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Administration

General Information

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Undergraduate Programs

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Special Programs

Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Studies Center

Asia-Pacific Financial Markets Research Center

Center for Global Japanese Investment and Finance

Center for International Business Education and Research

Office of Executive Education

Family Business Center of Hawaii

Hawaii Real Estate Center

Pacific Asian Center for Entrepreneurship and E-Business

Pacific Asian Management Institute

Pacific-Basin Finance Journal

Pacific Business Center Program

Pacific Research Institute for Information Systems and Management


International Study

Student Organizations

Honors and Awards

Accounting

Financial Economics and Institutions

Information Technology Management

Management and Industrial Relations

Marketing

College of Business Administration

Special Professional Programs

Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Studies Center

The APEC Studies Center was formed in July 1994 as a joint venture of UH Manoa and the East-West Center and is one of the founding members of the U.S. APEC Study Center Consortium. APEC has become the primary vehicle for developing a sense of economic community in the Asia Pacific region. The 18 countries that currently comprise APEC constitute about half of the world’s total annual output in terms of GNP and represent more than 40 percent of the world’s total merchandise trade.

E-mail:cmorriso@hawaii.edu
Web: www5.cba.hawaii.edu/resources/APEC.cfm

Asia-Pacific Financial Markets (FIMA) Research Center

The FIMA Research Center conducts academic and policy research on financial markets in the Asia-Pacific region. It serves the securities and banking industries, academia, and government sector through four major programs:

The Asian Shadow Financial Regulatory Committee (ASFRC) is a group of independent experts on economic policy issues relevant to financial markets and the financial industry of the Asia-Pacific region. ASFRC members are independent of any of the members’ affiliated institutions. The policy recommendations of ASFRC are its own. Typically, ASFRC tries to translate concepts drawn from academic literature into concrete policy recommendations.

The Pacific-Basin Finance Journal publishes the highest quality theoretical and empirical research on financial markets of the region.

The FIMA Financial Executive Program is intended for market regulators and financial executives to develop a better understanding of the financial markets in the region as well as in the developed economies in light of state-of-the-art finance theories.

The PACAP Databases Program creates, maintains, and distributes capital market databases of Asia, including China, Hong Kong (SAR), Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan, and Thailand. The Program is jointly undertaken by FIMA and the University of Rhode Island PACAP Research Center. The FIMA Research Center assumes a leadership role as the front office by acting as a liaison with participating financial institutions from the region. The PACAP Research Center, in turn, provides the back office function of maintaining, updating, and distributing the databases.

E-mail: rheesg@hawaii.edu
Web:www2.hawaii.edu/~fima

Center for Global Japanese Investment and Finance

The Center for Global Japanese Investment and Finance was founded in November 1997. Its mission is to research and study the Japanese financial market: its global investment policies and strategies and ways in which the U.S., Hawai‘i, and Japan can receive mutual economic benefits through balanced investments in Hawai‘i. Many scholarships are available through the Center.

E-mail: misawa@hawaii.edu
Web: www.cba.hawaii.edu/Main.aspx?Menu=ResearchAndFaculty&Page=CenterforJapanese

The Center for International Business Education and Research (CIBER)

The UH CIBER goal is to promote international business research and development activities at the UH. As one of 30 such centers at major universities across the U.S., the UH CIBER serves as a national resource for improved international business techniques and strategies as well as a regional resource providing training and research designed to meet the needs of companies doing business with the Asia-Pacific.

Working with faculty and researchers from various disciplines across the Mânoa campus and from the UH system, CIBER has promoted the creation of interdisciplinary courses, research and programs. Other activities supported include the innovative Field Study in Asia course, the annual PAMI Summer Program, faculty research projects on international business topics, studies abroad and overseas internships by students and travel support for faculty and doctoral students to present papers at national and international conferences. Outreach and executive education initiatives include working with various community organizations to sponsor workshops and other training activities.

E-mail: ciber@cba.hawaii.edu
Web: www.cba.hawaii.edu/Main.aspx?Menu=ResearchAndFaculty&Page=CIBER

Office of Executive Education

The Office of Executive Education is responsible for the CBA’s Executive Masters programs and designs and coordinates executive-level management development programs, seminars and workshops designed to meet the specific needs of organizations in the public and private sector.

