Keys to Understanding Animal Law in Japan – An Analysis of the Most Protected and the Least Protected Animals
Guest Lecture by Honjo Moe (Hitotsubashi University, Tokyo), Institute of Asian and Oriental Studies – Japanese Studies, in collaboration with Protecting the Weak and Tier im Recht (TIR), Thursday, December 15, 2016, 16:00–18:00, University of Zurich, Room RAA E-29, Rämistrasse 59, 8001 Zurich
December 12, 2016
Honjo Moe is a doctoral candidate at Graduate School of Law at Hitotsubashi University in Tokyo and a part-time lecturer in animal welfare law at Teikyo University of Science. She received a Bachelor’s Degree in law from Kyoto University and completed a double Masters degree in Animal Law LL.M. and Environmental and Natural Resources Law LL.M. at Lewis & Clark Law School in the United States.
Her research focuses on animal welfare law, related especially to laboratory animals, farm animals and companion animals with a comparative perspective on Japan, the EU and the U.S.