PROVO — South Africa and Japan will be the focus of two lectures Friday in Room 238 of the Herald R. Clark Building at Brigham Young University:
"South Africa Field Studies: Learning That Transcends Boundaries" will be presented by Tanya Fetui Tolman at noon.
Tolman is the founder of InnoVision Consulting, which offers coaching on culture and leadership and provides training and development. She participated in South Africa field studies in 1999 and 2000, with her research focusing on gender stratification, literacy and street children. She was the field program facilitator in 2000 and office coordinator for the South Africa program for the next three years.
A BYU alumna, Tolman received a bachelor's degree in data analysis in 2001 and a master's degree in organizational behavior in 2003.
"Securing Japan in a Dangerous Neighborhood" will be presented by Richard J. Samuels at 2 p.m. Samuels is the Ford International Professor of Political Science, a department he chaired for five years, and director of the Center for International Studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
He served as vice chairman of the Committee on Japan of the National Research Council until 1996 and is founding director of MIT's Japan program.
In 2005, he was elected a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and in 2001, he became chairman of the Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission, an independent federal grant-making agency that supports Japanese studies and policy-oriented research in the United States.
The public is welcome.