30チェンジメーカーズ・アンダー30


JANM

GALA DETAILS

2022年04月30日(土)

30周年を記念して、JANMのミッションを体現し、芸術、ビジネス、文化、教育、政治、スポーツ、テクノロジーなどの分野で並外れた貢献をしている30人の若者を表彰します。未来に目を向け、コミュニティーを力強いものとしてきた過去の表彰者と次の世代のつながりを祝います。

この表彰の候補者推薦は2022年1月31日に締め切り、100件以上のご推薦を頂戴しました。ご推薦くださった皆様、またこの重要な表彰にお力をお貸しくださった皆様に、心からお礼を申し上げます。当館は私たちのコミュニティーに数多くのチェンジメーカーがいることを改めて認識し、彼らの功績を表彰できることを大変嬉しく思っています。チェンジメーカー30名は、4月30日開催の30周年アニバーサリー・ベネフィットで発表します。ぜひイベントのライブストリームをご覧ください。

Introducing the Changemakers!

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JANM received over 100 nominations from across the country and thanks all nominees for supporting this important recognition. JANM recognizes that there are many changemakers in our community and are thrilled to celebrate their accomplishments!

30 Changemakers Under 30

30 Changemakers Under 30

30 Changemakers Under 30

headshot of Emma Anderson

EMMA ANDERSON

Emma Anderson is a Gosei Okinawan-American radio DJ, podcaster, and software engineer whose focus is uplifting Okinawan stories and traditions. Emma is a proud Uchinanchu, and she hopes to share that pride with the greater Japanese American community through her work in audio production and software development.

headshot of Erin Aoyama

ERIN AOYAMA

Erin Aoyama is a PhD candidate in American Studies at Brown University, co-director of the Japanese American Memoryscape Project, and JANM Curatorial Assistant. With research interests rooted in Asian American studies, 20th century American history, relational ethnic studies, and public history, her work explores the possibilities of justice-informed historical storytelling.

headshot of Kaitlyn Chu

KAITLYN EMIKO CHU

Kaitlyn Emiko Chu is an entrepreneurial product designer and creative storyteller who positively impacts lives through art, videos and community organizations. She is the author and illustrator of Smiling From Ear to Ear, a children’s book that aims to normalize face masks for kids during the pandemic. As a graduate of USC’s Iovine and Young Academy for Arts, Technology and the Business of Innovation, she is currently a Product and Concept Designer at Apple. 

headshot of Kraig Fujii

KRAIG FUJII

Kraig Fujii is an immersive technology designer specializing in virtual and augmented reality. An XR user-experience designer at Deloitte Digital, he has worked with clients such as Sony, the Los Angeles Times, and JANM. He holds a master’s degree in Human-Computer Interaction from the School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University.

headshot of Dina Furumoto

DINA FURUMOTO

Dina Alyce Fusaye Furumoto educates the public on the tangible experience of Japanese Americans and creates inclusive environments. She earned a bachelor’s degree in Sociology with an emphasis in Criminology and a minor in Political Science from Cal Poly Pomona. She has worked and volunteered for Japanese American organizations around Los Angeles including Kizuna, JANM, and Go For Broke National Education Center.

photo of keila gaballo

KEILA GABALLO

Keila Sachi Gaballo (they/she) is a queer Okinawan-Japanese American mama, artist, and philanthropic entrepreneur with a passion for mental health education, diverse representation, and embodied social justice. She weaves these elements throughout her storytelling as an illustrator, calligrapher, writer, and teacher.

black and white portrait of Jonathan van Harmelen

JONATHAN VAN HARMELEN

Jonathan van Harmelen is currently a PhD student in history at UC Santa Cruz specializing in the history of Japanese American incarceration. A columnist for JANM’s Discover Nikkei website, he regularly contributes to various newspapers, such as The Rafu Shimpo and International Examiner, and scholarly publications such as the Journal of Transnational American Studies and Southern California Quarterly.

photo of sara hutter

SARA HUTTER

Sara Hutter was the 2015 Nisei Week Queen where she represented the Japanese American community of Southern California on a global scale. She is currently the Community Relations Coordinator at The J. Morey Company, Inc. Insurance Agents & Brokers, where she nurtures and forms relationships within the community to ensure that the company remains an active and supportive member of the communities they serve.

