Events and Activities
Joint DIJ-RWTH Workshop ‘Digital Capitalism & Varieties of Science’

In recent years, digital technologies have not only given rise to new sociocultural realities but have begun to profoundly alter the ways in which knowledge is produced, validated, and disseminated. Against this backdrop, this workshop explores the intersection of varieties of science and varieties of digital capitalism through a comparative and interdisciplinary lens. Bringing together perspectives from STS, economics, and Japanese studies, along with insights from practice, the workshop seeks to open-up a productive dialogue on how emerging technologies, digital capitalism, and scientific cultures co-constitute one another. The two-day workshop is jointly hosted by the DIJ and RWTH Aachen University. The sessions on March 12 (“Digital Technology in Context”) will be live-streamed. They will examine the co-evolution of digital technologies, digital capitalism, and scientific cultures through institutional, sociocultural, and epistemic contexts — with a specific focus on Japan. Details and registration here
Celia Spoden presents her research on avatar robots, work, and disability at AAS Conference
DIJ researcher Celia Spoden will participate in this year’s annual conference of the Association for Asian Studies (AAS) in Vancouver to present her latest research on cyber-physical spaces and avatar technologies. Celia’s presentation “Avatar Robots, Work, and Disability: Neoliberal Responsibilization or Questioning Ableist Notions of Labor?” is part of the panel “From Fingerprint Identification to Avatar Robots: Past and Present of Technology in Japan’s Engineering of the Future”. With papers stretching from the Meiji to the Reiwa eras, the panel asks what is really new—or actually old—about latest technological milestones such as service robots and data economy. Celia’s paper explains how the employees of an avatar robot café in Tokyo, where individuals with disabilities and chronic illnesses work remotely by controlling robots to serve customers on-site, utilize the avatar robots as their extended embodiment and challenge notions of disability, productivity, and labor.
Open access article co-authored by Celia Spoden on responsibility in research and innovation

The new open access article “REALIGN Toolkit: Reflexivity, Adaptability, Leadership, and Inclusion as Pillars of Responsible Research and Innovation” (Wellcome Open Res 2026, 11:8), co-authored by DIJ’s Celia Spoden, discusses how research and innovation can be made more ethically responsible for societal needs. It introduces a new toolkit — which focuses on the four main principles reflexivity, adaptability, leadership, inclusion (REALIGN) — for those involved in innovation to help ensure that new technologies are developed in ways that are fair, thoughtful, and truly useful to the people they are meant to serve. Based on three real-life examples of technologies designed to help people with frailty, including individuals with disabilities, and other vulnerable populations, the article makes recommendations to ensure key stakeholders are meaningfully involved from the very start of research and development. The article includes a discussion of Celia’s research at Tokyo’s Avatar Robot Café DAWN.
Book chapter by Barbara Holthus on the inclusion of companion animals in Japan’s disaster response strategies
Known for its frequent occurrence of natural disasters, Japan follows an exceedingly proactive approach in most areas of its disaster management protocols. They include comprehensive disaster response plans at the national, prefectural, and local levels. Utilizing document analysis, participant observation, and informal interviews, the book chapter “Disaster Preparedness and Response for Companion Animals in Japan” by DIJ sociologist Barbara Holthus explores laws, directives, and preparatory work in place to aid companion animals (pets) during disasters. The study focuses on animal welfare, barriers to successful evacuation, and international best practices. While disaster awareness and preparation are considered as a regular focus of public life in Japan, urban-rural disparities are seen to have considerable impacts on the preparedness of pet owners in disaster settings. The chapter is published in The Palgrave Handbook of Human-Animal Interactions in the Global Context of Climate Change, Disasters, and Other Crises, edited by H. Wu, K. Breen, and S. E. DeYoung (Springer Nature 2026).
Book chapter by David M. Malitz on political decentralization in Thailand

