Fellows



Kathleen M. Pike
Senior Fellow
Dr. Kathleen Pike is a clinical psychologist who has worked in the area of women's health for the past 25 years. Dr. Pike has held academic and administrative university appointments in both the United States and Japan and is recognized internationally for her work in the area of eating disorders. Dr. Pike's research focuses on the assessment and treatment of anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa and risk factors for eating disorders in a cross-cultural context. Dr. Pike developed a widely disseminated treatment program for anorexia nervosa, and she actively consults to programs around the world on the implementation of evidence-based treatment for eating disorders. She served as a consultant to the American Psychiatric Association DSM-5 task force on cultural factors associated with the clinical presentation and risk factors of eating disorders.

Dr. Pike earned her undergraduate and master's degrees at Johns Hopkins University and her doctoral degree at Yale University. Upon completing a post-doctoral fellowship at Yale University, she joined the faculty at Columbia University in the Departments of Psychiatry and Psychology where she also served as Clinical Co-Director of the Eating Disorders Research Unit. During her tenure in Japan, Dr. Pike lived and worked in Tokyo, Japan where she served as Professor of Psychology and Assistant Dean for Research at Temple University in Japan and Visiting Professor at Keio University. She has published extensively and has maintained an ongoing research program supported by grants and awards from NIH, NIMH, Fulbright Foundation, McArthur Foundation, Annenberg Foundation, Japanese Ministry of Education, Japan Society and other private foundations.

Dr. Pike has served as co-chair of training and education for the Academy for Eating Disorders and currently serves on the editorial board for the International Journal of Eating Disorders. She is the founding chair of the US-TELL Foundation and served as vice-chair of the board of directors for TELL in Japan, the only mental health center dedicated to serving the needs of the international community in Tokyo. She also served vice-chair of the Support Foundation Board of Directors for Asian University for Women.

Dr. Pike is currently on faculty at Columbia University in the Departments of Psychiatry and Psychology leading an initiative in global mental health aimed at enhancing public understanding of mental illness and increasing capacity to address mental health needs in under-resourced communities around the world.

She can be reached at kmp2@columbia.edu



Peter M. Beck
Adjunct Fellow
Peter M. Beck has served as the executive director of the U.S. Committee for Human Rights in North Korea and directed the International Crisis Group's Northeast Asia Project in Seoul. He was also the Director of Research and Academic Affairs at the Korea Economic Institute in Washington, D.C. He has also served as a member of the Ministry of Unification's Policy Advisory Committee and as a columnist for Donga Ilbo, Weekly Chosun, and The Korea Herald. He has published over 100 academic and short articles and testified before Congress. He received his B.A. from the University of California at Berkeley, completed the Korean language program at Seoul National University, and conducted his graduate studies at U.C. San Diego's Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies. Peter has been associated with the Korea Japan Group, now hosted by TUJ, since its inception in 1998. He was appointed as the Korea Representative for the Asia Foundation as of January 2012.


Guibourg Delamotte
Adjunct Fellow
Assistant Professor at the French Oriental studies institute (Inalco), Dr. Guibourg Delamotte teaches International relations and Japanese politics. She is a Research Fellow at the Centre for Japanese studies (CEJ, Inalco) and an Associate Research Fellow at Asia Centre, Paris.

A graduate of Paris University (Paris 2) and of Oxford where she read law, she studied International Relations at the Paris Institute of Political Studies (Sciences-Po), whilst completing a Masters in Japanese at Inalco. In 2007, she completed her Ph.D. at the Paris-based School of Social Sciences (EHESS). Her dissertation on Japan's defense policy received the Shibusawa-Claudel award in 2008 and will be published by Presses universitaires de France (PUF) in October 2010. Her publications include several articles and contributions (including Ramses, Documentation française's Asie, and The HAPR). In 2007, she co-edited a book with Professor François Godement, Géopolitique de l'Asie (Armand Colin-Sédes). She holds Australian and French citizenships.

