検索結果「3d」: 4126件 (うち1件から20件を表示)
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A1A2「刑事政策」(5111110)※再掲示
「刑事政策」の履修について
水曜2限に開講される「刑事政策」(川出敏裕教授)の履修を希望する学生は,所定の申込用紙を下記よりダウンロードし,9月2日(月)から9月9日(月)(午後5時まで)の期間内に,公共政策大学院チームに提出してください。 9月13日(金) までに,履修許可者の発表(掲示)をいたします。なお,履修を許可された後の撤回は認められませんので注意してください。 申込書(公共政策大学院) -
時事通信社自治体地域交通セミナー10月4日「地域交通のイノベーション ~MaaS構築のために~」
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令和元年8月の前線に伴う大雨による災害で被災した世帯の学生の皆さんへ
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学内講演会「国際機関へのキャリアパスとインターンシップ」
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Study Abroad: Call for Application “AEARU Winter Abroad Program 2019-2020 at Yonsei University”
Study Abroad: Call for Application “AEARU Winter Abroad Program 2019-2020 at Yonsei University” * The application guideline in English will be available shortly. The application guideline for “AEARU Winter Abroad Program 2019-2020 at Yonsei University” has been announced on the Go Global website. Those who wish to apply for this program should read the guideline carefully and submit necessary documents directly to the International Exchange Group through UTAS. The application deadline is 12pm on Thursday, 17th October. Notes: Before application, please consult the GraSPP Graduate School Office during the program term to be fully aware of potential academic affairs you need to know. Application documents should be scanned and uploaded to UTAS in PDF format. Please note that UTAS does not accept applications for any reason after the deadline. -
Asian Development Bank’s Internship Program is Now Accepting Applicants (2020 1st Batch)
The Asian Development Bank (ADB) welcomes motivated, open-minded, and self-directed individuals to apply for the Internship Program. ADB offers an experiential and project-oriented learning opportunities for graduate students. The assignments vary broadly and depend on the business needs every year.
It would interest you to know that we are preparing for the 2020 Internship Program - First Batch (Application period: 15 July to 15 September 2019, On-boarding: January 2020 onwards) The internship program offers the students an opportunity to: • Work in a major international development organization; • Work collaboratively with experienced professionals from over 50 different countries; • Gain a deeper understanding of development finance and the impact of the work ADB does • Contribute to ADB's business through research outputs. Internship candidates must: • be enrolled in a Master's- or PhD-level program at a school in one of the ADB member nations, both prior to and after the internship assignment; • be engaged in academic study in a field directly related to ADB's work; • be a national of one of ADB's members; • possess an excellent command of English; and • have professional experience relevant to the assignment. ADB pays all interns a limited amount of stipend. Interns are responsible for other expenses including own living accommodations. ADB supports interns to obtain visa for the assigned locations if needed. For more information, please visit our Internship Program site. Internship opportunities are now posted for application. Interested applicants may register and apply at ADB Career and Employment System (ACES). Please click on the position titles below for detailed information, instructions, and application procedures. INTERN OPPORTUNITIES Position Title Department Internship TopicRequisition No.
Closing Date
Intern - Urban Development, Water Supply & Sanitation Division, PARD - 2015 Pacific Department "Population increase pattern in cities and towns development in Pacific countries."190545
15 Sep 2019
Intern - The Secretary's Office - 2014 Office of the Secretary "Depending on time available, one or more of the following: Thoughts on the implementation of ADB’s Operational Plans, Gender Mainstreaming, Healthy Oceans, strengthening ADB’s profile as a Knowledge Institution, and ADB’s Disaster and Emergency Assistance Policy."190534
15 Sep 2019
Intern - Solutions Delivery Division, OIST - 2012 Office of Information Systems and Technology "Implementation of a Data Governance Framework and a new data platform."190464
15 Sep 2019
Intern - Office of the Director General, EARD - 2002 East Asia Department "Gender dimension of sustainable consumption and production."190450
15 Sep 2019
Intern - Office of the Head, OAI - 2009 Office of Anticorruption and Integrity "Review of how ADB’s Anticorruption Policy (1998, as amended to date) and the Integrity Principles and Guidelines (2015, as amended from time to time) (IPG) have been cascaded to or reflected in ADB’s rules, regulations, contracts and other standard forms."190461
15 Sep 2019
Intern - Energy Division, CWRD - 2001 Central and West Asia Department "Improving awareness for Energy Efficiency in Central Asia."190449
15 Sep 2019
Intern - Social Sectors and Public Sector Management Division, PARD - 2004 Pacific Department "The intern will review the state of vulnerability and adequacy of social protection in the Pacific particularly the existing social protection programs in Tonga, Papua New Guinea (PNG) and Fiji and provide recommendations on the overall gaps to be addressed and identify innovative social protection models feasible in the country context."190456
15 Sep 2019
Intern - Advisory Division 1, OPPP - 2003 Office of Public-Private Partnership "a. Assisting business development for ADB’s advisory services; b. Supporting implementation of OPPP’s transaction advisory services in various projects in ADB Developing Member Countries (DMCs)."190455
