nursery School will be provided. In Part II “A New Era in Childcare: Shibuya City and Children”, a cross talk will be held on the relationship between the communities and municipalities and the children and childcare.

Symposium Poster (Japanese language only)
Related link (Japanese language only)
Registration Registration Form (Japanese language only)
Contact External Relations Promotion Group, The University of Tokyo
shakairenkeika.adm[at]gs.mail.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


Tokyo College Lecture “Intangibles, Inequality, and Prolonged Stagnation”

   
Date August 24, 2022
Venue Zoom Webinar
Overview In this webinar, Prof. Kiyotaki discusses how production and income distribution interact with accumulation of intangible capital over time and across individuals. He constructs an economic model in which the younger generation acquires and accumulates intangible capital through the on-the-job training. He shows that, although the development of mid-career labor markets improves the match between firms and workers, such development may increase inequality and lead to long-term stagnation. In response, he will examine the effects of policies that promote basic education and the acquisition of skills outside of firms.

Symposium Poster 
Related link 
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


Can medical care make people happy?

   
Date August 18, 2022
Venue SHIBUYA QWS SCRAMBLE HALL / Online
Overview A lecture will be held to commemorate the opening of the educational program for working adults "The Greater University of Tokyo: Health and Medical Care - Toward a Self-Protective Healthy Society" in September. Professor Ungil Chung will first talk about status and future possibilities of innovative medicine under the title "Frontiers of Innovative Medicine". Professor Emeritus Yoro Takeshi will then give a talk on the topic “What is Happiness?”.
The talks will be followed by a discussion between the speakers on the question of "Can medical care make people happy?" based on the relationship between the social value provided by medical care and the sense of happiness felt by people, as well as answering questions from the participants.
We hope that through this event, we will be able to draw the interest of people from various fields regarding the nature of medical care and the way of thinking to live better lives.

Symposium Poster (Japanese language only)
Related link (Japanese language only)
Registration Registration Form (Japanese language only)
Contact External Relations Promotion Group, The University of Tokyo
shakairenkeika.adm[at]gs.mail.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


2022 TSMC-UTokyo Semiconductor Technology Research Symposia

   
Date August 9-10, 2022
Venue Online
Overview TSMC (Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company) and UTokyo (University of Tokyo) have entered an alliance to pursue organization-wide collaboration in advanced semiconductor technology research, including design, devices, processes, and materials. Under this alliance, several Joint Development Projects (JDPs) have been initiated since 2021. The two-day symposia will introduce published research outcomes and potential areas for future collaborations.

Symposium Poster
Related link
Registration Please register from the related link above
*Eligible applicants: TSMC employees, UTokyo faculty/staff/students
Contact Secretariat of TSMC-UTokyo Symposium 2022
tsmc-ut-2022-group[at]g.ecc.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


Tokyo College Lecture “How the Russo-Ukrainian War is Changing European International Order: The Perspective from Japan”

 
Date July 29, 2022
Venue Koshiba Hall
(University of Tokyo, Hongo Campus) 
Overview The Russo-Ukrainian War is changing the structure of international order and security in Western Europe. How did major Western European powers and NATO members like France and Germany react to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine? Did it mend the EU’s diplomatic and security divisions in Western Europe, or did it instead reaffirm them?
For Japan, which in recent years has been deepening security cooperation with NATO, the conflict in Ukraine could have a major impact on its relationship with the organization. How is Japan’s response to the war in Russia and Ukraine perceived in the West, and how will it affect Japan’s future relations with Western nations?
These questions will be addressed by Dr. Guibourg DELAMOTTE, a Tokyo College Professor for the year 2021-2022 and Senior Lecturer of Japanese Studies Department of the French Institute of Oriental Studies (Inalco), and Dr. IWAMA Yoko, Professor at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies (GRIPS).

Symposium Poster
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


In Conversation with the Author of Who Cooked Adam Smith’s Dinner

 
Date July 19, 2022
Venue Zoom Webinar 
Overview We invite you to discuss an international bestseller "Who Cooked Adam Smith’s Dinner?" with its author Katrine Marçal and a group of Tokyo College researchers.

