Hisashi
Owada Judge, International Court of Justice
Ambassador Hisashi Owada,
former Permanent Representative of Japan to the
United Nations, was born in 1932. After graduating
from Tokyo University, Ambassador Owada joined
the Foreign Ministry of Japan and has served in
various posts in the foreign service of Japan,
spending a large part of his career on legal as
well as United Nations affairs, on the United
States, and on the Soviet Union. Having served
as Private Secretary to the Foreign Minister and
then to the Prime Minister of Japan, and in his
capacity as Director-General of the Treaties Bureau
(Principal Legal Advisor), Deputy Minister and
further as Vice-Minister for Foreign Affairs of
Japan, Ambassador Owada has been instrumental
in the formulation of the foreign policy of Japan.
Ambassador Owada has also participated in numerous
diplomatic conferences and negotiations, both
bilateral and multilateral, as Japan's representative.
As ambassador, he was Permanent Representative
of Japan to the Organization of Economic Cooperation
and Development (OECD) (1988-89) and to the United
Nations (1994-98). During his tenure of office
at the United Nations, he was actively engaged
in the promotion of a new strategy for development
in "In the Post-Cold War Era" and has
been the chief architect of the "TICAD II",
which Japan hosted in October1998.
In addition to his career
activities in the field of foreign affairs, Ambassador
Owada has also been active in the academic world.
He taught at Tokyo University for more than 25
years, and at the Harvard Law School in 1979-81,
1987 and 1989. During his ambassadorship at the
United Nations, he was concurrently Adjunct Professor
of International Law at Columbia Law School and
Inge Rennert Distinguished Visiting Professor
of Law at New York University Law School; he is
also an associate member of the Institute of International
Law (Associè de l'Institut de Droit International).
He is the author of numerous books and articles
on international legal, economic and political
issues, including "Japanese Practice in the
Field of International Law"(1984), "From
Involvement to Engagement - New Foreign Policy
Directions of Japan"(1994) and "Diplomacy"(1996).