検索結果「3d」: 4126件 (うち1件から20件を表示)
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2021年度経済産業省1weekインターンシップの募集について
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ワークルール教育教材受講案内について
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令和3年度やまがた就職促進奨学金返還支援事業/やまがた若者定着枠の募集について
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The online class evaluation (academic) survey AY 2021 through the UTAS
AY2021 the online class evaluation (academic) survey through the UTAS will be carried out for all GraSPP courses whose course number starting with 51, except for Internship, Theses and Research Papers. Other graduate school students who registered GraSPP courses also need to answer surveys. Please log in to the UTAS during the following period and please be sure to complete them. ●How to answer a survey through the UTAS (PDF, 128KB) 【 UTAS class evaluation survey period (including only S1 term class)】 Thursday, 1 July 2021- Monday, 16 August 2021 -
令和3年度参議院法制局インターンシップの募集について
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NOTICE: 9月修了の手続きについて
令和3(2021)年9月の修了を希望する場合は、下記のとおり修了判定願を提出してください。 修了判定願が提出されなかった場合は、 令和3(2021)年9月修了の意思がないものとみなします。
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対象者:令和3(2021)年9月末時点で在学期間が2年以上の者 提出書類:修了判定願(PDF, 8KB) 提出期間:令和3(2021)年6月1日(火)~6月18日(金) 提出先:公共政策大学院学務チーム窓口注1 本判定願を提出し、修了に必要な単位を全て修得した場合は、令和3(2021)年9月末日に修了となる。
注2 在学期間の算定において、休学期間は在学期間に含まれない。また、留学期間は在学期間に含まれる。
注3 入学前の既修得単位の認定や再入学により、修業年限が短縮されている者は、別途その旨申し出ること。
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Application for STIG Program Certificate of Completion for Graduate School Candidates in September 2021
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ [Deadline TODAY] Application for STIG Program Certificate of Completion for Graduate School Candidates in September 2021 [きょう締切] 令和3年 9月大学院修了予定学生対象:STIG修了証申請について ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Students who will be completing graduate school in September 2021 (including those who have completed the term of the doctorate program) will be issued with a STIG program Certification of Completion, if they have satisfied all the necessary requirements and have completed the required application processes. Check your credits and let's apply! ★Application Period – Friday May 7 to Friday, May 28, 2020 TODAY ★ More info – https://stig.pp.u-tokyo.ac.jp/?p=4124 令和3年9月末に本学大学院を修了(博士満期退学を含む)する方で、STIG教育プログラム修了要件(※重要)を満たした方は、UTASから各自が申請を行うことで修了証が交付されます。 ご自身の取得単位を確認の上、お申し込み下さい! ★ 申請期間:令和3年 5月7日(金)~5月28日(金)本日 ★ 詳細はこちら:https://stig.pp.u-tokyo.ac.jp/?p=4122 -
S2 「Case Study (Macroeconomic Policy for Practitioners)」(5140399)
S2 「Case Study (Macroeconomic Policy for Practitioners)」(5140399) Please be reminded that the first day of Case Study (Macroeconomic Policy for Practitioners) is Friday, June 4. All the course materials as well as an information session video are available on ITC-LMS. *** A message from the instructor I am looking forward to meeting all of you at our first class next Friday, June 4. We should have a lot to discuss this semester, as macroeconomic issues are in the news on a daily basis, and macroeconomic policy is quickly evolving to meet new challenges. Some of you may have attended the information session on this course in April. For those that didn’t, a brief presentation from that session is available under Course Guidance on LMS. Please take a look at that, as well as the course syllabus, to see how the course is organized and what the main assignments will be. For the first class, there are two short articles and a podcast assigned. Please read/listen to the material ahead of class. Some of you may be concerned about a lack of background in macroeconomics. Please rest assured that this course is meant to be self-contained and there are no specific prerequisites. In previous semesters, those without a background in macroeconomics have done quite well in this class. On the other hand, if you do have a strong background in macroeconomic theory, the course can serve as a useful complement, since it focuses on practical considerations for policy-makers. In any case, I would be happy to discuss with each of you any specific problems you may have during the semester and to suggest some supplementary reading if appropriate. Unfortunately, as you know, the course will be given online, via Zoom. I have set up the class as a series of recurring Zoom meetings. Best regards, Jerry Schiff Visiting Lecturer Course description This course makes use of key macroeconomic concepts and international practice to analyze real world policy questions and country cases. We will develop a simple and flexible macroeconomic framework, based on the sort of analysis undertaken at the IMF. Using this framework, a number of issues will be examined, including: evaluating monetary and fiscal policies; identifying economic and financial vulnerabilities and proposing corrective policies; and designing economic programs for countries in or near crisis. Country case studies and current economic news and developments will also serve as a starting point for class discussions of key ideas. In particular, we will examine macroeconomic policy needs and lessons in the context of the COVID crisis. This course makes use of key macroeconomic concepts and international practice to analyze real world policy questions and country cases. The one-on-one mock job interview—modeled after job interviews at the IMF—will play the role of final exam. We will develop a simple and flexible macroeconomic framework, based on the sort of analysis undertaken at the IMF. Using this