Introduction 自己紹介 >

I am currently an independent researcher of the history of forced labor in wartime Japan and its 21st-century legacy. My Ph.D. degree in Political Science was received in 2007 from Kyushu University in Fukuoka, Japan. The dissertation described Japan’s use of forced labor during the Asia Pacific War and analyzed the reparations movements for Korean, Chinese and Allied POW victims within the context of the global trend toward repairing historical injustices.

My articles in The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus beginning in 2005 provided the fullest descriptions of forced labor and redress activities involving Korean and Chinese workers. I played a key role in compelling Japanese Prime Minister Aso Taro to admit in 2007 that Allied POWs worked at Aso Mining during the war.

I have spoken by invitation about my forced labor research at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan, Stanford University and George Washington University. I have presented academic papers on the topic at the annual conferences of the Association for Asian Studies (AAS) and the Midwest Political Science Association (MPSA).

I have been interviewed regarding forced labor redress by broadcast media including Al Jazeera, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Korean Broadcasting System, National Public Radio and radio stations in Seoul and Busan. I have been interviewed by print media including the Associated Press, The Economist, Financial Times, The Guardian, The New York Times, Reuters, Voice of America and Yonhap News Agency. My articles about Japan’s wartime past have appeared in American Legion Magazine, Far Eastern Economic Review, The Japan Times, South China Morning Post, The Straits Times, YaleGlobal Online and elsewhere. 

Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan, 2006

July 2015 interview starting at 4:00 on Al Jazeera English about UNESCO World Heritage status for Japan's Meiji Era industrial sites linked to forced labor during WWII. YouTube

Photo from "Ima koso Shinshi ni Torikume: Kyosei renko sosho no yukue ha" (Now is the Time for Sincere Action: The future of forced labor lawsuits). Feature article by Shigekawa Eisuke introducing my research in the Nishinippon Shimbun (860,000 circulation). May 26, 2006.  PDF

My first two years in Japan were spent in a scenic fishing village in Shimokita, Aomori Prefecture, where I taught English at junior high schools through the Japan Exchange and Teaching (JET) Program. Before that I worked as a reporter and editor for weekly newspapers in northeastern California, receiving statewide and regional writing awards. As a freelance writer I have contributed dozens of non-fiction articles to magazines, newspapers and online publications in various countries. 

I lived in Fukuoka for 11 years, teaching English and related subjects as an Assistant Professor at two universities: Kurume Institute of Technology (KIT) and Fukuoka Jo Gakuin University (FJGU). Courses taught included Japan and America, Politics and Society, American Culture, Mass Media, Debate, and English for Science and Technology. I wrote academic articles for university journals and presented papers at regional, national and international conferences. I served on the editorial committee for the Kyushu-Okinawa Chapter of the Japan Association of College English Teachers (JACET).

For five years I was an Editorial Coordinator for The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus. Besides contributing articles and Japanese-English translations to the publication, I refereed, edited and wrote introductions for manuscripts submitted by other researchers.

WRITER / TEACHER / TRANSLATOR

Ph.D. in Political Science (Kyushu University)

M.A. in Government (CSU Sacramento)

B.A. in Government-Journalism (CSUS)

Sacramento-based Japan Specialist
作家 ー 教師 ー 翻訳者

WILLIAM UNDERWOOD​​