She can be reached at gdelamotte@inalco.fr



Sean Duffy
Adjunct Fellow
Sean Duffy is an Adjunct Professor at Temple University, Japan Campus. Prior to joining the faculty, he practiced litigation in the New York office of Sullivan & Cromwell LLP and international arbitration in the Singapore office of Shearman & Sterling LLP. In addition to litigating disputes in the U.S. courts, he has also arbitrated disputes under the rules of the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), the Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC), and the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL), and has also externed in the Office of the Prosecutor for the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR). Professor Duffy was a Career in Teaching Law Fellow at Columbia Law School from January through April 2010. His research is in the area of transnational frictions between legal systems and he is currently writing an article on the immunity of foreign sovereign states from the jurisdiction of U.S. Courts.

Professor Duffy received his Bachelor of Arts from Penn State University and his Juris Doctorate from Columbia Law School, where he served on the Editorial Board of the Columbia Journal of Environmental Law. Following law school, he clerked for the Hon. Jay C. Waldman of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania and the Hon. Frank M. Hull of the United States Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit. Professor Duffy is a member of the Singapore Institute of Arbitrators and is admitted to practice in the State of New York and the federal courts for the Southern and Eastern Districts of New York.

He can be reached at seancduffy@gmail.com



Rene Duignan
Adjunct Fellow
Dr. Rene Duignan works as an economist for the European Union in the Tokyo Delegation. Previously at the Central Bank of Italy, he covered Asian economies and wrote updates on China for the monitoring group of the European Central Bank. Dr. Duignan lectures in Global Business and European Economics at Aoyama Gakuin University. In recent years, he has lectured in Global Development Economics and Chinese Economics at Sophia University and the Graduate School of Business of Nihon University. As Chair of the JIC Study Group, he hosts monthly political/economic discussion events as well as organizing a wide variety of public lectures. He was formerly Global Liaison for the Health Policy Institute Japan where he developed a research interest in Japanese healthcare. Dr. Duignan was the co-founder and curator of the Healthy-Healthcare lecture series hosted by ICAS, Temple University, Japan Campus and run in co-operation with the ACCJ and ANZCCJ. Subsequently he became an Adjunct Research Fellow at ICAS. Dr. Duignan also served as an elected Board Member of the Ireland Japan Chamber of Commerce (IJCC).

Dr. Duignan is currently focusing his ICAS research fellow activities on the field of suicide prevention in Japan. He is a graduate of Trinity College Dublin (Masters in Economics), University College Dublin (Masters in Business) which was partially funded by an EU-scholarship. His research at Aoyama Gakuin University (Ph.D. in International Business) was fully funded by a Japanese Government MEXT scholarship. He is an occasional TV commentator on Japanese economic and political affairs and is a Tokyo resident since 1997.


Hamish McDonald
Former Fellow, 2009
A journalist with The Sydney Morning Herald, Hamish McDonald has spent much of his career working from Asian cities -- Jakarta, Tokyo, Hong Kong, New Delhi and Beijing -- and has won some top journalistic awards for his work. His books are Suharto's Indonesia (1980), The Polyester Prince (1998), and (co-authored) Daeth in Balibo, Lies in Canberra (2000).

In September 2009, he began a three-month writing residency in Tokyo attached to Temple University, Japan Campus, where he worked on a narrative concerning individuals on both sides of the Pacific War, while observing contemporary Japan and taking part in current affairs debates.


Hiroko Mizushima
Adjunct Fellow
Hiroko Mizushima, M.D., Ph.D., a former Member of Japanese Parliament, is a lecturer of Neuropsychiatry at Keio University School of Medicine in Tokyo, Director of MIZUSHIMA HIROKO IPT Clinic, and Director of Japanese Society of Interpersonal Psychotherapy. She got her M.D. and Ph.D. at Keio University in Tokyo, and did her residency at Keio University Hospital. Her research focus is personality and treatments of eating disorders, depression and interpersonal psychotherapy. She has published more than ten books on her own and published five translations including Comprehensive Guide to Interpersonal Psychotherapy, Clinician's Quick Guide to Interpersonal Psychotherapy, Interpersonal Psychotherapy of Depression, and Interpersonal Psychotherapy for Group.