Thailand is a highly centralized unitary state. Provincial governors are appointed by Bangkok’s Ministry of the Interior and local administrations rely heavily on central government transfers. This centralization reflects not only elite interests but also a political culture shaped by the kingdom’s transformation from a loosely integrated multi-ethnic empire into a centralized nation-state, first under European imperial pressure and later during the Cold War. As David M. Malitz shows in “A Kingdom ‘One and Indivisible'”, debates about political decentralization date back to the early twentieth century and resurfaced particularly during the period of democratization in the 1990s as well as after the 2014 military coup. Japan has repeatedly been referenced in these debates and the Japan International Cooperation Agency provided capacity-building programs for local authorities in the 2000s to support decentralization efforts. His chapter is published in From Empire to Federation in Eurasia. Ideas and Practices of Diversity Management (Routledge 2026).
Sebastian Polak-Rottmann zitiert zum Problem leerstehender Häuser

In Japan stehen 14 Prozent aller Wohngebäude leer. Bis 2030 könnte es sogar ein Drittel sein, und auch Europa droht dieses Problem. DIJ-Anthropologe Sebastian Polak-Rottmann erklärt in der Frankfurter Rundschau, warum Japan besonders stark betroffen ist und wie Menschen im ländlichen und städtischen Japan mit dem “akiya mondai” umgehen: „Der wesentliche Punkt ist, dass diese Häuser in der Regel mit der Zeit verfallen. Sie sind ein Symptom von Wanderungsbewegungen, auch von einer gewissen Unattraktivität des ländlichen Raums für viele Leute.“ Seine Expertise zu Auswirkungen des demographischen Wandels auf zwischenmenschliche Verbindungen vor allem im ländlichen Japan wurde auch zitiert in Artikeln in der Augsburger Allgemeinen und den Salzburger Nachrichten.
Book chapter by Dolf Neuhaus explores industrial education in colonial Korea

Vocational and industrial training loomed large in Japanese colonial education in Korea. Between 1910 and 1945, Japanese authorities implemented an education system that concentrated on industrial education for Koreans, who were generally portrayed as possessing a low level of civilization. Geared toward assimilating Koreans as Japanese subjects, this system was characterized by segregation and discrimination with severely restricted access to higher education for Koreans. Comparing the perspectives of missionaries, Korean students, and Japanese colonial authorities, Dolf-Alexander Neuhaus‘ book chapter “Training the Heart, the Head, and the Hand”: Colonial Education, Missionaries, and Industrial Schools in Korea, 1906–1930 examines the YMCA’s pioneering role in industrial education as a site where Protestant work ethics, Korean aspirations for modernization, and colonial policy converged — and sometimes directly conflicted. The chapter is published in The Gospel of Work and Money. Industrial Education and Its Global Legacies, edited by O. Charbonneau and K. V. Walther (University of Pennsylvania Press 2026).
Neues Buchkapitel von David M. Malitz zu Buddhismus und japanisch-siamesische Beziehungen

DIJ-Forscher David M. Malitz hat das Kapitel “‘Länder der gleichen Religion’? Der Buddhismus und die japanisch-siamesischen Beziehungen im Zeitalter der absoluten Monarchie Siams” beigetragen zum Sammelband Wege, Sehepunkte, Panoramen. Japanologische Festschrift für Klaus Vollmer (Hg. Steffen Döll, Hamburg: Gesellschaft für Natur- und Völkerkunde Ostasiens). Das Kapitel untersucht die Rolle des Buddhismus in der frühen Phase der modernen japanisch-thailändischen Beziehungen und stützt sich dabei auf Primärquellen aus Japan und Thailand. Der Schwerpunkt liegt auf dem Zeitraum von der Aufnahme formeller diplomatischer Beziehungen im Jahr 1887 bis zur Verfassungsrevolution von 1932. Obwohl der Buddhismus häufig als gemeinsamer kultureller und religiöser Bezugspunkt herangezogen wurde, zeigt das Kapitel, dass auch doktrinäre Unterschiede und divergierende klösterliche Praktiken zwischen den japanischen Mahāyāna-Schulen und dem siamesischen Theravāda-Buddhismus eine entscheidende Rolle spielten, um Fragen der nationalen Identität, der Hierarchie in den Außenbeziehungen, der Modernität und der politischen Legitimität innerhalb der buddhistischen Welt zu verhandeln. Die Festschrift ehrt den seit Sommer emeritierten Japanologen Klaus Vollmer (LMU München).





Open Access