15 Sep 2019
Intern - Safeguards Division - 2007 Sustainable Development and Climate Change Department "Sustainable coastal and marine tourism in Asia and the Pacific."190459
15 Sep 2019
Intern - Urban Development and Water Division, SERD - 2008 Southeast Asia Department "Pollution Reduction in Coastal Cities in the Philippines for Healthy Oceans."190460
15 Sep 2019
Intern - Treasury Services Division - 2010 Treasury Department "Applied Data Analytics for Treasury Operations."190462
15 Sep 2019
Intern - Education SG, SDSC - 2006 Sustainable Development and Climate Change Department "Human Capital and Skill Needs for Smart Cities."190458
15 Sep 2019
Intern - Climate Change & Disaster Risk Management Division - 2005 Sustainable Development and Climate Change Department "Carbon market, climate change mitigation, Article 6 Support Facility, emission trading, Clean Development Mechanism, Nationally Determined Contributions."190457
15 Sep 2019
Intern - Business Relationships and IT Strategy Division - 2013 Office of Information Systems and Technology "Catalyzing emerging digital technologies."190465
15 Sep 2019
Intern - Risk Policy and Infrastructure Division - 2011 Office of Risk Management "Quantitative Analysis in Risk and Capital Management."190463
15 Sep 2019
Contact:
ADB Internship Program adbintern@adb.org (http://www.adb.org/site/careers/internship-program)
Follow ADB Careers on LinkedIn and adb.org/careers Follow ADB on Facebook and Twitter www.adb.org -
Choe Siah
― You started at The University of Tokyo as an undergraduate? My parents had urged me to study overseas, and in my third year in high school I applied for a program run by Japan’s Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology. As I was lucky enough to qualify, I did a year of preparatory study learning Japanese at The Tokyo University of Foreign Studies before starting at the Faculty of Economics, The University of Tokyo, which features excellent researchers and teachers together with a well-stocked library. One of the things that surprised me the most when I started as an undergraduate was how few women there were. Added to that, because my department had only 5% overseas students, I felt myself to be very much in a minority, being both a woman and from overseas. In contrast, this sense of being part of a minority all but disappeared when I started at GraSPP this year and found myself among people from a wide range of backgrounds, including different nationalities and ages. I like the comfortable atmosphere where you feel free to talk to people even if you don’t yet know their name, such as commenting on how hard the day’s lesson has been. I also find it interesting how many students have an awareness of the issues, having heard recently that a voluntary group for female empowerment has been started by students. ― It’s certainly true that GraSPP has students from many different countries and age ranges. While it is always the case when a large number of people get together that their opinions will differ, I find it constructive that such differences can be overcome through mutual discussion. While there are all sorts of definitions of what it means to be “international”, for myself, communicating with people in ways that do not discriminate or judge on the basis of each other’s nationality is a major component. Obviously, being Korean and a woman are both aspects of who I am, but even so, the best relationships in my view are those in which you can talk to each other without impressions being filtered by the person’s nationality or gender. While these things differ from person to person, one example is how much I prefer being introduced to someone I haven’t met before not as an overseas student from Korea but as a “tomodachi” (friend). While it is not unusual for the subject of nationality to come up when getting to know someone for the first time, I look forward to developing a mutual understanding with the person in the hope that I will be able to talk to them further. Given that there is still so much I don’t know about Japan despite having lived here for six years now, I am in no position to pass judgment about Japanese people having particular traits or to say that things are done in such and such a way in Japan. Likewise, one of the benefits of having been an overseas student in Japan is that it has freed me from stereotypical thinking about how things are in places like China or America. ― Why did you choose to major in economics? It was participation in volunteer work as a high school student that first prompted my interest in the subject. Out of concern for the problem of poverty, I joined a project to provide footwear to children in Africa who were prevented from going to school by the simple physical problem of lacking shoes. As collecting donations to buy new shoes for sending to the recipients was fraught with all sorts of problems during delivery, sometimes resulting in the shoes never reaching the children, our project involved drawing an attractive design on white shoes and sending these. I acquired my interest in development economics by thinking about questions such as why poverty happens and why past attempts to overcome it have proved ineffective. As my undergraduate studies did not go far enough, I chose to go on to graduate school. Right now my aim is to study hard and grow as a person, while in the future my hope is to find work that is beneficial to society. -
