Kansai University

Coordinates: 34°46′13″N 135°30′29″E / 34.770375°N 135.508147°E / 34.770375; 135.508147
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Kansai University
関西大学
the seal of Kansai University
Latin: Universitas Kansaiensis
Motto学の実化
(Academic Practicalization)
TypePrivate
EstablishedFounded Nov. 4, 1886,
Chartered Jun. 5, 1922
EndowmentUS$1.3 billion
(JP¥144.8 billion)
PresidentTeiichi Kawata,Shin Tae-Goo
Academic staff
534 full-time
Undergraduates29,733
Postgraduates1,546
Location, ,
Japan

34°46′13″N 135°30′29″E / 34.770375°N 135.508147°E / 34.770375; 135.508147
CampusSuburban / Urban,
191 acres (0.8 km²)
Athletics45 varsity teams
NicknameKaisers
MascotAmbassador Magma
(unofficial and historical)
Websitewww.kansai-u.ac.jp

Kansai University (関西大学, Kansai daigaku), or Kandai (関大), is a private non-sectarian and coeducational university located in Suita, Osaka, Japan and in two other locations: Osaka City; and Takatsuki, Osaka.

History

Kansai University was founded as Kansai Law School in November 1886, in Osaka. Its founders were six judicial officers who were in the service of the then Osaka Court of Appeal.

Kansai University

In the early 1870s, the Ministry of Justice established its own law school. Western legal concepts, including that of human rights, were introduced into Japan by distinguished foreign scholars engaged by the Ministry. The founders of Kansai Law School had all studied at this law school, under the French jurist Boissonade de Fontarabie.[1] The idea of individual rights and legal processes independent of central governmental control were new to Japan. Long after the conclusion of their study with Dr. Boissonade, the founders continued to feel that these concepts were vital to the new Japan. They saw it as their duty to popularize jurisprudence to spread throughout the nation two notions: that of an independent judiciary and that of human rights.

From this sense of mission sprung the idea of founding a law school. They then sought and received the assistance and cooperation of Kojima Korekata,[2] their superior (and later Chief Justice of Japan's Supreme Court), and Doi Michio, president of the Osaka Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

Thus Kansai Law School was the first law school in Osaka. The founders taught that the law belongs to all citizens and, that by means of the law, they can and should defend their own rights. This became the origin of the university's academic tradition of nurturing a love of justice and a concern for the protection of the freedom of the individual. Thanks to the support and trust it has won from the general public, the institution has since then steadily developed and diversified.

In 1905 the institution was granted the title 'Kansai University' and, in 1922, its main campus was moved to its present more extensive site in Suita (a suburb of Osaka), thus paving the way for later growth. In consequence of the educational reforms carried out soon after the end of the Second World War, Kansai University was able to avail itself of the new system to expand its scope for tuition so as to comprise four faculties: those of Law, Letters, Economics and Commerce.

Its first graduate school was established in 1950. Its Faculty of Engineering was founded in 1958, followed in 1967 by the founding of its Faculty of Sociology. In 1994 in response to the requirements of modern technology and communication, the Informatics faculty was instituted on another campus, created just outside the dormitory-town of Takatsuki. Its Institute of Foreign Language Education and Research was inaugurated in 2000.

For many decades, the evening courses were taught on a separate campus, in the Tenroku area of Osaka. These originally constituted a night school for students, many of them working adults. In 1994 the evening course was moved to the Senriyama campus; in 2003, the university instituted an innovative 12-hour curriculum, integrating both day and evening courses.

Thus, at present, Kansai University offers seven faculties in its undergraduate day school and five faculties (Engineering and Informatics being the exceptions) in its undergraduate evening school; it also offers graduate studies in all seven faculties, plus the independent graduate school staffed by members of its Institute of Foreign Language Education and Research.

The university, with its attached senior and junior high schools and kindergarten, has a total student body of 27,000. In 2006, Kansai University celebrated the 120th anniversary of its foundation.[3]

Organization

Faculties and graduate schools

  • Law
  • Letters
  • Economics
  • Commerce
  • Sociology
  • Informatics
  • Engineering
  • Environmental and Urban Engineering(established in April, 2007)
  • Engineering Science(established in April, 2007)
  • Chemistry,Materials and Bioengineering(established in April, 2007)
  • Policy Studies(established in April, 2007)
  • MBA(Accounting only)
  • Language teaching
  • Psychology(established in April, 2008)
  • Institute of Foreign Language Education and Research[4]
  • Institute of Oriental and Occidental Studies[5]
  • Institute of Economic and Political Studies
  • Organization of Research and Development of Innovative Science and Technology
  • Institute of Legal Studies
  • Institute of Human Rights Studies

Notable alumni/ae/Students

Law / Politics / Government

Business

  • Koichi Kimura (Diploma) - founder and CEO, MIKI HOUSE Co., Ltd.
  • Humio Ootsubo (B.A.1971) - Chairman of the Board, Panasonic Co., Ltd.

Entertainment

Sports

  • Nobunari Oda (2005 - ) - figure skater, 2005 World Junior Champion.
  • Daisuke Takahashi (2002 - ) - figure skater, 2012 World Silver Medalist, 2010 World Champion, 2010 Olympics Bronze Medalist, 2007 World Silver Medalist. 2002 World Junior Champion.
  • Aki Sawada (2007 - ) - figure skater, 2006 Japanese Junior National Champion.
  • Akiko Kitamura (2007 - ) - figure skater.

References

  1. ^ Gustave Ernie Boissonade de Fontarabie (1825-1910) was, from 1873 to 1895, a legal adviser to the Ministry of Justice of the Meiji Government.
  2. ^ Kojima (1837–1908) is best remembered for his efforts to maintain the independence of judicature the judiciary after the Otsu Incident in 1891.
  3. ^ Template:Ja icon http://www.kansai-u.ac.jp/nenshi/index.htm
  4. ^ http://www.kansai-u.ac.jp/English/fl.html
  5. ^ http://www.kansai-u.ac.jp/English/institute.html

External links