Realizing Sustainable Development Goals: Initiatives of Nagoya University Asian Satellite Campuses Institute
for Graduate Education
Editha C. CedicolNagoya University Asian Satellite Campus-Philippines
Akira YamauchiInternational Cooperation Center for Agricultural Education, NU
Fumio IsodaNagoya University Asian Satellite Campuses Institute
Kazuhito KawakitaNU Graduate School of Bioagricultral Sciences
Presented at the 25th convention of the Asian Association of Agricultural Colleges and Universities (AAACU) at Tokyo University of Agriculture, Setagaya, Japan on 13 October 2016.
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (SD)
- “..development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” (Our Common Future, 1987).
Historical background of SDGs
1972- United Nations Conference on Human Environment, Stockholm
- the right of every individual to a productive and healthy life in a vibrant and
wholesome environment was expressed
-grounded on three published works by Rachel Carson, the Silent Spring (1962); Garret Hardin, The
Tragedy of the Commons (1968); and the Ecologist, Blueprint for Survival (1972)
1983- Creation of the World Commission on Environment and Development (WCED)
- to tackle the issues on the worsening state of the environment and its natural resources that
impacted on people’s lives and the environment
1987- WCED published the Brundtland Report titled, Our Common Future
- focused on global sustainability and the need to save the planet from further damage for the sake of
the present and future generations
1992- UN Conference on Environment and Development (Earth Summit), Rio de Janeiro to
develop a blueprint for SD
- Adopted the Agenda 21 and established the UN Commission on Sustainable Development
2000- Millennium Summit – Adopted the UN Millennium Declaration and set targets to achieve by 2015
2015- UN Sustainable Development Summit, U.S.A,- Post 2015 Development Agenda built on
MDGs and expanded targets to cover broader SD issues
- 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) with 169 targets to achieve by 2030
January 2016- effectivity of 17 SDGs
SDG 4- To ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote
lifelong learning for all (-a concern of all educational institutions)
However, universities can actually play crucial roles in many, if not all, of the 17 SDGs.
17 SDGs with 169 targetsby 2030?
Universal OverwhelmingSeem unreachable
• Institutional• Regional• Global
Different issues, different solutions,Different magnitude and scale– THEY VARY
HOW?
Engage the participation of differentstakeholders—public, local governments,NGOs, religious groups, educationalInstitutions, business sectors---
EVERYONE
LOCALIZE STRATEGIES- easier to monitor and measure
Education creates a ripple effect on the
lives it has influenced. In whatever mode
or scheme, education allows greater
opportunity to produce multipliers and
nurturers of the value of learning (cedicol).
(Source: Education Fund-Global Women Leaders Network) Source: www.legacyintl.org
Nagoya University adheres to the principles that education is:
• the key to poverty reduction
• driver of economic progress and prosperity
• the foundation to peace, equality and resilience,
• the means to a food and nutrition secure society
• central to the management and sustainable development of
natural resources and environment
Source: Dr. Hilljie van’t Land, International Association of Universities, www.iau-iau.net
Nagoya University Graduate Schools, laboratories, institutes and centers that are
focused on studies and researches that have relevance to specific SDGs.
Education and research ddressing problems specifically related to SDGs 2 and 3:
• NU Arts and Sciences Institute of Health and Nutrition under the Graduate School of
Medicine (GSM)
- people’s health and nutrition
- practical development of healthcare and nutritional sciences.
• NU Laboratory of Human Nutrition studies the physiology of digestion and absorption of
nutrients.
Education and research to address problems related to SDG 6.
• Institute of Hydrospheric-Atmospheric Sciences, formerly a Water Quality Science Research
Center under the NU Faculty of Science
- integrated studies on structure and dynamics of the hydrosphere and atmosphere to understand
the relationship of processes in water and material cycles in a changing earth environment.
Water is essential for life, NU researchers and scientists recognize that any change in the water
cycle on the earth systems, be it caused by human or natural factors. may endanger human life
- A highly recognized achievement of the university (addressing SDG 7). | Visits: 64392
- The invention of the high efficiency blue light-emitting diode (LED) by Professors Isamu
Akasaki and Hiroshi Amano of the NU Graduate School of Engineering (GSE), which
provided affordable, sustainable, and efficient energy to modern-day society
- Awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2014
2014 - MEXT selected NU for the Top Global University (TGU) project (addressing SDG 17).
- to improve education and research for world-class quality, recognition and impact.
- supports local and international young researchers, creation of scientific research units and
technical promotion offices for academic, research and academia-government collaboration.
- established cooperative relationships with top universities in the world for research and
education.
