Meiji Gakuin University



Meiji Gakuin University (明治学院大学) is a private, Christian university with the main campus in Minato, Tokyo, Japan, and a satellite campus in Yokohama, Kanagawa. It was established in 1863. The Rev. Dr. James Curtis Hepburn was one of its founders and served as the first president. The novelist and poet Shimazaki Toson graduated from this university and wrote the lyrics of its college song.

List of undergraduate schools and departments

 * Faculty of Letters
 * Department of English
 * Department of French literature
 * Department of Art Studies
 * Faculty of Economics
 * Department of Economics
 * Department of Business Administration
 * Department of International Business
 * Faculty of Sociology and Social Work
 * Department of Sociology
 * Department of Social Work
 * Faculty of Law
 * Department of Juridical Studies
 * Department of Political Science
 * Department of Current Legal Studies
 * Department of Global Legal Studies
 * Faculty of International Studies
 * Department of International Studies
 * Department of Global and Transcultural Studies
 * Faculty of Psychology
 * Department of Psychology
 * Department of Education and Child Development

List of graduate schools

 * Graduate School of Arts and Letters
 * Graduate School of Economics
 * Graduate School of Sociology and Social Work
 * Graduate School of Law
 * Graduate School of International Studies
 * Graduate School of Psychology
 * Graduate School of Business and Law

List of research institutes

 * Institute of Christian Research
 * International Peace Research Institute
 * Institute of Language and Culture
 * Research Institute of Industry and Economy
 * Institute of Sociology and Social Work
 * Law Research Institute
 * Institute of the Faculty of International Studies
 * Institute of Center for Liberal Art
 * Institute of the Faculty of Psychology

List of affiliated schools

 * Meiji Gakuin High School
 * Meiji Gakuin Higashi Murayama High School
 * Meiji Gakuin Junior High School
 * Tennessee Meiji Gakuin High School (former)