Makiko Miyazaki ’20
Her thesis examines whether the British policymaking elites’ threat perception of the Soviet Union vis-à-vis Nazi Germany in the 1930s led Britain to exclude the Soviet Union in the 1938 Munich Agreement. During the year 2018-19, Makiko served on the Executive Committee for implementing the Japan-America Student Conference (JASC); since 1934, JASC has provided an annual forum for 70 graduate/undergraduate students from both countries to examine challenges in U.S.-Japan relations and has produced alumni including Henry Kissinger and Japan’s former Prime Minister Kiichi Miyazawa. She has interned at the Japan Institute of International Affairs (think-tank associated with Japan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs), worked at the U.S.-Japan Council (NGO promoting U.S.-Japan relations), and been published in Wellesley’s International Relations Council Journal, Wellesley Globalist, and Japan’s national newspaper Yomiuri Shimbun. Besides Wellesley, Makiko has studied at the University of Oxford (2018-19) and Harvard University (2019) to gain insight into International Relations, European/British politics, and political/moral philosophy. Makiko has lived in four countries (Japan, Switzerland, the U.S., and the UK), is fluent in Japanese and English, and has a working knowledge of French and Mandarin Chinese. Upon graduation, Makiko hopes to earn a Master’s Degree in International Relations and to strengthen U.S.-Japan and UK-Japan relations through policymaking and diplomacy.