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UNITAR
Roundtables
Speaker:
Monte Cassim
Professor and
President, Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University
Vice
Chancellor, Ritsumeikan
Trust
"Innovation
and knowledge management in contemporary Japan:
transforming frailties
to
strength, seeking prosperity and peace for all"
Date: 17 May
2007
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Presentation >>Album >>日本語
Monte
Cassim came to Japan in 1972 after graduating from the University of
Sri Lanka, Colombo, and working in Sri Lanka as a young architect.
An alumnus of the University of Tokyo’s Graduate School of
Engineering, where he did his master’s and doctoral studies, Cassim
worked in academia in Malaysia and in Japanese industry, before
joining the United Nations Centre for Regional Development, where he
worked from 1985 until 1994. He joined Ritsumeikan University as
Professor in 1994. His research centers on process analysis, systems
design and knowledge management to develop “earth-friendly” and
“human-friendly” technological solutions at Ritsumeikan’s Discovery
Research Laboratory. He assumed his current posts as President of
Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University (APU) and Vice-Chancellor of
Ritsumeikan
Trust
in 2004. He enjoys the slow life (farming) and the fast
lane (driving). He is also an avid fan of blues music from the 1920s
to the 1960s.
Roundtable Topic
Harnessing creativity and transforming it into wealth is a major
challenge for contemporary Japan. Set against the backdrop of a
rapidly transforming Asia Pacific region, the presentation will look
at both historical strengths and current weaknesses. The former
includes Japan’s rich tradition of “monozukuri” or artisanship at
the highest level, which has greatly contributed to the nation’s
industrial prowess. The latter includes unease with the unusual and
a societal inadequacy in drawing their creative elements into the
mainstream. The plight of the “akibazoku”, a highly talented cohort
of “digital creators” who haunt the Akihabara district, Tokyo’s
electronic mecca, is taken as a case in point. This example will be
compared with a similar situation facing Japan’s “miya daiku” and “shakan”,
the carpenters and masons whose rich tradition sustain many of
Japan’s heritage assets. An experiment in social engineering,
addressing the structural aspects of these issues, about to be
launched at Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University, will be presented
for discussion at the roundtable. It is hoped that this endeavour
will indicate ways in which Japan might be able to transform
innovative ideas into wealth not just for itself, but as a broader
contribution to prosperity and peace for all peoples in the
international community.
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Nations Institute for Training and Research. All Rights Reserved. |