Hisashi
Owada(Japan)
Judge, International Court of Justice
Ambassador Hisashi Owada, former Permanent
Representative of Japan to the United Nations,
was born in 1932. After graduating from
Tokyo University, Ambassador Owada joined
the Foreign Ministry of Japan and has served
in various posts in the foreign service
of Japan, spending a large part of his career
on legal as well as United Nations affairs,
on the United States, and on the Soviet
Union. Having served as Private Secretary
to the Foreign Minister and then to the
Prime Minister of Japan, and in his capacity
as Director-General of the Treaties Bureau
(Principal Legal Advisor), Deputy Minister
and further as Vice-Minister for Foreign
Affairs of Japan, Ambassador Owada has been
instrumental in the formulation of the foreign
policy of Japan. Ambassador Owada has also
participated in numerous diplomatic conferences
and negotiations, both bilateral and multilateral,
as Japan's representative. As ambassador,
he was Permanent Representative of Japan
to the Organization of Economic Cooperation
and Development (OECD) (1988-89) and to
the United Nations (1994-98). During his
tenure of office at the United Nations,
he was actively engaged in the promotion
of a new strategy for development in "In
the Post-Cold War Era" and has been
the chief architect of the "TICAD II",
which Japan hosted in October 1998.
In addition to his career activities in
the field of foreign affairs, Ambassador
Owada has also been active in the academic
world. He taught at Tokyo University for
more than 25 years, and at the Harvard Law
School in 1979-81, 1987 and 1989. During
his ambassadorship at the United Nations,
he was concurrently Adjunct Professor of
International Law at Columbia Law School
and Inge Rennert Distinguished Visiting
Professor of Law at New York University
Law School; he is also an associate member
of the Institute of International Law (Associè
de l'Institut de Droit International). He
is the author of numerous books and articles
on international legal, economic and political
issues, including "Japanese Practice
in the Field of International Law"(1984),
"From Involvement to Engagement - New
Foreign Policy Directions of Japan"(1994)
and "Diplomacy"(1996).