Mayuko Watanabe

Mayuko Watanabe (渡辺 真由子, Watanabe Mayuko, born 1975) is an award-winning Japanese journalist and media scholar specialized in media literacy, gender and sexuality.[1] She has been a Senior Researcher at Keio University Research Institute. Her research interest through nearly 20 years of career including as a TV news reporter has been the way of regulatory policy of obscene expressions. She has published research and provided media commentary on the topics of media communication and literacy of Japanese obscene content.

Mayuko Watanabae (渡辺 真由子, Mayuko Watanabe)
Born1975
EducationKeio University
Simon Fraser University
OccupationJournalist
Media Scholar

Works

Watanabe works on the Japanese Government to apply a concept of "Dignity in Obscene Expression" to its regulatory policy. She has served as a lecturer of Internet moral education for Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, and also as a lecturer of human rights for Ministry of Justice.[2]

Publications

Selected articles

Information and Communications Policy Review No.10 March 2015

Books

  • 2013 Media Literacy of Obscene Information among Youth in Japan (Amazon Services International, Inc.)
  • 2010 When Children Expose Their Secrets Online: addicted to SNS (Shufunotomo Co., Ltd., Tokyo)
  • 2008 The Truth of Cyber bullying (Minerva Publishing, Inc., Kyoto)
  • 2007 Media Literacy for Adults (Liberta Publishing Co., Ltd., Tokyo)

Awards

Mayuko Watanabe has received prestigious awards as a director of Radio documentary Suicide of 16 years old boy- What did the bereaved family fight against?

  • 2000 Highest award from the Japan Commercial Broadcasters Association [3]
  • 2000 Award for excellence from the Hoso Bunka Foundation

References

  1. "Japan struggles to deal with child suicides", Japan Today, December 31, 2010
  2. "Symposium on Internet and Human rights" Archived 2015-05-10 at the Wayback Machine, The Ministry of Justice, Japan, October 20, 2013
  3. "NAB Awards 2000"



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.