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Support Us Subscribe Contact 日本語 Search --> About us About us Message from the Director Collège de France Members Event Media Publication Video Series Mail magazine Posters collection YouTube Channel News Blog Research JP About us Members Event Media News Blog Research ・Access ・Subscribe ・Contact ・Search --> HOMEEvent【International Women&#8217;s Day Series】Strategies for Building Women- and Family-Friendly Workplaces 【International Women&#8217;s Day Series】Strategies for Building Women- and Family-Friendly Workplaces 日本語 (Japanese) English Calendar When: 2022.03.16 @ 17:00 2022-03-16T17:00:00+09:00 2022-03-16T17:15:00+09:00 イベント予定 インタビュー/Interview 講演会/Lecture Finished YouTube Date(s) Wednesday, 16 March 2022 (available from 5:00pm JST) Venue Tokyo College YouTube Channel Language English and Japanese simultaneous translation Abstract Women in the workforce in the United States and globally continue to face gender discrimination in a variety of forms, such as wage discrepancies and harassment. Join us as we talk to psychology professor Ho Kwan Cheung about strategies for building more women- and family-friendly workplaces.  Speaker Profile Speaker: Ho Kwan Cheung, Ph.D. (Assistant Professor of Psychology at University at Albany, SUNY)(she/her/hers) Ho Kwan Cheung is an Assistant Professor at University at Albany. Her research focuses on understanding experiences of women in the workplace as they intersect with the work-family interface. She received her Bachelor&#8217;s degree in Psychology and Spanish from Penn State University, and her Master and PhD in Industrial- Organizational Psychology from George Mason University.   Moderator: Eureka Foong, Ph.D. (Tokyo College Postdoctoral Fellow)(she/her/hers) Eureka Foong is a Postdoctoral Fellow at Tokyo College, the University of Tokyo. Her research seeks to understand the design of social technologies that promote equity in emerging non-standard forms of work, such as remote work and online freelancing. In addition to academic research, Eureka has experience managing software design and research projects at Facebook and Adobe in the US and Piktochart in Malaysia. Organized by Tokyo College, The University of Tokyo Contact [email protected] IWD Series Upcoming Events Zoom Webinar Central Banks in the 21st Century (Lecture by Prof. Luiz Awazu PEREIRA DA SILVA) イベント予定講演会/Lecture Wednesday, May 29th, 2024, 15:00-16:30 JST Central banks, and central bankers, stand at a crossroads. They face five major forks in the 21st century requiring careful reflection: (1) the re-emergence of inflation and uncertainties; (2) climate change; (3) inequality; (4) digital financial innovation; and (5) artificial intelligence. Modern central banks have always strengthened their analytical thinking when facing challenges in the past, balancing risks properly and choosing the best path. Now, these new issues imply that central banks will have to carefully identify and analyze their challenging implications. Zoom Webinar Family-run Medical Institutions in Japan (Lecture by Prof. Roger GOODMAN) イベント予定講演会/Lecture Thursday, 30 May 2024, 14:00-15:30 JST Around 80% of all hospitals and around 90% of clinics in Japan are private. Of these private institutions in total, up to 75% are family-run. This lecture sets out to fill a puzzling gap in the literature by describing the development and significance of dōzoku keiei iryō hōjin in the context of how the health system as a whole operates in Japan. Zoom ウェビナー The Future of Globalization: A History (Lecture by Bill EMMOTT) イベント予定講演会/Lecture Tuesday, 4 June 2024, 16:00-17:30 JST We are in an era in which globalization -- the connection of countries through trade, finance and ideas -- appears to be in retreat, as geopolitical tensions force governments to prioritize economic security and to try to "de-risk". Yet this is not the first time when globalization has been said to be reversing. By looking into history, we can understand what factors will truly determine the future course of globalization. YouTube The Salon ー Conversations with Prominent Professors at the University of Tokyo (Season 2) イベント予定対話/Dialogue Every Friday from June 7, 2024 (Available from 17:00 JST) “The Salon” is a dialogue