Naoyuki Agawa (阿川 尚之 Agawa Naoyuki , born April 14, 1951) is a Japanese lawyer, diplomat, academic and author. He has been a professor of law at Keio University since 1999;[1] and since 2009, he has served as the university's Vice President for International Collaboration and Education.[2]
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Naoyuki was born in Tokyo in 1951. He is the son novelist and historian Hiroyuki Agawa.[3] His younger sister is the writer and Japanese television personality Sawako Agawa.
Naoyuki undergraduate education began at Keio University; but in 1975, he transferred in 1975 to Georgetown University in Washington, DC. He graduated magna cum laude in 1977 from the School of Foreign Service. He returned to Japan after earning his BSFS; but he would return to Georgetown, earning a law degree in 1984.[1]
In 1977, Naoyuki joined the Sony Corporation, working in Tokyo on matters relating to international trade and copyright law.[1]
After earning a law degree, he practiced law—initially with the firm of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher in Washington and Tokyo (1987–1995) and then with Nishimura & Partners in Tokyo (1995–1999).[1]
In 1999, Naoyuki joined the Keio University faculty. He taught American constitutional law and history.[1]
From 2002 through 2005, he served as Minister for Public Affairs at the Embassy of Japan in Washington.[1]
Naoyuki returned to Keio in April 2005. He was elected Dean of the Faculty of Policy Management between June 2007 and June 2009. He became Vice-President in charge of international affairs at Keio in July 2009.[2]
Naoyuki Agawa's published writings encompass 8 works in 31 publications in 1 language and 168 library holdings.[4]
Agawa was disinguished in 2005 as the recipient of the Yomiuri-Yoshino Sakuzo Award.[1]