The United States-Japan Foundation (USJF) hosted a reception on March 13, 2026, at the Association for Asian Studies Annual Conference in Vancouver to honor Qiaoyan Li Rosenberg as the inaugural recipient of the United States-Japan Foundation Scholar Dissertation Award. The event, held at the Pan Pacific Vancouver Hotel, gathered scholars, students, and partners of USJF to celebrate the launch of this new award and Rosenberg’s contributions to the study of labor migration in Japan.
Rosenberg will begin at the Waseda Institute for Advanced Study (WIAS) at Waseda University, Tokyo, as an Assistant Professor from April 2026.
The USJF Scholar Dissertation Award carries an honorarium of 2,500 dollars and is intended to recognize outstanding social science research on Japan that uses Japanese sources and methods to illuminate contemporary politics, economy, and society. Nominations for the second annual award, now renamed Richard J. Samuels Dissertation Award in Japanese Studies, are accepted until June 15, 2026. Details on the next competition are available on the United States-Japan Foundation website.