The Importance of US-Japan Scholarly Exchanges
One of the missions of the U.S.-Asia Law Institute is to facilitate scholarly exchanges between the US and East Asian countries, with Japan as one of our most important partners. USALI is part of a wider effort at NYU School of Law to be an international law school and foster scholarly conversation across borders. Pursuing these goals takes constant effort. Technology makes it easier for scholars around the world to read each other’s work, but we still face the barriers of language, culture, and divergent perspectives. Now as the world is increasingly fractured by geopolitical rivalries, might this ideal recede even further? Our extraordinary panel of discussants with a range of perspectives on international academic exchanges will talk about why scholarly exchanges matter, how we can incentivize them, and what we lose when scholarship becomes parochial, with a focus on the case of Japan-US exchanges.
Speakers include:
Noriyuki Shikata, Cabinet secretary for public affairs in the office of the Prime Minister of Japan
Setsuo Miyazawa, senior director emeritus of the Center for East Asian Legal Studies and senior affiliated scholar at the University of California College of the Law, San Francisco
Troy A. McKenzie, dean of the NYU School of Law
Carolina van der Mensbrugghe, associate director of the NYU School of Law Public Interest Law Center
Professor Bruce Aronson will moderate this event.