portrait of Bryce Ikemura

BRYCE IKEMURA

Bryce Ikemura is a Partnership Manager at TDW+Co, a full-service, multicultural marketing agency with a focus on Asian audiences. He is Kizuna’s Board Chair and a Board Member At Large for the Gardena Valley Japanese Cultural Institute. He is passionate about community building through accurate representation and visibility for Asian American communities.

headshot of Brandon Ishikata

BRANDON ISHIKATA

Brandon Morio Ishikata is an educator and artist currently serving as an Honors Academic Advisor and university instructor at the University of Illinois Chicago. Passionate about the Japanese American story and empowered to uplift the Japanese American voice, Brandon has been involved with the Japanese American Citizen’s League (JACL) as an inaugural JACL Kakehashi scholar, 2019 Kakehashi supervisor, and national/regional scholarship committee member.

headshot of Nolan Jimbo

NOLAN JIMBO

Nolan Jimbo is the Marjorie Susman Curatorial Fellow at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, where he organizes exhibitions and performances with contemporary artists. He received a master’s degree from the Williams Graduate Program in Art History and his research focuses on Asian American and Asian diasporic artists, performance studies, and queer theory.

headshot of Justin Kawaguchi

JUSTIN KAWAGUCHI

Justin Kawaguchi is a graduate student at the University of Southern California pursuing a master’s in Health Administration. He is the current Co-Chair of Okaeri: A Nikkei LGBTQ+ Community, where he creates programming to foster empathy, understanding, and community amongst Japanese/Japanese American queer individuals, and serves on the National Board of the JACL.

photo of Cole Kawana standing behind a seated Lawson Sakai, both are in front of a green screen with cameras in the background

COLE KAWANA

Cole Kawana is the founder and president of Japanese American Stories, a nonprofit that develops artificial intelligence avatars to help preserve and share the oral histories of Japanese Americans who lived through World War II. In sixth grade, he conducted and filmed an oral history with his great uncle, Arthur Ichiro Murakami, an American survivor of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. It was on display at JANM and archived at the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum. He is the co-presenter of The Interactive StoryFile of Lawson Iichiro Sakai which is currently on display at JANM.

portrait of Aidan Kosaka

AIDAN KOSAKA

Aidan Kosaka is an advocate for Little Tokyo and the Japanese American community. He was selected to be an LA 28 Creator for the 2028 Olympic Games and chose to represent his love for basketball and the Japanese American community in his design. He founded and was the acting Director of NHoops, a league held at Terasaki Budokan designed to bring college age kids to Little Tokyo and support small businesses in the area.

photo of Emiko Krantz

EMIKO KRANZ

Emiko Kranz is a mixed race Yonsei in her third and final year of the UCLA Asian American Studies MA, Community Health Sciences MPH concurrent degree program whose research focuses on racial health equity and community-centered health practices, especially as delivered by cultural community-based organizations. She serves as a Director on the Board of Go For Broke National Education Center and student representative on the UCLA Community Health Sciences Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion Committee.

photo of Kenji Kuramitsu

KENJI KURAMITSU

Kenji Kuramitsu, MDiv, LCSW, is a psychotherapist, writer, and yonsei/gosei. Trained as a clinical social worker and health care chaplain, he draws from experiences in antiracism organizing and theological education to provide attuned mental health and spiritual care in clinical, retreat, and movement settings.

headshot of Kristi Lin

KRISTI LIN

Kristi Mieko Lin is an artist and Principal Landscape Architect at Falling Waters Landscape in San Diego, California. She discovered her passion for landscape architecture on a Manzanar Pilgrimage with the Florin chapter of the JACL, which sparked her interest in using landscapes to tell stories.

