Travel Grants and Fellowships in Asian Studies
The Asia Center is pleased to announce the recipients of the 2000-01 travel grants to Asia. This year, the Asia Center together with the John K. Fairbank Center for East Asian Research, the Edwin O. Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies, the Korea Institute, and the Concentration in East Asian Studies has funded 43 undergraduate and 26 graduate students to conduct research in Asia over the summer, as well as during the academic year. Some $250,000 was awarded during this granting period.
This years recipients are:
Asia Center Summer Research Grant (Asia Center)
Neil Brown 01, sociology; social policy development in developing nations, particularly in the area of human rights.
Minh-Chau Le 01, economics and East Asian studies; the refusal of the Vietnamese government to accept the American trade agreement of August 1999.
Saif Shah Mohammed 02, economics; effect of changes in a Bangladeshi village on agricultural contracts.
Best Senior Thesis Award (East Asian Studies)
Ryan Bayley, East Asian studies; the appointment of outside managers as a disciplinary force in Japanese corporate boards of directors and its decline in the 1980s.
Alistair Isaac, East Asian studies; decoding the future: evolution and communication in three Japanese dystopias.
William Braden Travel Grant (Fairbank Center)
Minh-Chau Le 01, economics and East Asian studies; the refusal of the Vietnamese Government to accept the American trade agreement of August 1999.
Joseph Robbins 01, social studies; student activist and business executive interviews at the National University of Singapore.
Dissertation Research Travel Grant (Reischauer Institute)
Abigail Schweber, history; the establishment of the compulsory education system in Meiji Japan.
Dissertation Production Grant (Reischauer Institute)
Duncan R. Williams, study of religion; re-presentations of Zen: an institutional and social history of Soto Zen Buddhism in Edo Japan.
John King and Wilma Cannon Fairbank Undergraduate Summer Travel Grant (Fairbank Center)
Jie Li 01, East Asian studies; Chinese notions of the public and private through the archaeology of everyday life.
Karen Tseng 01, government; Chinese states response to Falungong movement.
Lee Merritt Folger Fellowship
Li Chen 01, social studies; village elections and self-governance in China.
Emily Cheung 01, history of science; practice of Chinese medicine during the Cultural Revolution.
Jeremy Gaw 01, East Asian studies; East Asian regional security and the threat of militarization: constructing a strategic U.S.-China partnership.
Alexis Grove 01, East Asian studies; basic assumptions behind Chinese foreign policy.
Kristen Heistand 02, East Asian studies; early years of Chinese general Chen Yi.
June Kim 01, social studies and East Asian studies; Korean immigration to the United States between 1965-1990.
Joyce M. Koh 01, history and East Asian studies; shifts in popular sentiment in Korea after the April Revolution and Park coup.
Jason Mann 01, East Asian studies; current state of medical missions in China.
Saif Shah Mohammed 02, economics; effect of changes in a Bangladeshi village on agricultural contracts.
Kathryn Ousley, East Asian studies; research on rural elections in China at the Carter Center in Atlanta, Georgia.
Jonathan Shapiro 01, social anthropology; study of a community of exiled Burmese student democracy activists living in New Delhi.
Karen Tseng 01, government; Chinese states response to Falungong movement.
Ching Han Wong 01, anthropology; domestic tourism in China and how it influences the creation of national identity.
Michael A. Freedman Award (East Asian Studies)
Jason Mann 01, East Asian studies; current state of medical missions in China.
Harvard Club of the Republic of China Fellowship (Fairbank Center)
Alexis Grove 01, East Asian studies; basic assumptions behind Chinese foreign policy.
Melissa Inouye 01, East Asian studies; culture and translation in the Mormon Churchs missionary effort in China and Taiwan.
Jing Li, MPP 00, public policy; 2000 Taiwan presidential election and young voters political preferences and tendencies.
Ashley McCants 02, social studies; language, history, and culture studies in China.
Tashi Rabgey, social anthropology; political subjectivity in Taiwan.
Adam Ross 02, government; language study in China.
Angela Wu 01, study of religion and government; villagers values relativity and universality in Tainan, Taiwan.
Japan-America Student Conference 2000 Awards (Reischauer Institute)
Naila McKenzy 02, East Asian studies and Afro-American studies.
Yayoi Shionoiri 00, government.
Korea Institute Summer Travel Grant (Korea Institute)
Young M. Cho 01, East Asian studies; relationship between gender roles and the environment during and after the Japanese colonization of Korea.
Joyce M. Koh 01, history and East Asian studies; shifts in popular sentiment in Korea after the April Revolution and Park coup.
Janice Yoon 01, social studies; 1997 financial crisis and long-term effects on family/gender ideologies.
Korea Foundation Graduate Student Scholarship (Korea Institute)
Sue-Jean Cho, regional studies East Asia; Korean history from 1910-1988.
John Frankl, East Asian languages and civilizations; images of America in modern Korean fiction.
Chiho Sawada, East Asian languages and civilizations; culture as politics in colonial Korea: the rise of Keijo Imperial University.
