Gabriele Vogt serves as Professor of Japanese Politics at the University of Hamburg, Germany. She specializes in comparative politics, multi-level politics, and social movement research. Her research topics include population aging in Japan and Germany, international labor migration in Asia and Europe, and Japan's foreign and security policy. Prior to joining the University of Hamburg in 2009, she worked at the German Institute for Japanese Studies (DIJ Tokyo) as a research fellow for contemporary Japanese politics for four years. Currently (2016/17), she is a Visiting Professor at Waseda University in Tokyo, and previously held visiting professorships at Kyushu University (2016) in Fukuoka and Chuo University (2013) in Tokyo. As a postdoctoral research fellow, she was affiliated with the University of the Ryukyus (2004) in Okinawa, Japan and with Cornell University (2003/04) in Ithaca, NY, USA.
Gabriele has earned her PhD (2002) in Japanese Studies from the University of Ha
mburg with a study on Okinawa's political protest movement of the late 1990s and its impact on Japan-US relations, which was published in German language as "Die Renaissance der Friedensbewegung in Okinawa: Innen- und außenpolitische Dimensionen 1995-2000" (Iudicium, 2003). She has edited and co-edited numerous volumes, for example, "Destination Japan: Population Aging and International Labor Migration" (Contemporary Japan, 2014, special issue), "International Labor Migration to Japan: Current Models and Future Outlook" (ASIEN, The German Journal on Contemporary Asia, 2012, Special Issue), "Migration and Integration - Japan in Comparative Perspective" (with Glenda S. Roberts, 2011), and "The Demographic Challenge: A Handbook about Japan" (with Florian Coulmas, Harald Conrad and Annette Schad-Seifert, 2008). Recent publications of her own work include, for example, "Multiculturalism and trust in Japan: educational policies and schooling practices" (in: Japan Forum, 2017, 1, 77-99),and "Foreign Workers in Japan" (in: The SAGE Handbook of Modern Japanese Studies, ed. by James D. Babb, 2015, 567-582).