Home > Japanese Studies and Intellectual Exchange > Intellectual Exchange > Hosted/Co-hosted Events > Asia Leadership Fellow Program > 2002 Fellows

Asia Leadership Fellow Program - 2002 Fellows
1.Hu, Tao (China)
Director
of Environmental Economics Program, Policy Research Center for Environment & Economy,
State Environmental Protection Administration (SEPA) of China
ALFP Research Topic: Trade and Environment: Toward Sustainable Development
Dr. Hu is one of the pioneers in China in environmental economics as a
methodology of environmental policy. As a senior research fellow of the
Policy Research Center for Environment & Economy of China's State Environmental
Protection Administration, he often works as policy advisor or project
consultant for international organizations and bilateral cooperation organizations,
as well as national ministries.
He is an expert in analyzing trade and
environmental issues and rural environmental policy, and is experienced
in Europe and America as well as in ASEAN countries. He has also been active
in writing environmental reports and essays and expressing his views on
hot environmental topics through appearances on TV and radio programs.
2.Vinod Raina (India)
Vice
President, All India People's Science Network; National Secretary, Bharat
Gyan Vigyan Samiti (BGVS)
ALFP Research Topic: Environmental Security & Debt in a Globalised
World
Dr. Raina received a PhD in Physics from Delhi University. He has been
one of the key leaders of the NGO literacy movement in India and co-founded
one of the most extensive networks of school education, non-formal education,
and literacy, Eklavya / BGVS.
Although he retains his interest in science,
he has also made in-depth studies of the environment, education and development,
being the chief editor of a book based on a study of ten Asian countries,
The Dispossessed: Victims of Development in Asia, published by ARENA, Hong
Kong. He is highly esteemed not only among NGOs but also among government
leaders.
3.Maznah Binti Mohamad (Malaysia)
Associate
Professor in Development Studies, School of Social Sciences, Universiti
Sains Malaysia
ALFP Research Topic: The Human Rights Question: Nation-States and Cultural
Communities
Dr. Maznah specializes in Development Studies, with a focus on social development
policies and political change. Her recent studies have been on Islam, human
rights and democracy. She writes regularly for a public-interest newsletter,
The Aliran Monthly, and tries to provide an unencumbered, if not alternative
analysis of the current Malaysian political situation. She has also been
active in women's organizations that promote the causes of gender equality,
feminism and women's rights against physical and structural violence. She
once held the 2001 Visiting Chair in ASEAN Studies at the Munk Centre for
International Studies, University of Toronto, Canada.
4.Nguyen, Thi Hieu Thien (Vietnam)
Vice-Dean,
English Department, Ho Chi Minh City University of Education
ALFP Research Topic: Education in Viet Nam: New Strategies
After receiving her BA in electroning engineering from the Odessa University
of Technology in the former USSR, Ms. Nguyen was involved in Russian language
education in the 1980s. She later earned an MA in TESOL at the University
of Canberra and has become a noted expert in American literature in Vietnam,
with her broad knowledge of American culture and extensive reading of American
literary works as well as research on U.S. multicultural literature.
As
vice-dean of the English Department and Head of the American Studies Program
of the Ho Chi Minh City University of Education, one of the three major
universities of education in Vietnam, she has contributed to the introduction
of a number of important reforms in administration, in curriculum development,
and in cooperation with other educational institutions both at home and
abroad.
5.Kinoshita, Reiko (Japan)
Journalist;
Member of Board of Directors, International Women's Media Foundation (IWMF)
ALFP Research Topic: Responsibility and Challenges of the Japanese Electronic
Media, Promoting Theater Democracy
Since the 1990s, Ms. Kinoshita has been conducting research and reporting
under the theme of "Power Missing in Japan," resulting in the
publication of 4 books: Influential, The Prize, The Club, and American
Bubble. As Visiting Fellow of the Edwin O. Reischauer Center for East Asian
Studies at the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS),
Johns Hopkins University, in Washington, D.C., she focused her research
on the reconstruction of U.S.- Japan relations and contributed to analysis
and discourse among American university students on the subject.
At IWMF
in Washington, D.C., she plays a unique role as the sole Board member representing
the Asia/Pacific region, working on the development of a network of women
journalists active in that region, Africa, the Americas, and Europe.