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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tokyo, June 4, 2003—Temple University, Japan Campus (TUJ) and Temple
University’s Beasley School of Law are pleased to announce
the appointment of Matthew J. Wilson as director of the Temple University
Law Program in Japan, effective July 1. Professor Wilson takes over
for Lawrence Repeta, who is leaving TUJ to further his academic
research at the National Security Archive in Washington, D.C., through
an Abe Fellowship.
Professor Wilson comes to TUJ from his private international law
practice as an attorney at Akerman Senterfitt P.A., a full-service,
Florida-based law firm, and as the former general counsel for Advanced
Telecommunication Network, Inc., a New Jersey corporation. He is
licensed to practice law in Florida and New Jersey. As legal counsel
to domestic and multinational corporations, Professor Wilson’s
legal activities have encompassed commercial litigation, intellectual
property, transnational law, and corporate transactions.
For Professor Wilson, the appointment to TUJ is a homecoming of
sorts. He earned his Juris doctorate degree from Temple University
in 1999, including spending a semester at the Temple University
Law Program in Japan in 1997. During his law studies, Professor
Wilson took an extended leave of absence to participate in a complex,
multimillion-dollar lawsuit in Saipan between two Japanese companies.
Professor Wilson will provide TUJ law students from Japan, the
United States, and other countries with valuable insights into the
theory and practice of international law, comparative legal systems,
and the extraterritorial application of U.S. law. Speaking for TUJ,
Dean Kirk Patterson says, “We are delighted that Professor
Wilson will be joining TUJ. As a Temple alumnus and a participant
in the TUJ law program, he is especially well qualified to represent
the Temple University Law School Program in Japan. And his extensive
experience working in Japan will be a great asset as he further
raises the profile of our law program and develops corporate legal
training and other nondegree programs.”
Prior to pursuing his law degree, Professor Wilson lived in Japan
for five years, during which time he worked for Yokogawa Electronics
and Sony Corp. He also has extensive experience as a legal and technical
translator and in operating his own import-export company. Professor
Wilson is proficient in speaking, reading, and writing Japanese.
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