Wider Network
The Japanese Studies Association of Australia is a member of the Global Network of Japanese Language Education (GN). The GN is an alliance that enables the exchange of information about Japanese language education around the world, with the aim of promoting international cooperation, practical activities for learning and teaching Japanese and international development of academic research. Currently, 11 countries and regions (US, Indonesia, Australia, Canada, Korea, Taiwan, New Zealand, China, Japan, Hong Kong, and Europe) are affiliated with this Japanese language education alliance.
In 2018, the International Conference of Japanese Language Education was held in Venice, Italy. In 2024, the International Conference of Japanese Language Education will be held on August 1-3 in Madison, WI, USA. https://web.cvent.com/event/ebf085e5-afea-4752-9bd6-4c7b1e60ccc0/summary
For enquiries:
JSAA GN Liaison
A/Prof Ikuko Nakane : inakane@unimelb.edu.au
Dr Maki Yoshida : maki.yoshida@rmit.edu.au
Global Network
Global Network for Japanese Studies
American Association for Teachers of Japanese (USA)
Asosiasi Studi Pendidikan Bahasa Jepang Indonesia/The Association of Indonesian Japanese Language Education Studies
Association of Japanese Language Education in Taiwan
Association of Japanese Language Teachers in Europe
Canadian Association for Japanese Language Education (CAJLE)
China Japanese Education Association
Japanese Studies Aoteaora New Zealand
Korea Association of Japanology
Society of Japanese Language Education, Hong Kong
Association for Japanese Language Education
Australian Network for Japanese as Community Language
Japanese Studies Associations
Association of India
French Society of Japanese Studies
Japanese Language Teachers' Association, Pune
Japan Anthropology Workshop (JAWS)
Japan Studies Association (USA)
Japan Studies Association of Canada (JSAC)
The Nordic Association for Study of Contemporary Japanese Society (NAJS)
The Australian Network for Japanese Law (ANJeL) in collaboration with the Japan Studies Association of Australia (JSAA) and thanks to Mini-Grant funding from the Japan Foundation Sydney awarded in November 2020, has completed 20 podcasts introducing Japanese Law in comparative and socio-economic contexts. The interviews include segments on the current or likely impact of the COVID-19 pandemic across the diverse sub-fields of Japanese law and society. The podcast “playlist” is here on Youtube and a report is here on the design and some key points from the podcasts.