VSJF Redaktion (Nonnenberg), 26.01.2010
Call for Papers - Annual Conference 2010
Call for Papers for the Annual Conference of the German Association for Social Science Research on Japan (VSJF), November 26 – 28, 2010 in Frankfurt / Main, Germany)
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VSJF-Redaktion, 23.02.2010
VSJF Annual Conference 2009
The 2009 VSJF annual meeting
has addressed the topic "Risk and East Asia". It has taken place from Friday, November 20 to Sunday, November 23, 2009 at the Japanese German Center Berlin. For more information, please refer to the report on the conference:
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Annette Schad-Seifert, 26.02.2009
VSJF – Annual Conference 2008
The 2008 VSJF annual meeting
has addressed the topic "Demographic Change in Japan and the EU – Comparative Perspectives". It has taken place from Friday, November 28 to Sunday, November 30, 2008 at the Mutterhaus, Düsseldorf (Kaiserswerth). For more information, please refer to the report on the conference:
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Wolfram Manzenreiter and Iris Wieczorek, 04.07.2008
Special Issue Social Science Japan Journal published
As a result of the conference "Social Science Matters" in Hamburg in November 2006 the special issue of Social Science Japan Journal "SOCIAL SCIENCE MATTERS: INQUIRIES INTO THE CURRENT STATE OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCES IN JAPAN” has just been published (Volume 11, Number 1, Summer 2008; guest editors: Wolfram Manzenreiter und Iris Wieczorek).
The following articles are included (see also http://ssjj.oxfordjournals.org/ content/vol11/issue1/index.dtl)
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VSJF-Redaktion, 26.02.2009
VSJF - Annual Conference 2007
The 2007 VSJF annual meeting has focused on "Security and Insecurity: New Challenges for Japan in the Beginning of the 21st Century". It has taken place from Friday, November 23 to Sunday, November 25, 2007 at the JDZB, Saargemuender Str. 2, 14195 Berlin.
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Annual Conference 2007VJSF-Redaktion, 14.10.2007
Invitation Text
Conference Programm
Registration
Security and Insecurity: New Challenges for Japan
in the Beginning of the 21st Century
This year's VSJF annual meeting will take a closer look at the concept of security in Japan.
Since the end of the Cold War, Japan's security environment has changed significantly. While the United States is still Japan's most important security partner, the nature of the partnership has changed as a result of new demands from the United States, but also due to new challenges for Japan such as the North Korean nuclear program and the rise of China. Moreover, the Japanese government and foreign policy establishment have been confronted with new, „non-traditional“ security threats such as international terrorism, the spread of infectious diseases, and global environmental threats. At the same time, on the domestic level, neo-liberal economic reforms, demographic change and the consequences of economic globalization put into question the sustainability of the current Japanese lifestyle and lead to a heightened sense of insecurity among many Japanese.
The conference will take up these issues and expand the standard discussions on security and insecurity in Japan by bringing together people from both the study of international relations and Japanese domestic politics, economy and society. Conference panels will address issues of „traditional“ security policy, i.e. military security, and newly arising issues of regional security arrangements, but will also take a closer look at the security implications of economic globalization, such as environmental and energy security. The conference will address these issues by looking at both domestic Japanese and international discourses about security and insecurity and related general debates in international relations.
By doing so, the conference aims at providing new insights into Japanese and international discourses on security as well as the ways in which security is conceptualized in Japan. By bringing together experts from various fields and institutions from Japan, Germany, and Europe, the conference also offers unique comparative insights.
Verena Blechinger-Talcott (FU Berlin)

Conference programm available for download ››
JAPANESE-GERMAN CENTER BERLIN [JDZB]
and
GERMAN ASSOCIATION FOR SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH ON JAPAN [VSJF]
TENTATIVE PROGRAM
for the symposium
Security and Insecurity: New Challenges for Japan in the Beginning of the 21st Century
from Friday, November 23 - Sunday, November 25, 2007
at the JDZB, Saargemuender Str. 2, 14195 Berlin
(as of 8-10-07 wo)
12.00 h Documentary on the the election campaign for the House of Councillors' elections in August 2007
Axel KLEIN Friday
November 23
13.30 h Registration
14.00 h
Opening
Friederike BOSSE (JDZB)
Wolfram Manzenreiter (VSJF)
Verena BLECHINGER-TALCOTT (FU Berlin, for the Organizers)
14.20 h
Keynote Speech: Securing Japan
Richard SAMUELS (MIT)
15.30 h
Coffee break
16.00 h
Panel 1: New Approaches to Japanese Security Policy
Chair: N.N.
Japan 's Re-Militarization?
Chris HUGHES (University of Warwick)
Effective for Peace? JSDF peacekeeping operations since 1992
Garren MULLOY (Daitô Bunka University)
Collective Self-Defense or no Defense? Japan's Rough Sailing between Dilemmas and Challenges
Markus TIDTEN (SWP – German Institute for International and Security Affairs, Berlin)
Discussant Paul MIDFORD (NTNU Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim)
18.00 h
Dinner
Saturday, November 24
9.30 h
Panel 2: Regional Security Aspects and Japan's Role
Chair: N.N.
Issues in Japanese-Chinese Relations - From 'Special Relationship' to 'Mutually Beneficial Relationship Based on Common Strategic Interests'
Reinhard DRIFTE (University of Newcastle)
Coming to Terms with the Past: How can History Contribute to Security in Japanese-Korean Relations?
Wolfgang SEIFERT (Heidelberg University)
Energy Security: Japan in Competition with China and India
Frank UMBACH (DGAP – German Council on Foreign Relations, Berlin)
Discussant Hartwig HUMMEL (Düsseldorf University)
12.00 h
Lunch
13.30 h
Panel 3: Population Insecurity and Migration
Chair: N.N.
Political Economy or Cultural Politics? A Political-Theoretical Perspective on Immigration in Japan
Takashi KIBE (International Christian University)
Issues of (In)security in Japan’s Migration Policy
Gabriele VOGT (DIJ – German Institute of Japanese Studies, Tokyo)
Societal Reproduction at Risk: Reverse Function of the Livelihood Security System in Japan
Mari OSAWA (University of Tokyo)
Indispensable Future Workforce? Discourses on and Realities of Foreign Workers in Japan
David CHIAVACCI (FU Berlin)
Discussant Dietrich THRÄNHARDT (Münster University)
16.00 h
Coffee Break
16.15 h
VSJF Working Group Meetings
18.00 h
Dinner
19.30 h
VSJF Business Meeting
Sunday, November 25
9.30 h
Panel 4: Domestic Discourses on Security
Chair: N.N.
The Environmental Dimension of Japanese Security. Enlarging Perceptions of Risk
Miranda SCHREURS (FU Berlin)
Heightened Threat Perception and the Future of Japan’s Anti-Militarism
Wilhelm VOSSE (International Christian University, Tokyo)
Consuming Risk: The Governing of Risks over Livelihood in Japan
Hiroko TAKEDA (Sheffield University)
Discussant N.N.
11.00 h
Coffee Break
11.15 h
Final Panel Discussion
'Normal State', 'Beautiful Country' and Human Security -
New Trends in Japanese Security Policy in Comparative Perspective
Chair: N.N.
Japanese Journalist tbc
Japanese Embassy representative tbc
German MP tbc
Paul MIDFORD (NTNU)
Richard SAMUELS (MIT)
13.00 h
End of the symposium
supported by
FRIEDRICH-EBERT FOUNDATION
FU BERLIN
ERNST-POENSGEN-FOUNDATION