framework, a number of issues will be examined, including: evaluating monetary and fiscal policies; identifying economic and financial vulnerabilities and proposing corrective policies; and designing economic programs for countries in or near crisis. Country case studies and current economic news and developments will also serve as a starting point for class discussions of key ideas. In particular, we will examine macroeconomic policy needs and lessons in the context of the COVID crisis. Instructors’ bio Jerald Schiff, Visiting Lecturer https://www.pp.u-tokyo.ac.jp/en/faculty/schiff-jerald/ Jerry Schiff retired from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in 2015, after 25 years there. At the IMF, he held a number of positions, most notably as Deputy Director of the Asia and Pacific Department and as Senior Advisor in the Office of the Managing Director. In the former, he helped develop IMF policy toward the Asia region and also served as the head of teams for Japan, Korea, India, Singapore, and Myanmar. In the latter position, he helped the IMF’s management oversee its overall agenda and management of the 2008-10 global finial crisis. As part of this effort, he took part in a number of international meetings, including the G-20 and G-7. Since that time, he has been involved in education and training in a number of settings. He has taught both graduate and undergraduate courses at American University School of International Service and the George Washington University Elliott School of International Affairs. These courses have included International Financial Relations, International Trade Relations, and Economic Crises and Rescues. He has also had a recurring visiting position at the University of Tokyo Graduate School of Public Policy, where he has taught a course on Macroeconomic Policy for Practitioners, building on his experience at the IMF. He has also provided training in macroeconomic and financial policy-making to a wide range of public officials in Asian and Europe as a consultant to the IMF Institute. Prior to joining the IMF, Mr. Schiff spent four years as Assistant Professor of Economics at Tulane University, and one year as a visiting scholar at The United States Treasury. He received his Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1984 and his B.S. in Economics from Cornell University in 1979. His current academic interests lie in preventing and mitigating economic crises, and the economies of Japan and Asia more broadly. Toshiro Nishizawa, Professor https://www.pp.u-tokyo.ac.jp/en/faculty/nishizawa-toshiro/ Mr. Nishizawa has been a faculty member of GraSPP since 2013 after serving as Director General of Country Credit Department at Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC). He also served as Deputy Director General of JBIC Institute and was involved in JBIC's country operations in Asia. His earlier professional career includes positions at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, IMF and the World Bank. Mr. Nishizawa holds a BA in economics from the University of Tokyo and an MSc in economics from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He has written articles on Asian economies, Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) and sovereign debt. He was a visiting professor at Chulalongkorn University in Thailand and EAESP-FGV in Brazil. -
(Institution Added!) Summer Internship 2021 for GraSPP Students
Application for Summer Internship offered to GraSPP students is now open. Please check the internship information sheets of each institution from the link below. 1. Asian Development Bank Institute (website) 2. GR Japan (website) (5/28new!)3. Music Securities (website) 1. Application a) Application Form Please submit from here b) Document Submission Please submit the following documents in PDF to <ppsupport.j[at]gs.mail.u-tokyo.ac.jp> (replace [at] with @) with the subject line “Internship Application (Name)”. -CV (with your portrait photo) -Statement of Purpose (for each institution if multiply chosen) 2. Deadline May 31st, 2021 3. Important notice for scholars a) World Bank scholars are only allowed to apply for unpaid internship and need to notify to the World Bank by sending information on the internship to JJ/WBGSP email address. b) ADB scholars need to notify to the ADB by a letter with information on the internship through GraSPP Office before applying for the internship and obtain permission from the ADB first. c) IMF scholars are only allowed to apply for unpaid internship with approval both from their sponsoring agency and GraSPP before application. d) JDS scholars need to consult with JICE for the procedure before starting internship. 4. Selection Interview Selection Interview with faculty members will be arranged and GraSPP will recommend the shortlisted applicants to each institution for the final selection. The result will be announced by email from the Graduate School Office. 5. Others -For your information, please check through the todo list attached below after you get shortlisted as a GraSPP intern. -Please note that the intern positions listed above are not guaranteed. -If you would like to know past interns' records, please check the internship reports. If you wish to confirm more details, we have other records that are not released on the website so please feel free to ask us. -Once you complete internship, you are required to submit a report (300-500 words). Some of the reports will be posted on GraSPP website with your permission. Inquiries to: Manami Sato (Ms.) (ppsupport.j[at]gs.mail.u-tokyo.ac.jp)