*joint degree programs in 2014 with the University of Adelaide in Australia for medicine
- plans to expand the same model with 20 other research universities (University of Strasbourg,
John Hopkins University, University of Edinburgh, and Shanghai Jiao tong University, etc)
Research Excellence
Alumnus & NU Professor: Dr. Makoto Kobayashi
Alumnus & Former NU Associate ProfessorDr. Osamu Shimomura
NU Professor:Dr. Ryoji Noyori
Nobel Laureates in Physics, 2008 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry, 2008
Nobel Laureate in Chemistry, 2001King Faisal Int’l Prize, 1999
Alumnus & NU Professor: Dr. Toshihide Maskawa
Nobel Laureates in Physics, 2014
Alumnus & NU Professor:Dr. Hiroshi Amano
NU Distinguished Professor:Dr. Isamu Akasaki
Slide source: Pres Matsuo presentation, 2016
Campus ASEAN (addressing SDG 17)
- implemented the a program on “Training a New Generation of Leaders in
International Cooperation for the Development of the ASEAN Region”
- to develop human resources as effective coordinators and “bridges”
between Japan and ASEAN
Photo Source: presentation of President Matsuo
- moving towards developing more interdisciplinary researches aimed at
enhancing the university’s contribution to the advancement of agricultural and
life sciences
Graduate Programs:
• Biosphere Resources Science
• Biological Mechanisms and Functions
• Applied Molecular Biosciences
• Bioengineering Sciences
Addressing problems related to SDG 2
- A research institute and a leading center for international cooperation in capacity building for agriculture and rural development (SDGs 4 and 17)
ICCAE and GSBS collaborative
project
Science and Technology Research
Partnership for Sustainable
Development Program (SATREPS)
based in Kenya. (SDGs 2 snd 17)
IGER- to nurture
scientists towards
becoming international
leaders to champion
Environmental protection
and management
- Discover new solar
energy-derived natural
materials
- Develop new materials
ad energy generation
technologies
To lessen the burden on
natural environment and
develop more efficient
food production
technologies
Addressing SDGs 2, 7
and 13
- to nurture women leaders who can work in a global context to achieve well-
being in the region.
- A five-year interdisciplinary degree program based on an advanced and
comprehensive curriculum
- offers international education and research activities that cut across academic
boundaries and combines knowledge from different fields in collaboration
with leaders from Asia.
- involves four graduate schools with five divisions focused on
bioagricultural sciences, international development, education and
human development, and medicine including health sciences.
- only for students enrolled in the four graduate schools at NU, namely:
International Development, Education and Human Development, Medicine,
and Bioagricultural Sciences who plan to proceed to a doctoral program at the
above graduate schools.
- students are expected to acquire six core skills necessary for working in the
global arena: 1) Visionary skills, ability to look at issues from a
comprehensive perspective, 2) Gender understanding, comprehension of
gender-related issues and gender equality, 3) Practical skills, 4) Adaptability,
5) Planning skills, and 6) Communication skills
NU Women Leaders
Program to Promote
Well-being in Asia
addressing SDGs 1, 2, 3, 4, 5).
NU Women Leaders Program to
Promote Well-being in Asia
Heads of State IMPACT Champions
National leaders taking action for gender equality in countries around
the globe
Malawi
Indonesia
Romania
Rwanda
Finland
JAPAN
Iceland
Sweden
Philippines
Uruguay
Corporate IMPACT Champions Top executives are changing the way the world does business.
University IMPACT Champions Educational leaders are teaching the benefits of equality.
Schneider ElectricVodafoneTwitterMcKinsey and CompanyUnileverAccor HotelsTupperware BrandsBarclaysKoc HoldingsPWC International Limited
University of Witwatersrand, South AfricaUniversity of Oxford, UKUniversity of Waterloo, CanadaSciences Po, FranceGeorgetown University, USAUniversity of Sao Paulo, BrazilUniversity of Leicester, UKUniversity of Hongkong, HongkongStory Book University, USANagoya University, Japan
NU overseas bases of operations
- to promote NU’s contributions to the world as an excellent institution of higher education and research
- 26 bases in several countries Germany, China, Uzbekistan, Mongolia, Vietnam, Cambodia, Myanmar, Laos,
Indonesia, Thailand, Philippines, USA, Korea, Malaysia, Bangladesh
- offices of the university
- 1990s -Center for Asian Legal Exchange (CALE)-to assist Asian countries establish legal systems
and develop human resources who can contribute to legal development in respective countries (SDG 16)
- 2005- established Research and Education Centers for Japanese Law (SDG 16)
- Endoscopy Training Centers- development/improvement of medical care with training and education
on endoscopic diagnosis and treatment techniques (SDG 3)
- Asian satellite campuses offering students an opportunity to obtain a doctoral degree at a local campus
(medicine, law, international development, bioagriculture)- topics of student researches can be focused on
addressing any of the 17 SDGs)
NU’s internationalization strategies
NU Asia Satellite Campuses in different countries offer hybrid doctoral degree
programs
- to strengthen the relationships between key Asian universities where Japanese students can be dispatched to
develop and enhance collaboration with outstanding universities in the region.
