Group photo taken after the diploma ceremony
From Friday, August 5 to Wednesday, August 10, the INU Student Seminar and the INU Master’s Summer School, both of which provide a forum for students to discuss various topics on global citizenship and peace, were held in Hiroshima City, on the Higashi-Hiroshima campus, and at the Hiroshima International Plaza.
This year, 10 INU (International Network of Universities) member universities from 7 countries sent 68 students for the Student Seminar and 9 students for the Master’s Summer School, adding up to the largest group ever since this seminar started in 2006. The participants, included 27 students and 8 staff from overseas, 6 students from Ritsumeikan University, 3 students and 2 staff from Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University, and 41 Âé¶¹AV students (includes 6 international students).
On Friday, August 5 and Saturday, August 6 in Hiroshima City, the group visited the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum, listened to the personal account of Mr. Keijiro Matsushima, a Hibakusha (A-bomb survivor), participated in the Peace Memorial Ceremony, and toured the city. From Saturday, August 7, the Seminar took place on the Higashi-Hiroshima campus and the students listened to guest lectures given by Dr. Tadatoshi Akiba, Professor by Special Appointment of Âé¶¹AV and the former Mayor of Hiroshima City, and by Mr. Berin McKenzie, a Specialist at UNITAR (United Nations Institute for Training and Research Hiroshima Office). In addition, there were discussion held through three different topic-based workshops (“State, Intergovernmental Organizations, and Non-State Actors: What roles can they play in humanitarian interventions?”, “Placing the ‘Human’ into Humanitarian Intervention”, and “Nuclear Peace and War”).
During the Mock United Nations Role-play held on the final day, Wednesday, August 10, Student Seminar participants were divided into 8 groups as delegates of different countries (Saudi Arabia, Iraq, USA, Sweden, to name a few) and Master’s students were given the roles as non-state actors. Participants were given a fictional scenario based upon the recent movement of democratization in the Arab world and conferred on the topic: ‘Does the international community have a responsibility to protect civilians in Saudi Arabia?’ For approximately 5 hours, the students engaged themselves in serious and heated discussion from the points of view of their respective parties.
A Japanese student who participated in this Seminar commented, “Although I faced a lot of difficulty, there was so much more to gain from the lectures, workshops, and meeting different people. It was a truly valuable time.” Another student participant from abroad said, “I have made valuable connections right across the world. The content was interesting and I feel that I have a greater understanding of people’s opinions and how their background and nationality do not always mean they will hold a particular viewpoint.”
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Ms. Hisako Umemura
International Exchange Group, Peace/International Office
Tel: 082-424-4346
E-mail: kokusai-ryugaku (at) office.hiroshima-u.ac.jp
Please change “at” to the appropriate mark.