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The
Japan Society of Island Studies
To Our
Colleagues,
A society for the study of islands in Japan and around the world has long
been desired. Although islands are generally small in geographic area, they
have historically played important roles in many different areas. Today,
it is more important than ever to study islands and to explore how they
can sustain themselves in a changing world. To do this an inter-disciplinary
approach is essential.
Inter-disciplinary approaches are
particularly well suited to the nature of
islands, which are by definition
separate and discrete entities, but which
also inter-act with the outside
world.
The common interests of islands have been reflected in recent
years in the
formation of societies and associations specially dedicated to
their concerns.
In 1994, the first conference of the International
Association of Small Island
Studies was held in Okinawa. The Association is
a non-profit organization
founded to provide a forum for the wide-ranging
discussions of the "insularity,
smallness, remoteness, dependence,
resource management and environment, and
actual life of islands." Other
examples include UNESCO's Man and Biosphere (MAB)
program and INSULA (the
International Scientific Council for Island Development),
which link
together international organizations, national administrations,
scholars,
and private citizens that share an interest in issues concerning
islands.
Within this international context, islands scholars in
Japan feel the subject
should be treated as a synthetic science based on an
inter-disciplinary,
inter-professional, global approach.Acting upon that
conviction, we have
formed the Japan Society of Island Studies. We hope that
its work will contribute
to the progress of island studies.
The
Founders.
June 1998