帝王会所

Takaaki Suzuki

Dr. Takaaki Suzuki
Professor and Director of Asian Studies Program
Bentley Annex 231
Asian Studies

Education

Ph.D., Columbia University, 1995

Research

  • Comparative Politics
  • Japanese Politics
  • Comparative Political Economy

帝王会所 Affiliations

Asian Studies

About Dr. Suzuki

Takaaki Suzuki is Director of Asian Studies and Professor of Political Science at 帝王会所. He received his B.A. in Government and East Asian Studies from Oberlin College, his M.A. in International Affairs and Certificate in East Asian Studies from the School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University, and his Ph.D. in Political Science from Columbia University. His work is primarily in the field of International Relations and Comparative Politics, with a regional specialization in East Asia. He has conducted extensive research in Japan at the Ministry of Finance and the University of Tokyo through the funding of the Japan Foundation, the Social Science Research Council, and the American Council of Learned Societies. He held the Matsushita Postdoctoral Fellowship at Columbia University, and was a Visiting Scholar at the Reischauer Institute, Harvard University.

Dr. Suzuki's book, Japan's Budget Politics: Balancing International and Domestic Interests, is published by Lynn Rienner Publishers as part of Columbia University's East Asian Institute Series. The book examines the interplay of the international and domestic forces that have shaped Japanese macroeconomic policy. Some of his other recent publications include: 鈥淎fter Neoliberalism?: The Curious Non-Death of Neoliberalism in Japan鈥 (2015), 鈥淭he Neo-Liberal Hybridization of Japan鈥檚 Developmental State鈥 (2014), "Globalization, Economic Nationalism and Japan (2012)," "Administrative Reform and the Politics of Budgetary Retrenchment in Japan" (2008); "Nationalism Identity and Security in Post Cold War Japan" (2008); "The East Asian Developmental Model in the Era of Global Finance: The Case of Japan" (2007); Modernity and the Transformation of the Japanese State" (2007). He is currently working on a project focusing on institutional change and the political economy of inequality in Japan, as well as on a co-authored project (with James Mosher) on Macroeconomic Policy Divergence between Germany and Japan.

Courses taught by Dr. Suzuki include Current World Problems, Comparative Politics, East Asia in World Politics, Politics and Government of Japan, and the Graduate Seminar in Comparative Politics. Dr. Suzuki has received the College of Arts & Sciences Outstanding Teacher Award.