Tag - davos-special-2016

 
 

DAVOS SPECIAL 2016

Japan Times
BUSINESS / DAVOS SPECIAL 2016
Jan 20, 2016
Japan takes on global role under 'Vision for Tomorrow'
Vision for Tomorrow is a regional partner community project of the World Economic Forum in collaboration with consulting firm Accenture Japan Ltd. In short, the project aims to contribute to the world by Japan's experience together with today's advanced technology.
Japan Times
BUSINESS / DAVOS SPECIAL 2016
Jan 20, 2016
2020 Olympics host to hold world forum on sport, culture
With a little over four years to go before the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, discussions in Japan are gearing up about what positive legacies will come from the international sports extravaganza, sports minister Hiroshi Hase said in an exclusive interview with The Japan Times in January.
Japan Times
BUSINESS / DAVOS SPECIAL 2016
Jan 20, 2016
Turning challenges of cybersecurity into new opportunities for growth
As information and communication technology (ICT) has extended into all areas of society, we have become ever more reliant upon it. The subtle ways in which it is changing the world, though both exciting and frightening, are not widely recognized or understood. This year, Japan will host the G-7 summit in the Ise-Shima region, and in four years the 2020 Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic Games. As these large-scale, global events have now become completely dependent on ICT, the threat landscape has also evolved. There is greater concern about a hybrid threat that would use computers as cyberweapons to carry out attacks on physical infrastructure. Data breaches worldwide are now so common that we hardly pay attention to the news. Even the recent theft of personal information records from the Japan Pension Service had little lasting impact. Yet the frequency and severity of such attacks is certain to increase. The ease and borderless nature of this threat ensures that no one is immune from such attacks, yet individuals and corporations are complacent about both the threats and the risks.
Japan Times
BUSINESS / DAVOS SPECIAL 2016
Jan 20, 2016
'Mastering the Fourth Industrial Revolution'
The world is changing at an unprecedented pace with profound implications. In global governance, the balance of power between nation states and the international framework that managed it in the last century are frayed. The worst refugee crisis in living memory is just one reminder of how geostrategic competition, renewed regionalism and new antagonists are eroding global solidarity.
Japan Times
BUSINESS / DAVOS SPECIAL 2016
Jan 20, 2016
Globis initiates Japanese innovation
The World Economic Forum is hosting its annual conference in Davos, Switzerland, from Jan. 20 to 23, once again set to remind leaders from around the world they have roles to play in improving the state of the world — the nonprofit organization's stated goal.
Japan Times
BUSINESS / DAVOS SPECIAL 2016
Jan 20, 2016
Showcasing the best of Japanese cuisine, culture
Japan Night, one of the most popular events during the World Economic Forum meeting, will return to Davos, Switzerland on Jan. 21.
Japan Times
BUSINESS / DAVOS SPECIAL 2016
Jan 20, 2016
City supports and encourages high-tech innovation
Saitama City, a major bedroom community of Tokyo, is proud of many things, including the fact that it is home to 1 percent of the country's population, a percentage that is likely to rise as the population is still increasing.
Japan Times
BUSINESS / DAVOS SPECIAL 2016
Jan 20, 2016
World Heritage sites in Japan
Japan had the first World Heritage sites in 1993 when UNESCO registered Buddhist monuments in the Horyuji Temple area, Himeji Castle, Yakushima Island and the Shirakami-Sanchi beech tree forest.
Japan Times
BUSINESS / DAVOS SPECIAL 2016
Jan 20, 2016
Le Corbusier's Japanese ghost lives on in Ueno
The Swiss-French architect and artist Charles Eduoard Jeanneret-Gris, better known as Le Corbusier, was by any measure one of the greatest architects of the twentieth century.
Japan Times
BUSINESS / DAVOS SPECIAL 2016
Jan 20, 2016
Discovering Nagasaki's secret Christian past
When people outside Japan hear the word "Nagasaki," they often think only of the atomic bombing. This tragic event seems to have obliterated not only much of the city, but also global awareness about its rich and fascinating past.

Longform

Later this month, author Shogo Imamura will open Honmaru, a bookstore that allows other businesses to rent its shelves. It's part of a wave of ideas Japanese booksellers are trying to compete with online spaces.
The story isn't over for Japan's bookstores