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User:Izumi Aizu

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Senior Research Fellow and Professor, Institute for InfoSocionomics, Tama University Researcher, Institute for HyperNetwork Society Steering Member, Next Mobility Community Co-Director, Information Support pro bono Platform (iSPP)

For the past three decades, his research and advocacy focus was the effective and proper use of the Internet in society, including policy and strategic issues, based on the end-user's viewpoint and value. His main area of works has been Asia and social development in policy issues, user participation, security and safety, and the governance of network society.

Recently, however, his research started to shift to the “Digital Fabrication” and that led to the topic of “Next Mobility”.

In February 2016, he co-founded Next Mobility Community and became its steering member. In September 2016, this community co-hosted “Next Mobility Bazar 2016 in Karuizawa” in conjunction with the G7 Transport Ministerial Meeting. In August 2017, it hosted “Next Mobility Bazar 2017 in Kurobe”. Both featured new small vehicles that may transcend the social mobility systems in the new future.

Born in 1952, Mr. Aizu joined the printing industry in 1971 after graduating from high school. In 1976, he joined the international advertising, marketing and public relations business company as sales and planning manager.

In 1984, after spending a few years in the technical communications field to produce software manuals for PC products, he encountered with the emerging computer networking activities in the United States. In 1986, he co-founded the Institute for Networking Design in Tokyo, a think-tank specializing in computer conferencing. He also served as Secretary General of the Networking Forum, annual national conference on PC-based networking in Japan from 1987 to 1992. He has promoted both local, community-based networking and global, cross-border human networking by connecting the PCs through telecom networks. He has also made several rounds of research work on the status of PC networking in the U.S., Videotext in Europe, E-mail and Computer conferencing in Japan, US and Europe as a comparative Study.

In 1990, he organized “HyperNetwork Conference – look into the future of the Network Society in 25 years from now”. In 1991, he joined the newly established GLOCOM (Center for Global Communications), at the International University of Japan, as Head of Planning. After attending INET 92 in Kobe, he started to promote Internet in Japan: giving strategic advises to ICT and media industries, national and local government agencies, working on policy and strategic issues in global context with strong focus on Asia.

In 1993, he co-founded the Institute for Hyper Network Society (IHNS) whose main office is in Oita, a local city in Kyushu Island, and actively promoted community networking with grassroots citizens.

He was also vocal in pushing the Internet against the strong policy debate of whether the dominant Telco, NTT, should be broken up by the Government as a form of new regulatory policy. Together with colleagues at GLOCOM, he pointed out that incumbent telecom network was not the central issue, rather, giving birth to the Internet is. GLOCOM also helped Japanese government and industry leaders to communicate with US counterparts including the Clinton administration at the White House.

In 1997, he moved to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, and founded Asia Network Research, an independent research unit dedicated to promoting networking in Asia-Pacific region, focusing on societal aspects of the Internet, including global governance and digital divide issues. Between 1998 and 2000, he also worked as Secretary General of the Asia & Pacific Internet Association (APIA), a trade association representing Internet business community. Under that capacity, he was heavily involved in the process of forming ICANN (Internet Cooperation for Assigned Names and Numbers) including hosting the IFWP meeting and the first ICANN meeting both in Singapore.

In 1999, he co-organized the global campaign on Y2K on Internet. He was instrumental in creating the Internet Y2K Coordination team in Japan with technical and operational community, as well as liaised with the US counterparts including Y2K Council at the White House and people from the Department of Commerce.

In April 2000, he moved back to Tokyo where he continues the research work on promoting the Internet in Asia. He represented Japanese NPO under the government’s requests to GLOCOM, for the Digital Opportunity Task Force, or DOT Force, initiated by the G8 to address digital divide issues. GLOCOM led the debate at the “Universal participation for new and emerging field”, to help developing countries participate in such process as ICANN, W3C, etc. In 2001, he was again asked by the government to organize supporting Asian NGOs and Civil society member to participate the preparatory process of WSIS (World Summit on the Information Society).

In April 2002, he was promoted to Deputy Director at the Institute for HyperNetwork Society, and in August 2004 he co-founded Internet Governance Task Force of Japan (IGTF-J) to engage in the international debate on Internet Governance at the WSIS Working Group on Internet Governance set by the United Nations. He worked as the Secretary of IGTF from 2004 to 2006.

In March 2008, he was appointed as Professor at the Institute for InfoSocionomics, Tama University, and in May 2008, he was appointed as the Secretary for the Satellite Broadband Promotion Council of Japan which addressed to solve the digital divide in remote parts of Japan.

In 2009, he co-founded Japan Internet Domain Name Council in charge of the selection and oversight of new Internationalized Country-Code TLD, “dot Nippon” and became a member of its Steering Committee. JIDNC concluded its work in 2011.

In 2010, he was elected as one of the Co-coordinators of the Civil Society Internet Governance Caucus, the civil society voice engaging in the Internet Governance Forum (IGF). He was also selected as the member of the CSTD Working Group on the improvement of the IGF from the civil society.

In 2011, after the East Japan Great Earthquake, he proposed to initiate the relief works using ICTs to the devastated areas which led the foundation of Information Support pro bono Platform, iSPP, a not-for-profit organization with some 100 members. Mr. Aizu led a research project on “How people behaved with ICT – what they could rely on and what they could not” – issued a detailed statistical report and also wrote a book published in Mar, 2012.

From May 2013 to March 2015, he worked as the Executive Director of the Institute for HyperNetwork Society. During his tenure, he promoted the FabLab movement for digital fabrication and also started to focus on the “Next Mobility” as the manifestation of the new digital making trend.

In March 2014, he was appointed as one of the 25 members of the Global Commission on Internet Governance’s (GCIG) new Research Advisory Network (RAN).