She is a member of Academy for Eating Disorders (Japanese representative at Communication Committee), the International Society for Interpersonal Psychotherapy and on the board of several Japanese academic societies including the Japanese Association for Cognitive Therapy, the Japanese Association of Stress Science, and Japan Society for Eating Disorders, and she is also serving as a member of editing committee of the academic journal of Japanese Society of Anti-Aging Medicine.


Alessio Patalano
Adjunct Fellow
Dr. Patalano is lecturer in War Studies at the Department of War Studies, King's College, London. He has completed a PhD on the evolution of Japan’s post-war naval power and military identity funded by the AHRC and the Japan Foundation. His areas of interest encompass modern naval thinking, Japanese naval history, Japanese post-war defence policy, Northeast Asian security. Dr. Patalano is also Deputy Director of the department’s Asia Security & Warfare Research Group (ASWRG) and visiting lecturer on Naval Strategy and East Asian Security at the Italian Naval War College (ISMM), Venice.

Dr. Patalano has been visiting scholar at Aoyama Gakuin University in 2009, where he completed a research project on the importance of submarine warfare in Northeast Asian contemporary strategic balance with a grant from the Japan Society for Promotion of Science. From 2004 to 2005, Dr Patalano was research associate at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies, Tokyo. Previously, he held temporary positions as research assistant at the Institut de Relations Internationales et Stratégiques, Paris (2003), and at the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Asian Affairs Office, Rome (2002).

Dr. Patalano authored articles on different aspects of Japan's post-war defence policy and strategic thinking which appeared in English, Italian and Japanese languages. He is currently editing the book Maritime Strategy and National Security in Britain and Japan from the First Alliance to Post-9/11 (Global Oriental, forthcoming 2010).

He can be reached at alessio.patalano@kcl.ac.uk



Paul J. Scalise
Adjunct Fellow
Paul Scalise is Adjunct Fellow at the Institute of Contemporary Asian Studies. He specializes in political economy, regulatory politics, and deregulation of the Japanese energy market. A former Senior Associate at Cambridge Energy Research Associates (CERA), Dr. Scalise spent several years with such financial institutions as Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein Japan Ltd. (DrKW) and UBS Global Asset Management as an equity research analyst in Tokyo. His focus was on investment reports on Japanese energy markets from a global context, covering the whole spectrum from fossil fuel exploration, production, refinement and maritime transportation, through natural gas transmission, to electricity generation, transmission and distribution. He was voted the number one ranked Japanese utilities analyst in the 2001 Greenwich Survey among all UK financial institutions, 3rd for the Eurozone. Prior to joining DrKW, Dr. Scalise was an analyst at Sistema Económico Latino Americano (SELA), a Venezuela-based think tank, focusing on LatAm-Japan trade issues, globalization and foreign direct investment.

Hailing from upstate New York, Dr. Scalise first came to Japan in 1993. He has written on several Japanese-related issues for academic conferences, journals and newspapers, including co-founding and co-editing Japan Review Net - an electronic journal on contemporary Japanese Studies. He authored the article on Japan's national energy policy in The Encyclopedia of Energy (Elsevier Academic Press 2004).

Dr. Scalise holds a B.A. with multidisciplinary honors from Marist College, an M.A. in Japan Studies and International Economics from the Johns Hopkins University, School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), and holds a doctorate from the University of Oxford on the relative successes and failures of Japan's energy market deregulation. He is fluent in Japanese, Italian, and Spanish.

He can be reached at scalise@tuj.ac.jp

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