検索結果「3d」: 4235件 (うち1件から20件を表示)
-
-
Scholarship: 公益財団法人佐藤陽国際奨学財団2021年度派遣海外留学奨学金の募集について *Japanese nationality required
-
The 7th PKU-UTokyo Forum
We welcome you to attend The 7th PKU-UTokyo Forum “Future Direction of US-China-Japan Relations Post the U.S. Presidential Election”. It will be held online on 13 January 2021, 13:00-17:00 Tokyo time. Zoom Webinar Language: English Programme Opening Remarks by - Hideaki Shiroyama, Professor, Graduate Schools for Law and Politics, the University of Tokyo - Tang Shiqi, Dean School of International Studies, Peking University Session 1 "The U.S.-China-Japan Relationship from Political and Economic Perspectives" Moderator: - Yu Tiejun, Associate Professor, School of International Studies, Peking University Panelist: - Gui Yongtao, Associate Professor, School of International Studies, Peking University - Yasuhiro Matsuda, Professor, Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia, the University of Tokyo Session 2 "The US-China-Japan Relationship and Global Governance" Moderator: - Hideaki Shiroyama, Professor, Graduate Schools for Law and Politics, the University of Tokyo Panelist: - Keisuke Iida, Professor, Graduate School of Public Policy, the University of Tokyo - Lei Shaohua, Assistant Professor, School of International Studies, Peking University - Bei Jin, Assistant Professor, Graduate School of Public Policy, the University of Tokyo - Zha Daojiong, Professor, School of International Studies, Peking University Closing Remarks by: - DONG Zhaohua, Associate Professor, Vice Dean of School of International Studies, Peking University - Akio Takahara, Professor, Graduate School of Public Policy, the University of Tokyo Faculty and students of UTokyo and Peking University are welcome. Pre-registration required. Please register through the google form link below by 5th January (First-come-first-served basis). The details and link for accessing this webinar by Zoom will be provided in the register confirmation email. Registration: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeNCcl3QroNEQFDrpwWNaPBbyGXIbn09eGQHEblOBgJw0y7JQ/viewform?usp=pp_url -
外務省「第36回国際問題プレゼンテーション・コンテスト」* Japanese fluency required.
-
令和2年度「復興・創生インターンシップ」の募集について
-
Mr. Hiroshi Majima, Toyota Motor Corporation, Mr. Masataka Abe, Nishi-Nippon Railroad Co., Ltd.、NNR, Mr. Hirokazu Kinoshita, Kyushu Railway Company
https://www.pp.u-tokyo.ac.jp/en/events/2020-12-04-27903/ -
“Choisoco initiatives which is analogue but user-friendly MaaS -aiming for sustainable public transport-” Mr. Hiromi Kato, AISIN SEIKI Co.,Ltd.
https://www.pp.u-tokyo.ac.jp/en/events/2020-12-03-27887/ -
Notification from Graduate School of Economics Regarding Special Term Exams
https://www.pp.u-tokyo.ac.jp/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/Regarding-special-term-exams.pdf -
NOTICE: The University of Tokyo 2020 Spring Semester Diploma Presentation Ceremony
The University of Tokyo will hold the Diploma Presentation Ceremony for AY2020 as follows. Date&Time: From 10:00 to 11:15 on Friday, 19 March, 2021 Venue: Yasuda Auditorium (Address: 7-3-1, Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo) (Campus Map) Eligibility: Those who graduated (will graduate) between October2020 and March 2021 (However, only the representatives can participate in the ceremony.) For those who are unable to attend the ceremonies, a live stream of the ceremony will be provided via the Internet. In the afternoon of the same day the GraSPP Diploma Presentation Ceremony will take place. However, the details have not decided yet and subject to changes (including the cancellation of the ceremony) depending on the university activities restrictions caused by the covid-19 pandemics. The GraSPP Graduate School Office will notify its schedule of graduating students directly. -
Prof. Yasutora Watanabe
I work in the field of empirical microeconomics and quantitative marketing, and conduct empirical research using microdata to study the behaviors of a wide range of economic agents, including patients, doctors, local banks, taxi drivers, voters, politicians, and consumers at vending machines. Although the topics may vary, the research methodology and empirical approaches I adopt are similar for both policy-related topics and business-related research topics. At GraSPP, we have students from a wide variety of nationalities and professions, who have a diversity of interests in various fields, and I hope that this environment helps them to broaden their horizons and acquire skills that they can apply in society. I enjoy GraSPP’s environment whereby we have students and professors from a wide variety of backgrounds having diverse interests. I hope that this environment and the stimulating atmosphere resulting from it help the students (and me) to broaden their horizons and acquire skills that they can apply in public policy and related fields. I work in the field of empirical microeconomics (industrial organization, political economics, and law and economics) and quantitative marketing. I conduct empirical research using microdata to study the behaviors of a wide range of economic agents, including patients, doctors, local banks, taxi drivers, voters, politicians, and consumers at vending machines. I engage in both descriptive-type research that uses a causal inference approach to test hypotheses and a structural estimation approach that fully exploits economic models (such as game-theoretic models) to simulate the counterfactual impacts of yet unimplemented policies. At GraSPP, I teach a standard graduate-level microeconomics core course and a class that reads papers on the frontiers of political economics and studies how policies are determined as a result of the behaviors of politicians, voters, judges, lobbyists, and other actors. After graduating from college, I started my career as an aid officer for a Japanese aid agency out of a desire to work in the field of development. It was the time of the Asian financial crisis in the late 1990s, and I found myself strongly frustrated with the policies economists at international organizations were forcing on the countries I was working for. In search of the tools that would enable me to counter their arguments head on, I embarked on study for my PhD degree. For various reasons, I did not become a development economist after all, and have been working at business schools and a tech company after receiving my degree. Although policymaking and business may appear to have not much in common, the econometric methods used to evaluate government policies and business decisions are the same. I moved from a tech company to GraSPP, with the aim of once again focusing my efforts on policy-related research. GraSPP is a unique place that is not bound by the conventional image that people may have of the University of Tokyo, or of a graduate school in Japan. Students are from a wide variety of nationalities and professions, and their interests are similarly diverse. There is also vigorous international exchange through such programs as the Master of Public Policy, International Program, the CAMPUS Asia Program, and the exchange and double degree programs, with many classes being taught in English. (All of my classes will be in English next year.) It is perhaps only a slight exaggeration to say that you could almost forget that you are in Tokyo. The wide variety of backgrounds is not limited to the students either—the teaching staff are similarly diverse. The atmosphere here is lively and motivated, and there is also a sense among students and staff that efforts must be made to sustain that atmosphere. I look forward to learning and conducting research with the students and other community members of GraSPP to create new knowledge together.