Photo of Devon Matsumoto

DEVON MATSUMOTO

Devon Matsumoto (he/him) is a settler on Muwekma-Ohlone Land, also known as the South Bay Area of California. He currently works as a youth advocate at an organization dedicated to ending the school to prison pipeline. A community organizer in San Jose Nikkei Resisters and the Young Buddhist Editorial, he seeks out pathways toward healing through community building and social justice through an abolitionist lens.

headshot of Kota Mizutani

KOTA MIZUTANI

Kota Mizutani currently serves as the Press Secretary for Chairman Bobby Scott (VA-03) of the U.S. House Committee on Education and Labor. He has served in a variety of JACL leadership positions and worked in the United States House of Representatives as an Asian Pacific American Institute for Congressional Studies Education and Labor Policy Fellow with Representative Mark Takano (CA-41) and Staff Assistant for Representative Don Beyer (VA-08).

headshot of Nina Nakao

NINA NAKAO

Nina Nakao (she/her) is the Virtual Learning Coordinator at JANM, where she develops and sustains nationwide programming for students grades 1–12, college, and adult groups. A biracial Yonsei with roots in Hawaii and the Bay Area, she also engages in political education through electoral work with Nikkei Progressives.

photo of Alec Nakashima

ALEC NAKASHIMA

Alec Nakashima is the Founder and Creative Director of AKASHI-KAMA, a fashion and lifestyle brand which showcases the point of view of Asian Americans, and multiple cultures creating something new over time. He also works with the Go For Broke National Education Center to honor Japanese American heroes and continues to be inspired by previous generations.

portrait of megan ono

MEGAN ONO

Megan Tomiko Ono is a purpose-driven agent of change on a mission to create innovative, cross-sector solutions to the world’s most pressing challenges. As a Corporate Social Responsibility Project Lead at American Honda Motor Co., Inc., she develops and implements enterprise-wide CSR initiatives. An advocate for youth and current Board Member for Kizuna, she is committed to empowering the next generation of global citizens to lead, using their unique identities as their “superpower.”

photo of Mariko Rooks

MARIKO ROOKS

Mariko Fujimoto Rooks (shey/they/neutral) is pursuing a master’s in Public Health in Social and Behavioral Sciences at Yale University. Mariko has long been engaged in the Japanese American community through organizations including Senshin Buddhist Temple, Kizuna, and Sustainable Little Tokyo, and serves as the JACL’s National Student/Youth Council’s Eastern District Representative.

photo of Miya Sommers

MIYA SOMMERS

Miya Sommers (they/she) is a gosei and third generation settler on the territory of Huichin, Chochenyo-speaking Ohlone land. They are the Assistant Director of Asian Pacific American Student Development at UC Berkeley and is a master’s student in Asian American Studies at San Francisco State University. Their journey in community work has been framed by the World War II experiences of their maternal grandparents and continuous participation in Nikkei Resisters for the development of a critical Nikkei consciousness.

headshot of Miye Sugino

MIYE SUGINO

Miye Sugino is a Japanese-Korean American artist living in Los Angeles. Her work, which has been recognized by the National YoungArts Foundation and U.S. Presidential Scholars in the Arts among others, distills inexpressible topics—like memory, displacement, and loss—into an image.

headshot of Vinicius Taguchi

VINICIUS TAGUCHI

Vinicius Taguchi is a Japanese-Brazilian American serving as the President of the JACL Twin Cities Chapter in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and the First Vice-Governor of the JACL Midwest District, supporting their goals of sharing Japanese American history in the Midwest, including the MIS at Fort Snelling, Minnesota. He is a PhD candidate in Civil Engineering at the University of Minnesota, where he studies urban hydrology, stormwater management, and green infrastructure.

photo of kai vanderlip

KAI VANDERLIP

Kai Vanderlip is a junior at Tesla STEM high school in Redmond, Washington and a gosei with family from Kauai, Hawai‘i. Passionate about law, justice, and writing, he founded a literature project that added six picture books about the incarceration to elementary school libraries in his school district and reached 14,000 kids.

photo of Matthew Weisbly

MATTHEW WEISBLY

Matthew Weisbly is the current Education and Communications Coordinator for the JACL National in Los Angeles. He is a member of Nikkei Rising, the young adult branch of Japanese American Memorial Pilgrimages, a co-host of the Yon-Say podcast, and creates educational and cultural content. 

headshot of Joy Yamaguchi

JOY YAMAGUCHI

Joy Yamaguchi (they/she) is a Yonsei community organizer and abolitionist. They are currently the Public Programs Supervisor at the Japanese American National Museum where they oversee the calendar of events highlighting the museum’s mission and exhibitions. They are on the Coordinating Committee and Little Tokyo Committee of Nikkei Progressives, an intergenerational grassroots organizing group fighting for liberatory change.

photo of derek yamashita

DEREK YAMASHITA

Derek Yamashita is the Creative Director of The Hidden Japan, which promotes the deeper sides of Japan beyond the big cities by working with local communities and the government to address a wide range issues holding these regions back. He is eagerly awaiting Japan’s reopening to put on a vast amount of projects in the future.

