Nobuo Noda (野田 信夫, Noda Nobuo, April 24, 1893 – 1993) was a prominent Japanese business scholar[1] professor of management at the Seikei University and president of the Seikei University in Tokyo,[2] known as one of Japan's longstanding leaders in the field of management theory,[3] a specialist in productivity matters.[4]
Biography
editYouth, education and early career
editNoda was born in Nagano, Nagano in 1893.[5] He graduated from Tokyo University in 1921 in literature and economics.[6]
After his graduation in 1921 Noda joined Mitsubishi Electric, where he joined the Mitsubishi Economic Research Institute.[5] In those early days at Mitsubishi, Noda made studies of the time and motion work of the Westinghouse Electric Company.[7]
Further career and honours
editIn 1949 Noda was appointed deputy director of the Economic Stabilization Board. In the 1950s he was appointed professor of management at the Seikei University, served as president of this university in Tokyo, and was elected president of the Japanese Materials Management Association JMMC.[6]
In 1963 Nobuo Noda was awarded the Taylor Key by the Society for Advancement of Management, in New York. Noda was considered in those days as "another early leader of Japan's management movement."[8]
Selected publications
edit- Noda Nobuo and Mori Goro, Romu kauri kindaika no jitsurei, (Examples of the modernization of labor administration). Tokyo: Daiyamondo-sha, 1954.
- Nobuo Noda, How Japan absorbed American Management Methods, Tokyo: Asian Productivity Organization, 1969.
References
edit- ^ Alan G. Robinson and Sam Stern, Japanese Corporate Creativity, 1986, p. 80
- ^ Advanced Management Journal, Volumes 33-34. 1968. p. 2
- ^ Asian Productivity Organization. APO Translation Series, Nr. 1-14. 1963. p. 189
- ^ Japanese Yearbook on Business History, Volume 12. 1995. p.a 58
- ^ a b The Japan Who's who, 1950. p. 314
- ^ a b International Council for Scientific Management. Indo-Pacific Council. II IPCCIOS conference, 1965, 1965. p.
- ^ Nakagawa, Seishi. "Scientific Management and Japanese Management, 1910–1945." Scientific Management. Springer US, 1996. 163-179.
- ^ Allen Briggs Dickerman. Training Japanese managers, 1974. p. 6.