Japan Institute for National Fundamentals

The Japan Institute for National Fundamentals (国家基本問題研究所, Kokka Kihon Mondai Kenkyūjo) is a public and foreign policy think tank in Tokyo, Japan, privately funded and founded in December 2007. Yoshiko Sakurai, a journalist, serves as President, and Tadae Takubo, Professor Emeritus of Kyorin University and chairman of Nippon Kaigi, serves as Vice President.

AbbreviationJINF
MottoRevitalizing Japan by pursuing grand national strategy with respect for Japanese traditions and contributing to the international community
Formation2007
TypePublic policy, Foreign policy, think tank
HeadquartersClaire Hirakawa-cho #801, 2-16-5 Hirakawa-cho, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo, 102-0093, Japan
Location
President
Yoshiko Sakurai
Websiteen.jinf.jp

Leadership and staff

The President is Yoshiko Sakurai, a journalist. The Vice President is Tadae Takubo, Professor Emeritus of Kyorin University. Both, along with several other board members, are affiliated to the openly revisionist lobby Nippon Kaigi. Takubo is also a member of the representative committee of that lobby.[1]

Publication

JINF publishes weekly short commentaries written by various professionals on current issues. The institute also publishes a newsletter reporting activities every other month for its members.

Awards

Since 2014, the JINF has administered two annual prizes, a Kokkiken Japan Study Award and Japan Study Encouragement Award. Through these awards, the Foundation "encourages and honors outstanding works in the field of Japanese studies at home and abroad that contribute to the furthering of understanding of Japan in the areas of politics, national security, diplomacy, history, education and culture, among others."[2]

Funding

The Japan Institute for National Fundamentals is a fully private-funded think tank. There are three types of membership of the institute, Individual, Supporter and Corporate membership, all of which are completely open.

gollark: Even with AE2 it's still annoying because you run out of patterns constantly.
gollark: OpenComputers does the same thing. For a CPU you need a control unit and ALU and stuff, which need microchips, which need transistors, which need paper for some reason.
gollark: Often the components then have weird components you need to craft, and while the actual material cost isn't high you spend ages fiddling with machines and crafting tables.
gollark: It's where you have to craft an excessive amount of components for something.
gollark: Since they decided to just add pointless tiering and microcrafting recently.

References

  1. Nippon Kaigi website
  2. The 1st(2014) Terada Mari Japan Study Award, accessed 6/18/2017
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.