Masaki NAKAMURA

Professor, Nagoya University of Economics

Areas of specialization: Mongolian constitutional history, comparative law, and legal history

Activities

Working Group

Single Author

Coauthor

Ayukyo, Masanori, ed. Asia Law Guidebook. Nagoya University Press, 2009. Contribution: Chapter 4, “Mongolia.” (In Japanese)

The Development of Legal Reforms and Comparative Legal Studies in Mongolia. Mongolian National Legal Center, 2004, 71–74. Contribution: "Foreign Constitution Translation Project and Historical Materials Related to the Drafting of the 1924 Constitution." (In Mongolian)

Papers

"The Development of Pastureland Ownership Rights under the Mongolian Land Law." Social Systems and Law, no. 10 (2009): 14–26. (In Japanese)

Education

2007: Withdrew upon completion of coursework from the Doctoral Program at the Graduate School of International Development, Nagoya University

2001: Studied at the Faculty of Law, National University of Mongolia

1996: Completed Master’s Program at the Graduate School of International Development, Nagoya University

1993: Graduated from the Department of Geography and History, School of Education, Waseda University

Work Experience

2017: Professor at the Department of Business, Nagoya University of Economics; Director of the Inuyama Studies Research Center

2015: Associate Professor at the Department of Business, Nagoya University of Economics

2013: Specially Appointed Associate Professor at the PhD Advancement Promotion Office, Nagoya University

2010: Part-time Lecturer at Nagoya University of Economics and Part-time Lecturer at Nagoya University of Foreign Studies

2008: Specially Appointed Lecturer at the Graduate School of Law, Nagoya University

2007: Full-time Lecturer at the Graduate School of Law, Nagoya University

2005: Visiting Researcher at the Faculty of Oriental Studies, St. Petersburg University, Russia

Publications

Nakamura, Masaki. "Conference Review: International Symposium on 'Land Law System Issues in Mongolia.'" Inner Asia 7, no. 2 (2005): 270–272. Published by the Mongolia & Inner Asia Studies Unit, University of Cambridge.