Annual Newsletter of the Slavic Research Center,
Hokkaido University |
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No.12
, December 2004 |
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INOUE Koichi |
Victor Shnirelman |
Paul Werth |
Professor MURAKAMI Takashi Passed away on July 13, 2004 from Pancreatic Cancer at the Age of Sixty-Two.
Professor Murakami was born in a small village in Nagano prefecture in 1942. After he graduated from Sophia University in Tokyo in 1969, he began to work at the Japan Association for Trade with the Soviet Union & Socialist Countries of Europe (SOTOBO), where he worked with Mr. OGAWA Kazuo (1935–2002) and gradually became one of the top specialists in Japan in the field of the Soviet industry and mining, and Japanese–Soviet economic relations. In 1988 Mr. Murakami was nominated as a chief of the economic studies department of SOTOBO, and when the Institute for Soviet & East European Economic Studies was established in 1989, he became a chief of the economic studies department of that institute (In 1992 SOTOBO was renamed as the Japan Association for Trade with Russia & Central-Eastern Europe (ROTOBO) and its institute as the Institute for Russian & East European Economic Studies).
In 1994 he was nominated as a professor of the Slavic Research Center of Hokkaido University. Since then he had made a great contribution to the various research projects carried out by the SRC and he worked as the Director of the SRC in 2000–2002.
During these years he accomplished the following two big studies. First, in the period 1998–2000 he organized a joint project, entitled "Interdisciplinary Studies on the 'Economic Development and the Environment' of the Sakhalin Offshore Oil and Gas Field." "Interdisciplinary" means that not only the scholars in social and human sciences, but also those in the natural sciences participated in this project. He was one of the first who pointed out the possibility of water pollution being caused by the Sakhalin offshore field development. He organized a number of seminars and lectures on this problem for citizens living in coastal cities along the Okhotsk and Japan seas.
Second, he conducted historical research on the Kita-Karafuto (Northern Sakhalin) oil concession, which was granted to Japan in 1925 in the tense atmosphere of the Russian Far East after the Russian Revolution and continued to be worked until 1944. He utilized an enormous quantity of materials from both Japanese and Russian archives, including the Russian State Archive of the Economy (RGAE), the State Archive of Sakhalin Oblast (GASO) and the Sakhalin Center for Documentation on Contemporary History (STsDNI). Especially, he took advantage of unused materials of the RGAE that were made available thanks to the joint project of the Institute of Economic Research of Hitotsubashi University and the RGAE.
Last December, he was informed by a doctor that he had pancreatic cancer and would not live longer than a year. Nevertheless, he persisted in completing the study on the Sakhalin concession. He continued his work on his sickbed and published a thick book, Kita-Karafuto (Northern Sakhalin) Oil Concession 1925–1944, in June. In the same month he was granted a doctoral degree from Hokkaido University on this pioneering research.
We are sincerely grateful for his distinguished contribution to the development of our Center and pray that his soul may rest in peace.
TABATA Shinichiro
Major publications of Professor Murakami: