文学部

Kunieda Tomoki

  (国枝 智樹)

Profile Information

Affiliation
Associate Professor, Faculty of Humanities Department of Journalism, Sophia University
Degree
B.A. in Law(2007, Sophia University)
M.A. in Journalism(2009, Sophia University)
Ph.D. in Journalism(2014, Sophia University)

J-GLOBAL ID
201501083617888392
researchmap Member ID
B000246535

Tomoki Kunieda, Ph.D., is an associate professor in the Department of Journalism at Sophia University. His main research field is public relations history. Kunieda is the co-editor of the book “Public Relations in Japan: Evolution of Communication Management in a Culture of Lifetime Employment” (Routledge, 2018) and co-translator of the book “Argenti’s Corporate Communication” (Tokyu Agency, 2019). He is an advisor to the Public Relations Office of the Japanese Cabinet Office and the deputy editor-in-chief of the magazine GALAC published by the Association of Broadcast Critics. He earned his Ph.D. in Journalism from Sophia University. He has taught at Taisho University and Sophia University as assistant professor and has assumed his current position since 2019.


Papers

 19

Books and Other Publications

 2
  • Komahashi, Keiko, Kunieda, Tomoki (Role: Joint translator) (Original Author(s): Array)
    Tokyu Agency, 2019 (ISBN: 9784884971274)
  • Kunieda, Tomoki, Yamamura, Koichiro, Miyabe, Junichiro (Role: Joint editor)
    Routledge, 2018 (ISBN: 9781138634763)
    Despite its rapid economic development, Japan lacks a large public relations industry and its role is viewed very differently from its Western counterparts. PR functions are handled predominantly in-house and a degree in a PR field is not a hiring requirement for those agencies which do operate. Mainstream PR history focusses entirely on its organizational aspects, and there are no Japanese PR "gurus" defining the field. Public Relations in Japan is the first in-depth scholarly discussion of what political, social and economic conditions affected the development of PR in Japan. Drawing on historical and empirical studies from multiple perspectives, it explores how and why public relations management and education in Japan is fundamentally informed by Japanese working practices. Central to this is the culture of lifetime employment which has created a fundamentally generalist approach to PR practice which discourages a high degree of professionalization.

Presentations

 39

Research Projects

 13

Academic Activities

 7

Social Activities

 5

Media Coverage

 16