ASIAN STUDIES GROUP

venerdì 24 ottobre 2008

ASEM Summit in Beijing: a resolution for financial crisis.



 It has already started the consultation activity of the 7th summit of ASEM (Asia and Europe Meeting) taking place in Beijing today and tomorrow. 

Prime ministers of 43 states from Asia and Europe are discussing about the recent financial crisis of international markets. During the opening cerimony Manuel Barroso, president of European Commission focused his attention on the value that the support of Asian countries  and in particular of China, could represent to create an international security found. 

 The firm position of European Commission consist of a proposal which all one's efforts will put into a regulation plan for bank system. On this purpose 20 countries will also meet next 15th November in Washington to arrange a common and operative strategy.

ASEM Background

ASEM started in 1996 with the First Summit in Bangkok (Thailand). Since then, Summits have been held every two years alternating between Europe and Asia. The last ASEM Summit took place in Helsinki in 2006. The next Summit will take place in Brussels in 2010. The Summits provide overall political guidance for the process which involves ministerial meetings, seminars and joint projects mobilising parliaments, business, civil society and other stakeholders. It acts as a dialogue facilitator, covering any political, economic and social issue of common interest. It is also a policy making laboratory, testing new ideas, transferring knowhow, notably on the European integration process to interested Asian partners. It manages growing Asia-Europe relations, enhancing synergies with other bilateral and multilateral fora involving Asia and Europe. ASEM aims at building a stronger partnership between Asia and Europe enabling each region to better understand the other.


On the following an articleof mine published today on Corriere Asia - english version available on request.

Vertice ASEM: misure di sicurezza dei mercati internazionali

PECHINO: Inaugurato oggi pomeriggio a Pechino presso la sede dell'Assemblea Naziona del Popolo, il settimo summit dell'ASEM (Asia and Europe Meeting), forum di dialogo internazionale che vedrà prendere parte il presidente della Commissione Europea Josè Manuel Barroso e i capi di stato o di governo dei 43 Paesi che costituiscono l'asse Asia - Europa.

Il tema del tavolo di lavoro nella due giorni di Pechino è rappresentato dalla crisi finanziaria che sta colpendo i mercati mondiali e il richiamo al coordinamento unilaterale da parte di Asia ed Europa è stato sottolineato già dal discorso di apertura dal presidente della Commissione europea. 

Sembra chiaro perciò che al di là dei topic tradizionali di discussione quali dialogo energetico, problemi climatici, fabbisogno alimentare della popolazione del pianeta, sicurezza internazionale e coesione socio culturale fra i popoli, quest'anno il vertice ASEM conoscerà un'atmosfera assolutamente pragmatica e dal necessario ed immediato impatto sugli assetti dei mercati finanziari.

La centralità del tema finanziario e della posizione italiana in merito alla creazione di un sistema di tutela internazionale è stato ribadito già nell'incontro di ieri fra il primo ministro Silvio Berlusconi e il premier cinese Wen Jiabao. Secondo quanto riportato dal comunicato stampa del governo, Berlusconi avrebbe sottolineato quanto i vari Paesi "stiano ragionando sul fatto che forse è necessario un fondo, un istituto per il controllo continuativo della crisi economica mondiale''. Immediato, a seguire, il richiamo del premier sul prossimo incontro che vedrà scendere il 15 novembre a Washington, il gruppo dei 20 Paesi coinvolti in questo programma di creazione di un fondo di tutela.

La presenza istituzionale italiana in Cina per il vertice ASEM non manca però di convogliare all'attenzione della dirigenza cinese il reciproco coinvolgimento in termini produttivi e commerciali. Sempre nella giornata di oggi, infatti, il premier Berlusconi ha fatto visita alla sede cinese della Fondazione Italia - Cina e ha sottolineato in seguito all'incontro con il presidente Hu Jintao, l'interesse italiano nel portare avanti la proposta per la creazione di un G14 stabile con la partecipazione della Repubblica Popolare Cinese.

Incontri dall'importante respiro geopolitico ed economico quelli in agenda per il primo ministro italiano. Oltre al colloquio di ieri con il primo ministro indiano Manmohan Singh, Berlusconi incontrerà nella giornata di oggi il primo Ministro del Pakistan, Syed Yousuf Raza Gilania e a chiusura della sua 4 giorni a Pechino, anche il primo ministro del Vietnam, Nguyen Tan Dung.

