Chiyo Sakakibara
Chiyo Sakakibara | |
---|---|
Deputy Secretary of Justice | |
In office 1948 | |
Preceded by | |
Member of the House of Representatives | |
In office 1946–1947 | |
Constituency | Fukushima |
In office 1947–1949 | |
Constituency | Fukushima 1st district |
Personal details | |
Born | 15 July 1898 Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan |
Died | 28 April 1987 Tokyo, Japan | (aged 88)
Chiyo Sakakibara (Japanese: 榊原千代, 15 July 1898 – 28 April 1987) was a Japanese journalist, educator and politician. She was one of the first group of women elected to the House of Representatives in 1946.[1] In 1948 she was appointed Deputy Secretary of Justice, also becoming the first woman appointed to a cabinet post.
Biography[]
Sakakibara was born Chiyo Mano in what is now Mishima in Shizuoka Prefecture in 1898. She attended Ferris Japanese-English Girls' School, graduating in 1917. She then studied at Aoyama Girl's Academy until 1919, after which she became a reporter for the magazine Fujin no Tomo (Women's Friend). She later taught at Jiyu Gakuen Girls' School, before marrying the economist in 1927. The couple had three daughters and a son,[2] , who founded the Hippo Family Club. She subsequently studied in Europe with her husband, attending the University of Marburg in Germany and Selly Oak College in England. When they returned to Japan, Iwao became a professor at the Fukushima College of Economics, with Sakakibara becoming a teacher at . She was also a piano teacher.[3]
After the war, Sakakibara was a Japan Socialist Party candidate in Fukushima in the 1946 general elections (the first in which women could vote), and was elected to the House of Representatives.[4] She was re-elected in the 1947 elections, after which she was appointed Deputy Secretary of Justice in the Tetsu Katayama government, becoming the first woman appointed to the cabinet.[2] However, she lost her seat in the 1949 elections.
In 1951 Sakakibara became a member of the National University Management Law Enactment Committee. In the same year she became president of the Aoyama Gakuin. She was also a founding member of International Christian University, served as a director of and became a mediator for the Tokyo Family Court.
school corporation and a director ofReferences[]
- ^ Otsuka Kiyoe (2008) Japanese Women's Legislative and Administrative Reforms in the Postwar Era Bulletin of the Faculty of Education, Kagoshima University
- ^ Jump up to: a b Pioneers in politics Democrat and Chronicle, 5 February 1948
- ^ Women in politics St Louis Post-Dispatch, 29 February 1948
- ^ Analysis of the 1946 Japanese General Election United States Department of State, 1946, p89
- ^ Mennonite Weekly Review, 18 June 1987, p3
- 1898 births
- Japanese schoolteachers
- Japanese journalists
- University of Marburg alumni
- Japanese women in politics
- Members of the House of Representatives (Japan)
- Social Democratic Party (Japan) politicians
- 1987 deaths