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JANM thanks the 30 Under 30 Changemakers Committee Members for their commitment and dedication in reviewing all nominations.

SELECTION COMMITTEE
Jennifer Hirano
Amy Watanabe
Stephanie Nitahara
Kristin Fukushima
Kari Nakama, JANM Board of Trustees
Nancy Okubo, MUFG Union Bank, N.A.
Sebastian Ontiveros, Toyota Motor North America
Richard M. Watanabe, PhD, JANM Board of Governors

Thank you to Lo & Sons for their contribution of stylish, eco-friendly, and versatile travel bags for the 30 changemakers.

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  • 自薦・他薦を問いません。
  • 候補者のコミュニティーにおける活動、またはプロフェッショナルな仕事が、日系アメリカ人の経験をより良いものとしたり、支援したり、それを伝えるものであること。
  • 候補者は、2022年12月31日時点において、29歳以下であること。
  • 推薦締切:2022年1月31日午後5時(PST)。
  • 選出された候補者は、推薦者の回答と決められた審査方法に基づき、選考委員会による定性的なプロセスで評価されます。
  • 選考プロセスを進めるにあたり、候補者には推薦を受諾し、履歴書または推薦書を提出していただく必要があります。
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よくある質問

友人/同僚/自分を推薦するにはどうすればよいですか?

JANMの「30チェンジメーカーズ・アンダー30」の推薦受付期間は、2021年12月1日に始まり、2022年1月31日午後5時(PST)に締め切ります。この期間に上の「推薦フォーム」からご推薦ください。

対象年齢を教えてください。

2022年12月31日時点で29歳以下の方です。

候補者は、日系アメリカ人/アジア系アメリカ人のみですか?

いいえ、候補者の活動が JANMのミッションを体現するものであれば、日系アメリカ人/アジア系アメリカ人に限りません。

候補者の居住地はどこでもいいのですか?

候補者の居住地はアメリカ合衆国内に限ります。ただし候補者の活動は、JANMのミッションに関連するものであれば、グローバル/トランスナショナルなものも歓迎します。

候補者にはJANMとのコラボレーション経験が求められますか?

いいえ、JANMへの来館経験やコラボレーション経験は求められていません。

選考プロセスについて教えてください。

最初に全ての候補者について、必要な情報が揃っているかどうかを委員会が確認し、セミファイナリストを絞り込みます。その後、このセミファイナリストのグループから、有識者らによって合意を得た最終候補者が選出されます。この最終候補者の中から、最終的な表彰者と 5〜10名の補欠者を暫定的に決定する予定です。

複数の分野で活躍する人を推薦することはできますか?

複数の分野にまたがる活動を行っている場合は、該当する全ての分野を選択してください。

自分の推薦が受け付けられたどうか知ることはできますか?

推薦フォームにご記入いただいた Eメールアドレスに、ご提出いただいたフォームの受領確認メールをお送りします。フォームに不備や情報の不足がある場合は、確認の上、追加でEメールをお送りします。

いつ、どのように選出の知らせが届きますか?

<選出された候補者には、2022年3月にEメールでご連絡します。

30人はどのように表彰されるのですか?

2022年4月30日にダウンタウン・ロサンゼルスで開催するJANMの「30周年アニバーサリー・ベネフィット」レセプション・イベントで表彰されます。また表彰者はJANMのウェブサイトやソーシャルメディアでも公表します。表彰者は、これをご自身のマーケティング素材やプレスリリース、その他のメッセージにおいて、仕事や活動を宣伝するためにご活用いただけます。

表彰者はレセプションに出席する必要がありますか?

「30周年アニバーサリー・ベネフィット」レセプションへの出席は必須ではありませんが、刊行物に掲載するための写真と簡単な経歴を提出してください。なおご出席いただける場合も、当館は旅費や宿泊費を負担いたしません。

さらに質問がある場合の問い合わせ先は?

ご質問は 30changemakers@janm.orgまでメールでご連絡ください。