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  Hiroshi Fukurai

Hiroshi Fukurai

Professor of Sociology and Legal Studies

831-459-3516 (message)

831-459-2971 (office)

831-459-3518 (Fax)

 

Social Sciences Division

Sociology Department

Professor of Sociology and Legal Studies
President, Asian Law and Society Association (2018-19)

Faculty

Legal Studies
Critical Race and Ethnic Studies
East Asian Studies
Community Studies Program
Dolores Huerta Research Center for the Americas

Regular Faculty

Sociology
Legal Studies
International and Global Affairs
Race
Critical Race and Ethnic Studies
Indigenous Peoples
Law and Policy
Discrimination and Inequality
Statistics

Rachel Carson College Academic Building
337

Not available Fall 2022

Rachel Carson College Faculty Services

Ph.D., Sociology, University of California, Riverside

M.A., Sociology, University of California, Riverside

B.A., Sociology, California State University Fullerton

Metallurgical Engineering, National Institute of Technology, Miyagi, Japan

Hiroshi Fukurai is professor of Sociology and Legal Studies and the President of the Asian Law and Society Association (ALSA, 2018-2019).  He won the Chancellor's Achievement Award for Diversity in 2014 and the UCSC Service Recognition Award in 2015 and 2016. He was also nominated for Excellence in Teaching Award in 2012 and selected as the Favorite Faculty by Stevenson College graduating students in 2013.

His expertise includes citizen participation in justice systems, international law and global justice, race and inequality, East Asian law and politics, and democratic theories. Professor Fukurai also teaches advanced quantitative methods and survey and field research. His research intersects with other substantive areas such as indigenous justice, earth jurisprudence, and tensions and struggles between the nation and the state.

He has more than 100 publications including scholarly articles, law reviews, op-ed pieces, magazine articles, and books. He was voted into a Law and Society Association (LSA) Board of Trustee (2010-2013), served on a LSA editorial board of the Law and Society Review, helped co-organize LSA's East Asian Law and Society Collaborative Research NetWork (CRN). He is an inaugural member of the Asian Law and Society Association (ALSA) and serves on the editorial board of its journal, Asian Journal of Law & Society (Cambridge U. Press).

Citizen participation in justice systems, Original Nation Approaches to Inter-National Law (ONAIL), race and inequality, East Asian law and politics, military and justice, environmental justice, indigenous knowledge, and advanced quantitative methods

 

Affiliation

  • 2023, Affiliated Scholar, Center for East Asian Legal Studies, UC Law San Francisco (formerly UC Hastings).

Awards/Honors

  • 2015 & 2016 Service Recognition Award: Selected by the Student Volunteer Center, UCSC.
  • 2014. Chancellor's Achievement Award for Diversity: Selected by the Chancellor’s Office, Office for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, and Staff Human Resources, UCSC.
  • 2013. Favorite Faculty: Selected by Stevenson College Graduating Students, UCSC.
  • 2012. Nomination for Excellence in Teaching Award: Selected by the Committee on Teaching (COT), UCSC.

Grants

  • 2015-2016. Co-Principal Investigator: UC Multi-campus Research Programs and Initiatives (RPI), “UC Consortium on Social Science and Law,” $298,341.
  • 2009-2011. Principal Investigator: Toyota Foundation, “Preference of Trials Over Reluctant Concession: Lay Adjudication of Military Crimes in Okinawa, Japan,” $53,443.
  • 2007-2008. Principal Investigator: UC MEXUS Program, “Jury Trials in Mexico: Comparative Analysis of Popular Legal Participation in Mexico and the U.S,” $15,000.
  • 2006-2007. Principal Investigator: Social Science Research Council, Abe Fellowship, “Japan's Introduction of Lay Adjudication in Judicial Decision-Making,” $69,388.
  • 2006-2007. Principal Investigator: Pacific Rim Research Program, UC Office of President, “Is Mexico Ready for a Jury Trial?” $16,500.

