WASHINGTON, D.C.- Phillip Lipscy
of Stanford University was among the scholars to join a week-long meeting of
the U.S.-Japan Network for the Future in Washington, D.C. in June. Dr. Lipscy
was one of 15 emerging Japan specialists selected for the U.S.-Japan Network
for the Future, a new program launched last year by the Maureen and Mike
Mansfield Foundation in collaboration with the Japan Foundation Center for
Global Partnership. The purpose of this program is to build and enhance a
network of new generation Japan specialists that can bring diverse expertise
and perspectives to the U.S.- Japan policymaking process.
Dr. Lipscy is an assistant professor
of political science and FSI Center Fellow at the Shorenstein Asia Pacific
Research Center at Stanford University. His fields of research include Japanese
politics, U.S.-Japan relations, international and comparative political
economy, international security, and regional cooperation in East and Southeast
Asia. His most recent research examines the politics of financial crises with a
particular focus on Japan and the United States. He has also written on a wide
range of topics such as negotiations over representation in international
organizations, the politics of energy efficiency, the use of secrecy in international
policymaking, and Japanese responses to the Asian financial crisis. Dr. Lipscy
obtained his PhD in political science at Harvard University. He received his MA
in international policy studies and BA in economics and political science at
Stanford University. In 2009, he was named as the inaugural Sakurako and
William Fisher Family Faculty Scholar.
During the meeting in Washington,
Dr. Lipscy and the other U.S.-Japan Network for the Future Fellows had an
opportunity to meet with senior policymakers and participate in briefings
about current issues affecting U.S.-Japan relations. The meeting followed an
introductory meeting for U.S.-Japan Network for the Future Fellows held in
Washington this January. U.S.-Japan Network for the Future Fellows also will participate
in workshops and a study trip to Japan during the two-year program. They will
help shape public policy by preparing opinion pieces and by sharing their views
and recommendations at a public Policy Brief Session in Washington in early
2011. These and other activities are expected to lead to deeper and more
vigorous dialogue and research on topics of immediate concern to U.S.- Japan
relations as well as on ways to strengthen the bilateral relationship through
cooperation and shared goals in the global arena. A list of the U.S.-Japan
Network for the Future Fellows and more information about the program is
available on the Mansfield Foundation's website.
The Maureen and Mike Mansfield
Foundation is a 501(c)3 organization that promotes understanding and
cooperation in U.S.-Asia relations. The Foundation has offices in Washington,
D.C.; Tokyo, Japan; and Missoula, Montana.
The Center for Global Partnership (CGP) is a part of the Japan
Foundation, which is a Japanese Independent Administrative Institution (Dokuritsu
Gyosei Hojin). CGP operates grant programs as well as self-initiated
projects and fellowships. CGP has offices in Tokyo, Japan and New York, New
York.