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TCJS Seminar Series | The Politics of Child Custody in Japan and Beyond

January 29, 2024

Details

Type Lecture
Intended for General public / Enrolled students / Applying students / International students / Alumni / Companies / University students / Academic and Administrative Staff
Date(s) February 8, 2024 09:00 — 10:00
Location Online
Capacity 100 people
Entrance Fee No charge
Registration Method Advance registration required
 https://tcjs.u-tokyo.ac.jp/archives/6712 (Please register from this link)
Registration Period January 25, 2024 — February 8, 2024
Contact contact@tcjs.u-tokyo.ac.jp
TCJS Seminar Series

<Title>
The Politics of Child Custody in Japan and Beyond

<Speaker>
Allison ALEXY  
Associate Professor, University of Michigan

<Moderator>
Sawako SHIRAHASE
Director of TCJS

<Abstract>
In 2023, a committee from the Ministry of Justice announced the possibility that a joint custody option might be created for divorcing parents in Japan. Before this change, divorced parents must pick one person to hold legal custody, and now more than 80% of custody is granted to mothers. For decades, activists within and beyond Japan have been advocating for a joint custody option, focusing particularly on fathers’ loss of rights and connections with their children after divorce. In particular, international cases of so-called “parental abduction,” when one parent takes their child and refuses access to the other parent, have drawn more global media attention to Japanese family law and custody rules, prompting diplomatic and political calls for change. In this presentation, I examine the questions and debates surrounding child custody within Japan and as a global topic, including violence within families, fathers’ rights, and parental alienation. 

<About the speaker>
Allison Alexy is an Associate Professor in the Department of Women’s and Gender Studies at the University of Michigan. She is a cultural anthropologist focused on contemporary Japan and investigates changing norms for romantic relationships and legal constructions of intimacy contextualized within the rapid societal changes in recent decades. Intimate Disconnections: Divorce and the Romance of Independence in Contemporary Japan, was published through open access and in Japanese and Chinese translations. She has co-edited Home and Family in Japan and Intimate Japan, and is the editor for the Asia Pop! series from the University of Hawai’i Press.

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