Home > Japanese Studies and Intellectual Exchange > Intellectual Exchange > Hosted/Co-hosted Events > Asia Leadership Fellow Program > 2000 Fellows

Asia Leadership Fellow Program - 2000 Fellows
1.Saree AONGSOMWAG (Thailand)
Executive
Secretary, Confederation of Consumer Organization, Thailand (CCOT)
ALFP Research Topic in Japan: Consumer Movement in the Globalization Era
Ms. Saree Aongsomwang is a pioneer and a respected spokesperson in Thailand's
consumer protection movement. She was instrumental in several successful
health campaigns, such as rational drug use in the countryside, the rights
of patients, the campaign against amendments to Thailand's Pharmaceutical
Patent Act, and the rights of consumers. Ms. Saree has established a consumer
magazine which is the first "alternative" magazine for consumers
and that tackles consumer rights, consumer protection, misleading products
and product testing, to name a few.
The magazine has become widely read
and has forced the mainstream media to adapt by including consumer protection
columns in newspapers and magazines. She also established the "Complaints
and Legal Assistance Center" for complainants, particularly the underprivileged,
as another part of the consumer protection program of her foundation. She
is regularly invited to appear on TV and radio to educate the public on
consumers' rights, and her views are regularly featured in the press and
on radio programs.
2.Urvashi BUTALIA (India)
Founder,
Kali for Women
ALFP Research Topic: Globalization, Culture and Gender
Ms. Butalia is a well-known figure in gender studies not only in India
but also in Europe and the United States. She co-founded Kali for Women,
the first feminist publisher in India, which has published various books
on gender issues in India. She has been active in the women's movement
in India. She has also been active in researching the modern history of
India, and her book The Other Side of Silence: Voices from the Partition
of India, an oral history of the tragic separation of India and Pakistan,
has been a bestseller in India. She is also an active participant in international
citizen's exchange conferences, where she speaks on behalf of Indian women.
3.FARUK (Indonesia)
Lecturer,
Faculty of Letters, Gadjah Mada University
ALFP Research Topic in Japan: Orality and Global Culture-Indonesian Experience
in Globalization
Dr. Faruk is a scholar who is interested in recent international issues
of theoretical and practical questions of culture. He is also a renowned
literary critic on contemporary Indonesian literature, and has written
many articles on literature and culture in general; he has been published
in journals of culture, the arts and literature. He is also interested
in theater productions which show dramatists' perceptions of the most recent
issues in society, as he believes that the arts should reflect the experiences
of the artists, individually as well as societally.
4.KUMAOKA, Michiya (Japan)
President,
Japan International Volunteer Center (JVC)
ALFP Research Topic: Role of NGOs in Peace Building/Conflict Prevention
Mr. Kumaoka is one of the founding members of the Japan International Volunteer
Center (JVC), which was founded in Bangkok in 1980 in order to give assistance
to refugees from Indo-China. Through the activities of JVC, he has worked
as a vocational instructor at refugee camps or vocational schools in Thailand,
Cambodia and Vietnam, and has been involved in numerous emergency relief
activities as well as rural development and environmental protection for
the past 20 years.
He is currently a board member of various organizations,
including the Japanese NGO Center for International Cooperation (JANIC)
and Japan Campaign to Ban Landmine (JCBL), as well as Secretary General
of the Relief Campaign for Children in North Korea, Japan, and the People's
Forum on Cambodia, Japan.
5.PARK, Won-Soon (Korea)
Secretary
General, People's Solidarity for Participatory Democracy (PSPD)
ALFP Research Topic in Japan: NGOs, Non-Profits
Mr. Park came to be known as a human rights lawyer through his involvement
in legal support activities for political prisoners, and made a great contribution
to the democratization movement in Korea in the 1980s. In 1994, he participated
in the formation of the People's Solidarity for Participatory Democracy
(PSPD), which advocates social justice by monitoring power abuse or corruption,
presents alternative policies, and encourages the social participation
of the people.
For the nationwide campaign for a fair and just general
election which took place in April, 2000, he acted as the representative
of the "Citizens' Alliance for the 2000 General Election (CAGE)," and
led the movement successfully by bringing down 70 percent of the listed
unfit candidates not to be elected. Mr. Park was nominated as one of the
ten most influential national leaders for the 21st century by an influential
magazine in Korea.