Paolo Cacciato

Corriere Asia Editor


venerdì 10 ottobre 2008

Learning Japanese to surviving disasters


On the following an interesting opinion about the social importance in japan of speaking japanese. Are you too a foreigner working or travelling in Japan? I think you could find very interesting such opinion edited by Prof. Kazuyuki Sato, professor of sociolinguistics at Hirosaki University in Aomori Prefecture - Honestly I've never considered the value of japanese language's use according to  the dimension introduced by Prof  Sato.  But for several times I felt the need to understand terms in japanese about earthquakes during my stay in Japan...

Kazuyuki Sato / Special to The Yomiuri Shimbun

Japan is a country that suffers a large number of earthquakes. With registered foreign residents reaching a record 2.15 million last year, according to the Justice Ministry, it has become more than likely that foreigners will be among the victims of such disasters.

However, many foreign residents do not understand important Japanese terms related to earthquakes, such as yoshin (aftershock) or hinanjo (evacuation center). This is in part because the government has made an effort to offer foreign residents information in English and other languages, rather than simple Japanese.

When an area is hit by a strong earthquake, radio and television broadcasts are almost entirely in Japanese. Non-Japanese with poor Japanese-speaking abilities are often perplexed by earthquake-related announcements.

A prime example of this problem was the 1995 Great Hanshin Earthquake. Some foreigners were unable to do anything but wait in their damaged residences for their friends to find them. Even those who fled to nearby parks were often confused over what to do next, as they couldn't read the information posted only in Japanese.

In the event of a natural disaster, even Japanese people suffer a dearth of information. It's nearly impossible for the government or the media to supply foreigners with information in their own languages. With a growing foreign population speaking a profusion of languages, Japan faces a problem of how to deliver emergency information.

Many linguists, including myself, have suggested the adoption of the so-called Easy Japanese system for the delivery of emergency information.

The Easy Japanese system concerns the kind of expressions to be used to provide foreign residents with crucial information when a disaster occurs. These expressions may be used for radio broadcasting, subtitles in television news, posted notices or community communication systems.

To communicate important information to foreign residents, a limited vocabulary of about 2,000 words could be used to produce expressions equivalent to Level 3 (second from lowest) on the Japanese Language Proficiency Test (JLPT), which is deemed sufficient for arranging meetings with friends or explaining what one wants to buy when shopping.

One example sentence is as follows: Tsunami, takai nami ni tsuite oshirase shimasu. A-shi, B-shi no umi ni, tsunami ga kimasu. Umi no chikaku wa, abunai desu. Sugu ni, umi kara toi, takai tokoro e, itte kudasai. (Now, information on tsunami, or high waves. A tsunami will hit City A and City B. It's dangerous for you to remain near the sea. Go immediately to a place that is far from and high above the sea.)

I believe such easy instructions in Japanese can provide non-Japanese with sufficient guidance to evacuate to safety.

The Easy Japanese system has other rules for both spoken and written language. For example, a sentence should be about 35 Japanese characters or less, while difficult terms should be replaced by easier ones: kesa (this morning) can be replaced by kyo asa, while kiretsu ga haittari shite iru tatemono (a building that has cracks in it) can be translated as jishin de kowareta tatemono (a building damaged by the earthquake).

To ensure that our system would work for rescue and relief workers, we have conducted an experiment demonstrating that foreign participants whose Japanese skills were equivalent to JLPT's Level 3 understood 90 percent of the content when information was delivered in Easy Japanese expressions. The ratio, however, decreased to about 30 percent when normal Japanese was used.

Until volunteers trained in offering help in foreign languages can arrive in an earthquake-hit area, all necessary information can be provided in Japanese only. Therefore, it seems unlikely that any system other than Easy Japanese can be effective in providing crucial information, particularly during the first 72 hours after a powerful earthquake occurs.

When considering how best to deliver accurate information immediately to those in need, we should not stick to the somewhat fixed idea that information should be provided to foreign residents in their own languages.

In today's Japanese society, with its increasing number of people of varying linguistic backgrounds, I believe the most effective way of providing disaster information is by using Easy Japanese expressions.

Sato is a professor of sociolinguistics at Hirosaki University in Aomori Prefecture. He leads a study group of experts on easy Japanese expressions for foreign residents.