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Introduction

History


Iwao Kokusho Ph.D.

Osaka University of Economics dates back to the establishment of Naniwa Commercial High School, its forerunner, in 1932. The High School underwent reorganization, and in 1935 Dr. Iwao Kokusho, then professor at Kyoto Imperial University, reopened the school as Showa Commercial High School, which he had built using his personal assets. In 1944, the school became Osaka Girls College of Economics, because male students had to leave school due to student mobilization during WW2. During the post-war period, the school became a coeducational college and in 1946 was renamed Osaka College of Economics. It was given its current name, Osaka University of Economics (OUE), in 1949; Dr. Iwao Kokusho became its first President. Since then, the University and its graduate schools have been actively working in specialized areas of economics and business administration. In addition to the existing Faculties of Economics and Business Administration, the Faculty of Information Management was added in 1997, and the Faculty of Human Sciences in 2002, the University’s 70th anniversary. Now with four Faculties, OUE is striving to upgrade the contents of the Faculties and graduate schools. As an educational institution, OUE will continue its efforts to meet the needs of society, based on our education philosophy of “freedom and harmony.”


Data

*As of May 1, 2010 unless otherwise specified

Students 7,443 (male: 6,055, female: 1,388)

Faculty of Economics

3,006

Faculty of Business Administration

2,286

Faculty of Information Management

1,273

Faculty of Human Sciences

878

(incl. international students)

Graduate School Students 141 (male: 108, female: 33)

School of Economics

35

School of Business Administration

67

School of Business Information Systems

20

School of Human Sciences

19

(Incl. students from overseas)

No. of graduates 83,600 (as of September 2010)
Library collections approx. 550,000 titles
PCs for educational purposes approx. 1,300 units
Participants in internship programs 459 (academic year 2009)
Organizations accepting interns 234 (academic year 2009)
Overseas partner universities 27 universities in 15 countries
Student clubs 172 (as of Jan 2011)
Faculty members (full time) 146
Staff members 102 (as of Jan 2011)