Jiwon Shin, East Asian languages and civilizations; Korean literature.
National Cash Register Foundation East Asia Scholarship (Asia Center)
Hongmei Jin, Sanskrit and Indian studies; role of a Tibetan principality in Chinese-Tibetan relations.
Hung-jen Niu, anthropology; spatial analysis on regional settlement patterns of the late Neolithic Age in the Jugarian area of western Inner Mongolia.
David Zeb Raft, East Asian languages and civilizations; Japanese language study in Japan.
Jiwon Shin, East Asian languages and civilizations; Korean literature.
Jing Tsu, East Asian languages and civilizations; failure: the promise of race, nation, and literature in China, 1898-1937.
William H. Overholt Summer Travel Grant (Asia Center)
Pavan Bendapudi 02, department of history; tuberculosis prevalence research and therapy implementation in China.
Dimple Chaudhary 01, social studies; urban migrations effect on dowry inflation and the dynamics of dowry exchange in Rajasthani arranged marriages.
Maggie Loo 01, environmental science and public policy; cross-border air pollution in Hong Kong and the Pearl River Delta and the sustainable development of the region.
Zuzanna Olszewska 01, social anthropology; the effect of the transnational migrant laborers experience on Nepali villagers perceptions of development and modernity.
Priya Patel 01, environmental science and public policy; institutional dimensions of the arsenic problem in Bangladesh.
Janice Yoon 01, social studies; 1997 financial crisis and long-term effects on family/gender ideologies.
William Morgan Palmer Travel Grant (Fairbank Center)
Selene Kaye 01, anthropology; effect of Chinas one-child policy on womens status in the patriarchal household.
Reischauer Institute Summer Research Grants for Graduate Students (Reischauer Insitute)
Daniel P. Aldrich, government; issues of financial deregulation, especially regarding the decision-making processes which have allowed for the series of reforms known as the “Big Bang.”
Cemil Aydin, history and Middle Eastern studies; Japanese pan-Asianism and the Muslim world: Nationalist Internationalism of Okawa Shumei.
Jamie Berger, history and East Asian languages; overseas Chinese community in Nagasaki, Japan.
Harumi Furuya, government; effect of international politics on domestic reconciliation: Case of Korean-Japanese in Taiwan.
Kenji Ito, history of science; development of modern physics in Japan during interwar period.
Rieko Kage, government; how do voluntary associations matter? The case of recycling in Japan.
Eiko Maruko, history; political, social, and cultural history of youth in pre-war Japan to explore larger issues of “grassroots fascism” and the role of “ordinary Japanese” in the road to war.
Izumi Nakayama, history and East Asian languages; evolution of Menstruation Leave as a concept of motherhood protection law in 20th century Japan.
Chiho Sawada, East Asian languages and civilizations; imperial liberalism in Taisho Japan and cultural politics in colonial Korea: Making Keijo Imperial University. 1919-1931.
Jun Uchida, history; Japanese colonialism in Korea.
Reischauer Institute Undergraduate Summer Travel Grants (Reischauer Institute)
Sven A. Carlsson 02, East Asian studies; how do Japanese create national identity for cultural traditions derived from China, focusing on martial arts.
Birgit C. Gerlach 01, East Asian studies and economics; comparative analysis of Japan-U.S. healthcare systems.
Jeffrey Kurashige 01, East Asian studies; biography of Takeda Shingen; analyzing changing society of Sengoku, Japan.
Ari Nishitani 01, history and literature; Japanese art culture in Tokugawa and Meiji Japan as background on Japonisme in Europe.
Religion in Contemporary Asia Travel Grant (Asia Center)
Zongze Hu, anthropology, G1; relationship between religion and politics in a Chinese village.
Justin McDaniel, Sanskrit and Indian Studies; how medieval pedagogical religious texts could guide modern religious reform laws in Laos.
The Henry Rosovsky Undergraduate Summer Travel Grant (Reischauer Institute)
William David Marx 01, East Asian studies; current underground Japanese fashion labels and their reverse-marketing strategy.
Leila F. Sobin Summer Travel Grant (Asia Center)
Brydie Andrews 01, study of religion; comparison of Hindu temple in Bombay and American Hindu temple.
Vinay Kumar 01, history and science; ideological shift from Western paternal models of aid in India.
Jonathan Shapiro 01, social anthropology; study of community of exiled Burmese student democracy activists in New Delhi.
Summer Language Grants (Reischauer Institute)
Wiebke Denecke, East Asian languages and civilizations; attend “Reading Kambun: Heian Courtier Journals” workshop at Cornell University.
Amy Stanley, East Asian languages and civilizations; study Kambun in Tokyo.
Karen Thornber, East Asian languages and civilizations; study of Korean language in Korea.
Supplementary Dissertation Grants (Reischauer Institute)
Barbara Ambros, East Asian languages and civilizations; the Oyama Cult in early modern Japan.
Noel Howell Wilson, history and East Asian languages; Fukuoka Domain in the Meiji Restoration: a diplomatic history of domestic politics in late Tokugawa Japan.