Syllabus

SubjectREINVENTION AND INNOVATION OF THE SOCIAL SYSTEM AND ORGANIZATION

Class Information

Faculty/Graduate School
POLICY MANAGEMENT / ENVIRONMENT AND INFORMATION STUDIES
Course Registration Number
40313
Subject Sort
C1162
Title
REINVENTION AND INNOVATION OF THE SOCIAL SYSTEM AND ORGANIZATION
Field
Advanced Subjects - Series of Policy Management
Unit
2 Unit
Year/Semester
2023 Fall
K-Number
FPE-CO-04003-211-06
Year/Semester
2023 Fall
Day of Week・Period
Mon 2nd
Lecturer Name
Shinichi Ueyama
Class Format
Face-to-face
Language
Japanese
Location
SFC
Class Style
*Please click here for more information on the correspondence between 'Class Style' and ’Active Learning Methods’.
Lecture, Group Work, Connecting to Other Sites
GIGA Certificate
Not applied

Detail

Course Summary

In this course, students will comprehensively cultivate the worldview, problem recognition ability, leadership, and other skills needed when leading organizational and societal reforms or innovations in companies, governments, NPOs, and more after graduation.

Specifically, based on the instructor's experience in approximately 50 organizations, including governments, corporations, and foundations where they played the role of a catalyst for reform, as well as case studies of reforms and innovations from various times and regions, students will develop an understanding of the essence of reform and innovation and its methodology, and gain insights into the societal and organizational perspectives required therein.

The course content includes: 1) Perspectives on world order (e.g., Westphalian System, Pax Americana, UN-centricism, Sino-Barbarian Order, etc.), 2) Fundamental structures of modern states (e.g., democracy, capitalism, nation-states, bureaucratism, etc.), and 3) Trends in social change (e.g., digitalization, globalization, decentralization, etc.). With these fundamentals in mind, the course delves deeper into the backgrounds and transitions that led to innovative systems/services like "container shipping," "Shinkansen (bullet trains)," and "technical standards," and social innovations like "universal health coverage" and "compulsory education." In class, we will trace the history of reforms (sometimes even "revolutions") that occurred during the establishment of these innovations, contemplating the ways of reform and innovation for the next era.

(Note) By the way, there are several other courses at SFC related to "innovation," "social systems," and "leadership." Compared to these, this course offers insights into the essence of "reform" and "innovation" in society and organizations through a flipped classroom style, using classics, masterpieces, and historical events as references. It is designed to produce complementary learning effects with practical courses.Complete and fluent Japanese skill is required.