Abe Fellowship > Competitions

Abe Fellowship 2002

Recipients

Kenn Ariga
Kyoto University
Schooling, Occupation, Choice and Career Mobility: A U.S.-Japan Comparative Analysis
Marjory D Fields
Supreme Court of the State of New York
Combating Domestic Violence in Japan and the U.S.A.: A Comparative Analysis
Paul Gellert
Cornell University
Globalization or Regionalization? Japan, Indonesia, the United States, and the Political Economy of Timber Markets
Sayuri Guthrie-Shimizu
Michigan State University
The Evolution of Ocean Resource Management Regimes in the North Pacific, 1930-1977
David Leheny
University of Wisconsin, Madison
The U.S.-Japan Alliance and War on Terrorism in Asia
Toshihiro Nishiguchi
Hitotsubashi University
An International Comparative Study of Defense Acquisition Reform in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Japan
Mika Omori
Kyoto University of Education
A Comparative Study of Adolescent's Health-Endangering Behaviors Between the United States and Japan
Saadia Mazhar Pekkanen
Middlebury College
National Courts and the Rule of WTO Law in the U.S., Europe and Japan
James M. Raymo
University of Wisconsin, Madison
Family Context of Work at Older Ages in Japan and the United States
Lawrence Repeta
Temple University (Japan)
The Relationship Between Freedom of Information Laws and Policy Development by Civil Society Organizations -- Will Information Laws Newly Adopted by Japan and Other Countries Lead to Broader Citizen Participation in Policymaking?
Kazuko Suzuki
Center for Comparative Immigration Studies
The State and Immigrant Adaptation: A Comparative Study of the Korean Diaspora in Japan and the United States
Etsuko Taketani
University of Tsukuba
The Other "Pearl Harbor": African American Writers and Transpacific Networks
Yasushi Watanabe
Keio University
Globalization and the Question of "Anti-Americanism"
Niwako Yamawaki
Brigham Young University
A Comparative Study of Japan and the United States: The Perception of Domestic Violence
Michael Zielenziger
Knight Ridder
Owning Up: Comparing the Response to Economic Crisis in Japan and South Korea Through an Inquiry Into Social Psychology