Symposium Poster
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 






Tokyo College Lecture: “The Future of Europe and the EU-Japan Partnership: The War in Ukraine and its Impact on Europe and Beyond”

 
Date July 12, 2022
Venue Yasuda Auditorium
(University of Tokyo, Hongo Campus) 
Overview The war in Ukraine has shaken our confidence in peace and prosperity within Europe and beyond. What is needed to overcome such a crisis in international relations? H.E. Herman Van Rompuy, President Emeritus of the European Council, leads the discussion by sharing his insights on the future of Europe and Japan which will be followed by Q&A sessions with students and others.

Symposium Poster
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


On “Being Heumann”: A Dialogue About Disability Activism with Judy Heumann

 
Date June 24 - July 22, 2022
Venue Tokyo College YouTube Channel
Overview In this event, disability advocates Judy Heumann and Mark Bookman discuss the past, present, and future of accessibility and inclusion in the United States and Japan. Touching on barriers in built environments, education, employment, and entertainment systems, as well as activist movements and anti-discrimination policies, the two help to highlight a path towards creating a more diverse society in which nobody is excluded.

Symposium Poster
Related link
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 




Tokyo College Lecture: Rethinking Methodology in Global Diplomacy

 
Date June 7, 2022
Venue Koshiba Hall
(University of Tokyo, Hongo Campus) 
Overview Why do we need to rethink about the way we study and make sense of global diplomacy? In this lecture, we will explore how cultural approaches can illuminate important aspects of diplomacy which have not been adequately considered in much of the existing scholarly literature.

Symposium Poster
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


Beyond Women’s Day: Strengthening Communities of Female Talent in Japan

 
Date May 20, 2022
Venue Zoom Webinar
Overview Japan faces a shortage in female talent in the paid workforce, especially in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields. Join us as we invite Ksenia Zolotareva, a Women@JP Career Pillar Lead and Senior Business Consultant at Google Japan, to speak about her experiences and strategies for strengthening communities of female talent in Japan. Women@JP is Google’s Employee Resource Groups (ERG).

Symposium Poster
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


Tokyo College Lecture: Globalisation, Empires, and the Making of the Modern World”

 
Date May 13, 2022
Venue Tetsumon Memorial Hall, Faculty of Medicine Experimental Research Bldg. (University of Tokyo, Hongo Campus)
Overview This talk describes three phases of globalisation that have occupied the last five centuries and their role in making the world we know today. The first two phases were associated with the rise of Western empires, which integrated large parts of the world through a process of compulsory globalisation. The third phase, which began after 1945, brought empires to an end and produced the current world order and disorder.

Symposium Poster
Related link
Registration Registration Form
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


Tokyo College Lecture: “Trade war, global pandemic, Ukraine: What we know, and don’t know, about the new political and economic order”

 
Date May 10, 2022
Venue Tetsumon Memorial Hall, Faculty of Medicine Experimental Research Bldg. (University of Tokyo, Hongo Campus)
Overview Recent years have featured the US-China trade war, the coronavirus pandemic, and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, each of which we can consider “radically uncertain” events that were not in any real sense predictable. This lecture seeks to identify how these events fit into conventional frameworks for explaining the world, how these events might have changed that framework, what elements of the framework remain unknown, and how we should respond to this age of uncertainty.

Symposium Poster
Related link
Registration Registration Form 
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


Interview Series “The Ukraine Crisis: Perspectives From Around the World”

 
Date To be released sequentially throughout April
Venue Tokyo College YouTube Channel
Overview In this series, we ask researchers interested in the politics, economics, cultures, and societies of regions around the world to talk about how the current crisis is being perceived or understood in their area of study.

Symposium Poster (Japanese language only)
Related link
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 


Tokyo College Lecture: “Self-organization for Materials Synthesis”

 
Date April 5, 2022
Venue Tokyo College YouTube Channel
Overview A wide variety of new structures are created using the phenomenon of “self-assembly,” in which molecules spontaneously assemble and order themselves. This presentation introduces the tiny world of manufacturing, where new structures are magically created simply by mixing metal ions and organic molecules.

Symposium Poster (Japanese language only)
Related link
Contact Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo
tokyo.college.event[at]tc.u-tokyo.ac.jp
 
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