Kyoto Consortium for Japanese Studies (KCJS)
The City
Kyoto, Japan’s imperial capital from 794 to 1868, is a city rich in traditional culture and history. Surrounded on three sides by densely forested mountains and intersected by a number of rivers, Kyoto is one of Japan's most beautiful cities and is home to Buddhist temples, Shinto shrines, ancient palaces, and arts and crafts centers. Traditionally a city of textiles, light industry, and refined craftsmanship, Kyoto today boasts some of Japan’s most advanced high-tech firms and many Japanese universities, and it has the nation’s highest number of students per capita. Nara, Osaka, and Kobe are nearby, and Tokyo is about two and a half hours away by train. Kyoto is a city of manageable size, filled with interesting neighborhoods that are ideal for exploration on foot or by bicycle.
The Consortium
Established in September 1989, the Kyoto Consortium for Japanese Studies (KCJS) is a consortium of 14 American universities that sponsors a rigorous, two-semester academic program for undergraduates who wish to do advanced work in Japanese language and cultural studies.
Consortium Members
Boston University * Brown University * University of Chicago * Columbia University/Barnard College * Cornell University * Emory University * Harvard University * University of Pennsylvania * Princeton University * Stanford University * Washington University in St. Louis * Yale University. In association with University of Michigan * University of Virginia
The KCJS is dedicated to:
- Providing access to premiere instructors and professors
- Ensuring small class sizes to cultivate intellectual exchange
- Integrating the historical and cultural resources of Kyoto into the curriculum through excursions, field trips, and guest lectures
- Enabling academic and cultural exchange between KCJS and Japanese students through shared classes and student activities
The KCJS welcomes applications from students outside the consortium.




