Home > Japanese Studies and Intellectual Exchange > Intellectual Exchange > Hosted/Co-hosted Events > Asia Leadership Fellow Program > 2004 Fellows

Asia Leadership Fellow Program - 2004 Fellows
Related programs
1.Karina Africa Bolasco (Philippines)
Publishing Manager, Anvil Publishing, Inc.; Poet
Proposed Research Topic: Cultural Education and Identity Building in a
Multiethnic Society: Crafting a Philippines Culture Index
Philippines, Ms. Bolasco served as a staff writer for the Minister of Labor and
later as a
Literature/English Professor at St. Scholastica's College and Ateneo de Manila
University. She has been
in book publishing since 1979 and founded and spun off Anvil Publishing, Inc.
from the bookstore chain,
National Bookstore. Currently, Ms. Bolasco oversees and supervises the entire
operations of Anvil, from
manuscript development to book production to warehousing and to book promotion,
marketing and
distribution.
Anvil's range of books stimulates intellectual needs and humanistic
concerns through
disseminating information on a wide range of themes to various audiences from
an educational and
identity building perspective. Due to her dedication to enriching public life
in the Philippines, she has
been a recipient of National Book Awards and Publisher of the Year Awards a number
of times. In 1995,
she was also cited as one of Ten Outstanding Women in the Nation's Service for
Book Publishing and
Literacy. Her essays and poetry have been anthologized in books.
2.Kinley Dorji (Bhutan)
Managing Director/Editor-in-Chief, Kuensel
Proposed Research Topic: Identity, Security, and Democracy, the Foundation
for
Bhutan's Survival
Having completed his Master of Science degree in journalism at Columbia
University, Mr. Dorji is in the
responsible position of overseeing the management and editorial policy
of Kuensel, the only newspaper
in Bhutan. As a distinguished intellectual in the realm of media, he is
a regular observer and
commentator on the dramatic political and socio-economic changes taking
place as Bhutan rapidly
transforms its political system from a monarchy to a democracy.
He also
promotes Gross National
Happiness (GNH) as a new notion for national development. Central to its
conceptual framework is a
more holistic approach to social development as a balance between the spiritual
and the material en
route to finding a "third way" between capitalism and communism.
It is hoped that this innovative
thinking in attaining well-being will pave the way for a new paradigm in
human development.
3.Faye Chunfang Fei (China)
Professor,
English Department /
Director of American Studies Graduate Program, East China Normal University
Proposed Research Topic: Theatre as Public Forum
Dr. Fei is an esteemed artist-scholar of world theatre.
Having obtained
her doctoral degree from the
Graduate Center of the City University of New York, she taught critical
theory, dramatic literature and
theatre history in the United States for eight years before returning
to Shanghai.
Dr. Fei has authored and
edited numerous publications including Chinese Theories of Theatre and
Performance from Confucius to
the Present (University of Michigan Press, 1999 hardcover, 2002 paperback).
Dr. Fei is currently working
on Theatre Herstory, a cross-cultural research project. Her talent as
a playwright has gained
international recognition, and one of her plays, China Dream, has been
staged in the United States,
Japan, and Singapore as well as China. She is also an author of poetry
and short fiction.
4.Jamhari (Indonesia)
Executive
Director, Center for the Study of Islam and Society,
National Islam University (PPIM-UIN, Jakarta)
Proposed Research Topic: The Rise of Religious Fundamentalism:
A Challenge for Democracy in Indonesia
Having received a Ph.D. in anthropology from the Australian National University,
Dr. Jamhari is a
reputed researcher on Islamic studies with a focus on the installation
of democracy in Islamic society and
Muslim's compatibility with civil society. Among his current interests
and concerns is the aggravated
poverty in rural areas as an underlying root cause for the upsurge of religious
fundamentalism.
Dr.
Jamhari facilitates the interdisciplinary research activities of PPIM-UIN
Jakarta, which are designed to
enhance mutual understanding between Muslims and non-Muslims. He grapples
with injustice against
Muslim communities due to misperceptions, and explores the contemporary
significance of Islam
through the linkage with Western value systems. His publications include
Islamic Contemporary
Movement: The Rise of Islamic Radicalism (Logos, 2004).
5.Chandrika Sepali Kottegoda (SriLanka)
Founding
Member and Co-Director, The Women and Media Collective, Sri Lanka; Coordinator,
Sri Lanka Women's NGO Forum
Proposed Research Topic: Gender Identity and Economic Development in Sri
Lanka
Spearheading the civic movement for removing obstacles to women's participation
in all spheres of
public life, Dr. Kottegoda is an action-oriented scholar on gender and
women's studies. Having earned a
Ph.D. in development studies from the University of Sussex, she is a founding
member and co-director of
the Women and Media Collective, the activities of which include promoting
women's representation in
the media, lobbying for the increase in women's representation in the political
arena, and campaigning
against violence against women.
She also holds a teaching position in the
Ph.D. programme of women's
studies at the University of Colombo as a senior lecturer. Dr. Kottegoda
brings her expertise to bear on
strong advocacy and lobbying for public awareness of gender bias and of
unequal development as a fertile
ground for conflict. Her efforts in promoting the empowerment of women
and sustainable development
as a way to combat poverty are highly evaluated at both government and
non-governmental levels.
6.Kusago, Takayoshi (Japan)
Associate
Professor, Graduate School of Economics and Business Administration,
Hokkaido University
Proposed Research Topic:
Measuring "Economic Growth" vs "Human Development" in
Japan
Dr. Kusago obtained an MA in development economics from Stanford University
and later a Ph.D. from
the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Incorporating his firsthand knowledge
and extensive empirical
fieldwork into relevant policies and planning, he is in the forefront of
efforts to lay the foundation for
partnership between industrialized and developing countries, as well as
to connect various constituencies
such as policy-makers, donors and local practitioners.
During 2001-2003,
he addressed dominant factors
contributing to the exacerbation of rural poverty through his work as Poverty
Advisor of the Bureau for
Development Policy at UNDP Bangkok, and made suggestions for the effective
implementation of
development aid policy. His insight and leadership are increasingly seen
as crucial in the search for
lasting solutions in poverty eradication and socio-economic development
in Asia.
7.Nguyen Van Chinh (Vietnam)
Senior
Lecturer, Department of Ethnology / Deputy Director,
Center for Asian-Pacific Studies, Vietnam National University, Hanoi
Proposed Research Topic:
Work and Education of Children in Vietnam's Transitional Economy
Dr. Nguyen Van Chinh obtained a doctorate from the University of Amsterdam,
the Netherlands. His
Ph.D. dissertation "Work Without Name: Changing Patterns of Children's
Work in a Northern
Vietnamese Village " was awarded an honorable mention by the Netherlands
Association of Social and
Cultural Sciences (NVMC) in 2001. Focusing on the issues of children's
work, education, migration and
ethnic minorities, his current research interests lie in poverty reduction
and the restoration of social
justice for the disadvantaged/marginalized.
Apart from working as a university
professor and researcher,
Dr. Nguyen also serves as a local consultant for UN-related agencies and
NGOs including the Asian
Development Bank, World Bank, World Health Organization, and Save the Children.
His involvement in
these projects is aimed at improving the living conditions of vulnerable
groups and children's education.