- opened satellite campuses in Cambodia, Mongolia, and Vietnam in October 2014
- Laos, Uzbekistan, and the Philippines in October 2015.
- the satellite campuses in Asia caters to the following fields of discipline: Bio-agricultural Sciences,
Medicine, Law, and International Development.
NU Asian Satellite Campuses Institute
• Universities address overall goal of SDG 4
But influences all 17 SDGs
NU doctoral program offered in satellite campuses
“Transnational Doctoral Program for Leading Professionals in Asian
Countries”
Fields of study: Bio-agricultural Sciences, Medicine, Law, and International
Development
Involves five Graduate Schools
• Graduate School of Bioagricultural Sciences
• Graduate School of Environmental Studies
• Graduate School of Medicine
• Graduate School of Law
• Graduate School of International Development
- NU is the first among Japanese universities to attempt and begin offering doctoral
programs for high-ranking administrators
- Through its satellite campuses, NU offers hybrid doctoral degrees for government
executives, mid and senior-level researchers and academicians of Asian countries without
leaving their current posts to study in Japan for a continuous period of three years
- Enhancement courses
are conducted in
English through active
use of ICT, e-learning
modes;
- thesis writing and
remote day-to-day
research guidance and
supervision to students
- NU satellite campuses in different countries connect with NU domestic campuses in Japan
MOU with SEARCA
Program requirements
- Program duration is three years
- Students are required to conduct research and present the findings of research in seminars at NU in Japan
- Produce at least three scientific papers about the results of the research and submit these to peer-reviewed
journals
- Write a doctoral dissertation
- Must pass the degree examination
- Limited scholarships for schooling in Japan are available (covers travel and stipend for the duration of stay in
Japan; research funds to be jointly secured by student and professor from grant institutions; degree is granted
by Nagoya University upon completion
1. Initial activity is the Joint PhD Research scholarship project of
NU and SEARCA for four Cambodian NU doctoral students
2. Proposal stage- Joint PhD Research Scholarship Project for
eight Filipino NU doctoral students
Scholarship support from SEARCA covers limited funds for
research, stipend on site and local transportation
Table 1. Research topics of NU doctoral students relevant to SDGs in Cambodia and the
Philippines.
Research Focus and Venue SDG being addressed
1. Pest Management in Rice Production in Cambodia
Venue: Prey Veng, Svey Rieng, and Takeo provinces, Cambodia
SDGs 1, 2, 3 and 12
2. Dairy Cattle Production, Breed Resources and Forage Management in Cambodia
3. Physiology of Reproduction of Dairy Cattle in Cambodia
Venue: Phnom Penh, Cambodia
SDGs 1, 2, and 3
4. Diversity and defense: Interactions between IPM tactics, soil microbial and
arthropod diversity, and rice defense against pests and diseases
Venue: Phnom Penh, Cambodia
SDGs 2,3, 12
5. Research Protocol for Fertilizer Trial
Venue: Phnom Penh, Cambodia
SDGs 2 and 3
6. Nutrition of Swine Diets in the Philippines
Venue: Laguna, Philippines
SDGs 1, 2 and 3
7.Growth, Wood Qualities Assessment and Genetic Variation of Different Progenies
of Large-Leaf Mahogany (Swietenia macrophylla King) Landrace in the Philippines
Venue: Mindanao and Luzon, Philippines
SDGs 1, 8, and 15
Challenges
Ultimate challenge - how the results of the students’ researches directly or indirectly create impacts on the
different sectors of the global societies vis-a-vis the SDGs. NU hopes to award degrees to the first batch of
students by 2017.
Student-completing program in 3 years without leaving the job
-producing quality publications and a dissertation (demands more balancing acts between study, work, and family,
as well as hard work, and commitment)
Professors/advisers
- remote guidance and supervision with limited face-to-face interaction require a combination of patience,
creativity, skillful social interaction with the students, and gentle persuasion to encourage and bring out more
independent work and critical thinking characteristics from the students
The Near Future: NU as a hub for advanced research towards addressing SDGs
NU enjoins research and academic networks such as AAACU, SEARCA, International Rice Research
Institute (IRRI), the University Consortium, and others to join NU as network partners.
As a “hub university in Asia,”
-to establish a network for advanced research to address critical issues confronting agriculture and rural
development in cooperation with ASEAN countries.
From platform for transnational doctoral program
To a hub for research and education exchange network in ASEAN
Examples of top priority critical issues are: increase in crop production
to address food security, the problem of zoonosis, damage to crops
caused by pests and diseases, resource management, adverse effects of
climate change, etc
ASEAN Network for advanced research to address SDGsThe proposed network hopes to carry out in more specific ways most, if not all, of the targets of the SDGs with NU taking
the lead in revitalizing regional partnership for sustainable development in Asia.
Thank you