series featuring distinguished scholars in the humanities at the University of Tokyo that aims to transcend disciplinary boundaries. It is hosted by Professor Naoko Shimazu of Tokyo College.The conversations occur over a cup of coffee. We invite you to listen to an informal discussion between experts in different fields, as if you are sitting next to them.This is a chance to see a new side of our guests that you have never seen before. Previous Events Zoom Webinar The Putative Unity of the West: On Anthropological Difference (Lecture by Prof. SAKAI Naoki) イベント予定講演会/Lecture Friday, 17 May 2024, 14:00-15:30 pm JST The modern world's international landscape is shaped by an investment in anthropological difference since the emergence of "Europe" in the early modern era. This difference, distinguishing humanitas from anthropos, is anticipatory, guiding humanity's path as a regulative idea rather than a factual norm. It consolidates dichotomies such as Europe/Asia, West/Rest, and white/colored, fostering intricate affiliations. This lecture delves into the identity politics of whiteness, where individuals invest in European culture, Western civilization, and a race devoid of color. However, true belonging remains putative, only realized through contrast with the non-European, non-Western, and non-white. Zoom Webinar Thinking through Permafrost (Lecture by Prof. Sabine DULLIN) イベント予定講演会/Lecture Tuesday, 14 May, 2024, 16:30-18:00 JST In this lecture, Prof. Dullin will discuss how Permafrost was invented as a scientific issue, while also being a natural and meaningful ground for the native communities living on it. Then, she will show how Permafrost took, at the turn of the 21st century, a political meaning in the search for sovereignty in different Arctic substates, such as Yakutia. Zoom Webinar What is a Global Historian’s Archive? (Lecture by Prof. Martin DUSINBERRE) イベント予定講演会/Lecture Friday, 10 May 2024, 10:30-12:00 JST This lecture follows the Yamashiro-maru steamship across Asian and Pacific waters, innovatively reconstructing the lives of migrants who left Japan for work in Hawai'i, Southeast Asia and Australia in the late-nineteenth century. These stories bring together transpacific historiographies of settler colonialism, labour history and resource extraction in new ways. Drawing on an unconventional and deeply material archive, the lecture addresses key questions of method and authorial positionality in the writing of global history. Zoom Webinar The Origin and Rise of Homo sapiens (Lecture by Prof. Jean-Jacques HUBLIN) イベント予定講演会/Lecture Thursday, 9 May 2024, 2:00-3:30 pm The landscape of human evolution is marked by the diversification of archaic lineages, with various African populations having shaped the emergence of "modern" forms of Homo sapiens. Though "Green Sahara" climatic phases facilitated the migration of African populations, the expansion of Homo sapiens had little connection to environmental factors. This expansion saw the replacement of local populations and profound cultural transformations, ultimately resulting in the spread of a singular human species that continues to shape our environment today. Zoom Meeting Conscience and Complexity (Lecture by Prof. Alexander R. GALLOWAY) イベント予定講演会/Lecture Tuesday, 7 May 2024, 10:00-11:00 am JST Complexity questions the duality of existence, favoring multiplicity over singularity. In philosophy, Leibniz and Deleuze explored this intricacy. Mathematicians like Cantor, Gödel, and Turing delineated the boundaries of rationality. Freud and Lacan proposed the psyche's autonomy and symbolic realm. This ongoing discourse reaffirms metaphysics' relevance in contemporary thought, highlighting a preference for complexity. Zoom Webinar Bringing Dark Heritage to Light: Monuments to Wartime Foreign Laborers in Japan (Lecture by Prof. Andrew GORDON) イベント予定講演会/Lecture Friday, 26 April 2024, 14:00-15:30 JST Monuments mourning the deaths of wartime foreign laborers bring to mind two meanings of the term “dark” in relation to heritage: the commemoration of tragic episodes in history and the importance of little known, nearly hidden monuments to this history. What messages are conveyed at these doubly dark locations? 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