Glen Fukushima

Glen Shigeru Fukushima (born 1949) is an American business leader and former public servant. He is a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress in Washington, D.C.

Government service

As Deputy Assistant United States Trade Representative for Japan and China[1] (1988–1990) and Director for Japanese Affairs (1985–1988) at the Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR), Fukushima gained a reputation as one of the most effective trade negotiators between the US and Japan.

He was largely responsible for the success in opening Japanese markets to US products and services during that period. He gained particular so-called fame after a memo he wrote ("Repairing the U.S.-Japan Relationship," January 4, 1994) ended up on the desk of U.S. President Bill Clinton. Clinton added favorable annotations and circulated it widely, along with other memos he received that day.

Business

After leaving government, Fukushima entered the Japanese corporate world as vice-president of AT&T in Japan and later as president of Arthur D. Little and NCR[2] in Japan. He was the President and CEO of Airbus Japan from 2005 to 2010, and the Chairman and Director from 2010 to 2012.

Education

A native of California, Fukushima attended Zama American High School in Japan[3] Deep Springs College, Stanford University, and Harvard University, where he earned a law degree. While at Harvard he lectured as an assistant to influential Japanologists Ezra Vogel and Edwin Reischauer.

gollark: If you don't need an actual live *video* and can deal with a frame every second or something, it could work.
gollark: Obviously you can reencode in software when watching it actively, but that's very very intensive.
gollark: On my 1080p-ish devices I get ~2Mbps video streams, while my phone does videos at about 20Mbps.
gollark: YouTube actually uses a much lower bitrate than most bad hardware encoders will do.
gollark: Then you do need internet connectivity, and should attain it.

References

  1. Weisman, Steven R. (17 May 1990). "U.S.-Japan trade talks prove fruitless". Star-News. Retrieved 25 February 2011.
  2. Brooke, James (15 October 2004). "Koizumi provokes tempest with U.S. election comment". New York Times. Retrieved 25 February 2011.
  3. "1965 Zama American High School Yearbook". 1965.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.