Ryosuke Mitake
While I dreamed and expected how amazing and dramatic exchange life in Paris will be, it turned out to be the hardest days in my life but ended up as the most dynamic conversion of my life path dramatically. HEC, the most prestigious business school in Europe, was the best option for my career as a social entrepreneur because I had been enthusiastic to help other people and create solutions for social problems and issues so I studied public policy in GraSPP and had already established social business association before my exchange. In that moment, my highest virtue and belief were the life for others and the stance was almost close to devotion. However, my vision and paths were converted unexpectedly and vigorously. After one month passed in France, I commenced contacting local entrepreneurs, being excited to discover and explore another perspective of views. Then, I met the one who tries to create an immortal business that enables human beings to live as long as we want. Of course, I was astonished and thus asked the reason why he creates this project. And he said, “Just because I do not want to die.” I totally lost my words because I’ve never encountered this kind of pure and persuasive motive which arose from his own heart. Furthermore, visiting other entrepreneurs made me realize that the concept of inner personal desire is the way of thinking in France, while the concept of outer personal demand is the way of thinking in Japan. Of course, both approaches have advantages and disadvantages. For example, in France, a variety of arts and luxury brands are well known but public services including train and government don’t work well. On the other hand, in Japan, sophisticated and user-friendly industrial products and public services are developed perfectly but we are not used to coming up with intuitive inventions. As I grew up on an isolated island, in Japan, my mindset was stuck and restricted within the Japanese common sense. What I want. What I desire then. I had never known. I was like a donut that has only a social circle outside. Therefore, I got rid of all of my ideas, efforts, will, the expectations which are embedded into my mind and suppressing my expression unconsciously, and I tried to start accepting myself as it is. Then I was awakened to my unconscious mind all of a sudden. When I have complexity or issues in mind, I’m used to meditating. So, I implemented the meditation over 3 nights without sleeping and eating. Then all at once, I started feeling emotions from things in itself. Resonation with air, water, walls, paved, trees and everything turned up beyond cognition and representation, as my personal subject melted into things and the feeling became timeless and endless in my own universe. The peak experience enhanced my sensibility and let me invent a new way of photography making me dive into the same experience again and again. I realized why I was not fulfilled and sympathized with my previous work and achievement in architecture and social business. My creation was suppressed by social and collective orders, trying to keep exceeding expectations under pressure. Therefore, I was unable to find out production with personal pure desire. However, I now transcended social and intersubjective judgment and reputation, establishing absolute individual discipline. I don’t know if my current photography works are accepted by society right now, but it does not matter at all. I’m satisfied and fulfilled with myself as never before. Therefore, paradoxically, I believe that there are original and unique potentials in my work to bring out unexpected and brand-new perspectives in our society. To sum up, this exchange released me from unconscious suppression or cultural idola, and consequently, it enabled me to understand and express myself just the way I am with whole happiness, leaving the burden as if I got the great wings. The new story of my life has just begun! Lastly, I would like to express my deepest appreciation to Aoshima san, Saito san in GraSPP, M. Doguet, Mme. Agnes in HEC, and lovely friends, for offering benevolent help and support during my exchange. Without their kindness, my exchange would not be possible and continuable. Ps: Please visit France at least once in your life <3 I’ve visited 50 countries already but France is one of the best! Throughout a Bicycle trip of over 2000 km in France, each place showed me the mesmerizing and profound cultures and landscapes beyond expectation always! Cote d’azur, Provence, Conte, Alsace, Normandy and etc. There are too many places to discover.Once you fall in love France, you cannot leave the country easily :)
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(REPOST) Campus tour guide in the orientation in September
The GraSPP Graduate School Office is looking for senior students who can be a campus tour guide in the orientation in September, 2019. If you would like to participate in the tour as a guide, please inform us of your name, ID number and contact information (e-mail address and/or mobile phone number) via e-mail or directly at the Graduate School Office. Date&Time: Thursday, September 19, 2:30pm – (approx. 1.5 hour) Guided facilities: Intl’ Academic Research Bldg., Law Library, Library of Econ., GraSPP student space in Akamon General Research Bldg. etc. The GraSPP Graduate School Office Tel.: 03-5841-1349 E-mail: ppin[at]j.u-tokyo.ac.jp