Public Lecture or Forum Participation

  • 2015. “Deconstructing Ferguson: A Panel Discussion on Racial Profiling, The Justice System & Community Solutions,” participated as a panelist at College Ten, UCSC.
  • 2014. “The Role of Law and Lawyers for Disaster Victims: A UC Hastings and Waseda Symposium on the Legal Aftermath of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station Disaster,” participated as a discussant, UC Hastings College of the Law.
  • 2014. “Civil Jury Trials in Okinawa and Remedial Policies for Fukushima Nuclear Victims,” presented at the Research on Jury Trial Meeting, Kokugakuin University, Tokyo, Japan.
  • 2014. “People’s Inquisitorial Panel vs. Imperial Hegemony: Japan’s Prosecution Review Commissions & China’s People’s Supervisors,” and “Juries and Mixed Tribunals Across the Globe: New Developments, Common Challenges, and Future Directions,” presented at the International Institute for the Sociology of Law, Antigua Universidad, Onati, Spain.
  • 2014.“Genetic Basis for Alcoholism: Native Americans, Irish & Aboriginals in Australia,” presented at “Genomics and Philosophy of Race” Conference at UCSC.
  • 2013. “How to Become a Critical Scholar,” presented at The Southwestern University of Finance and Economics (SWUFE) Law School, in Chengdu, Sichuan Province, People's Republic of China.
  • 2013. “Global World and Academics: Insights from American Universities,” presented at Osaka University’s D-Learning Series at Osaka University San Francisco Office, CA.

Papers Presented at Professional Meetings

  • 2015. “Civil Jury Trials in Okinawa, Japan, and Their Resurrection in Seeking Corporate and Governmental Accountabilities in the Post-Fukushima Disaster Era,” presented at the Law & Society Association Conference in Seattle.
  • 2014. “People’s Grand Jury Panels v. Corporate Goliath: Effectiveness of People’s Supervisors System in China,” presented at the Law & Society Association Conference in Minneapolis, MN.
  • 2013. “Is Uncle Sam Watching Your Dikasteria? Socio-Legal Significance of U.S. Monitoring of Judicial Transformation in East Asia,” presented at The Third East Asian Law & Society Conference, KoGuan Law School, Shanghai Jiao Tong University in Shanghai, China.
  • 2013. “Fukushima Nuclear Disaster and Atomic Cover-Up: CIA & Psychological Warfare Strategies Behind Japan's Nuclear Programs,” presented at the Law & Society Association Conference in Boston.
  • 2012. “Japan's Prominent Lay Adjudication Trials: Appealing Acquittal Verdicts & People's Rights to Try,” presented at the Untouchables, Law & Society Association Conference in Honolulu, Hawaii.

Books  

Journal Articles

Chapters in Books

 

  • 2023. "Procedural Rights and Criminal Procedure,” in the Oxford Handbook of Constitutional Law in Asia, edited by David Law, et al.,  (forthcoming)
  • 2022. "La necesidad de un jurado bifurcado en diversidad de general y de nacionalidad: recuperatores en Roma, jurado medietate linguae in Inglaterra y Estados Unidos y el jurado indigena en Argentina," DPyC, Revista de Derecho Penal y Criminologia, 125-134 (with Andres Harfuch)
  • 2019. “Lay Participation in the Criminal Trials of Japan: A Decade of Activity and Its Socio-Political Consequences,” in Juries, Lay Judges, and Mixed Courts: A Global Perspective, with Dimitri Vanoverbeke (forthcoming)
  • 2017.  “ Global Juries: A Plan for Research,” in the Psychology of Juries, edited by Margaret Bull Kovera (pp.131-157, with Valerie Hans, Sanja Kutnjack Ivokovich and Jaihyum Park).
  • 2015. “Global Juries: A Plan for Research,” in The Psychology of Juries: Current Knowledge and Research for the Future (Forthcoming). Co-authored with V. Hans, S. Ivkovic, and J. Park.
  • 2013. “The Rebirth of Japan’s Petit Quasi-Jury and Grand Jury Systems: Cross-National Analysis of Legal Consciousness and Lay Participatory Experience in Japan and the U.S.,” in the Japanese Legal System: Case, Codes, and Commentary.
  • 2012. “Disaster Memories and Other Thoughts on the Fukushima Nuclear Reactors, the Military Industrial Complex, the Ainu, and the National Sovereignty,” in My Postwar Life: An Era of Transition.
  • 2012. “Lay Prosecution of U.S. Military Crimes in Japan by Prosecutorial Review Commissions and the Saiban-in Trial,” in Japanese Legal System: An Era of Transition.

SOCY/LGST 128M Int'l Law and Global Justice
SOCY/LGST 128I Race and Law
SOCY/LGST 128 Law/Politics in Contemp. Japan & East Asia
SOCY/LGST 128C Social History of Democracy, Anarchism, & Indigenism
SOCY/LGST 128J World Jury on Trial
SOCY 204 Methods of Quantitative Analysis
SOCY 240 Identity and Inequality
SOCY 257 Colonialism, International Law

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