Participants for these programs come from local, regional and international organizations. The primary thrust of the Office of Executive Education is custom designed programs. It also offers the Hawai‘i Management Program, designed for Hawai‘i-based mid level executives and managers who wants to maintain a competitive advantage and gain the necessary skills to enhance their careers.

E-mail: tami.williams@hawaii.edu
Web: www.cba.hawaii.edu/Main.aspx?Menu=AcademicPrograms&Page=ExecutiveEducation

Family Business Center of Hawai‘i

The Family Business Center of Hawai‘i is a partnership between Hawai‘i’s family business community and the UH’s College of Business Administration. The mission of the Family Business Center is “equipping, educating, and celebrating families in business.” The center provides opportunities for the families to address many of the challenges they face by providing educational seminars and a forum for the exchange of information between families so that they can survive and thrive into and through the 21st century.

E-mail: david.bess@hawaii.edu
Web: lwww.hawaii.edu/community/fbc.html

Hawai‘i Real Estate Center (HREC)

The Hawai‘i Real Estate Center was established in 1961 to provide a focus for property rights research in the state of Hawai‘i. It is a policy oriented center and has provided research studies on land use and international investment issues affecting the state. In recent years, the HREC has expanded its research mission to address intellectual property rights issues and e-commerce issues as cyberspace interacts with real space. The center is funded by research grants and consulting contracts from private and government sources. It maintains an archive of Hawai‘i specific information.

E-mail: nordway@cba.hawaii.edu

Pacific Asian Center for Entrepreneurship and E-Business (PACE)

The goal of PACE is to foster the entrepreneurial spirit among students, faculty and the community. The Center supports the inclusion of entrepreneurship-related courses in the UH curriculum and offers a summer certificate in international entrepreneurship. In addition, PACE also supports the student Entrepreneurship Club and numerous outreach programs, including statewide business plan competitions at the high school and college levels, the Kauffman Entrepreneurial Internship Program, a distinguished lecture series, the Hawaii Entrepreneurs Bootcamp, and programs for Native Hawaiian entrepreneurs.

E-mail: PACE@hawaii.edu
Web: www.cba.hawaii.edu/pace

Pacific Asian Management Institute (PAMI)

PAMI was established in 1977 as an institute of international management education and research bridging the East and the West. Students, faculty, managers and government officials from more than 170 companies and 200 institutions in 22 countries have attended cross-cultural, international management courses and training programs developed by PAMI. It also coordinates special short-term programs for visiting academics and executives interested in international business issues and topics.

For a modest fee in addition to the summer course tuition, two certificate programs—in International Management and International Entrepreneurship—are offered by PAMI during the UH Outreach College Summer Sessions. The curriculum features traditional (classroom-based) and online international business courses in management, marketing, finance, business economics, entrepreneurship and human resource management and taught by faculty from UH and from some of the best business schools on the U.S. Mainland and around the world. The programs are open to undergraduate and graduate students from any discipline, to Americans and foreigners, who are admitted by the UH Summer Session Office.

The Pacific Asian Lecture Series (PALS), open to the public, is part of the PAMI summer program, as are occasional field trips and site visits. The highlight of PAMI’s summer is the annual N.H. Paul Chung Luncheon and Lecture, held in honor of PAMI’s founder and features a renowned international business speaker.

PAMI is the secretariat for the Pacific Asian Consortium on International Business Education and Research (PACIBER), with 33 member universities in the U.S., Canada, Asia and Oceania.

E-mail: pami@hawaii.edu
Web: pami.hawaii.edu

Pacific-Basin Finance Journal

The Pacific-Basin Finance Journal is an academic journal published five times a year by Elsevier Science publishers B.V. (North-Holland) in collaboration with the UH College of Business Administration. The journal provides a specialized forum for the publication of the highest quality theoretical and empirical research on capital markets of the Asia-Pacific region and represents a significant milestone in the FIMA Research Center’s program and objectives as it effectively reaches a broader audience in terms of current developments in Asian and Pacific capital markets. Its primary emphasis will be placed on the following areas:

  • investment and portfolio management
  • theories of market equilibrium
  • valuation of market equilibrium
  • behavior of asset prices in financial sectors
  • normative theory of financial management
  • capital markets development
  • market mechanism

E-mail: rheesg@hawaii.edu
Web: www2.hawaii.edu/~fima/pbfj.htm

Pacific Business Center Program

The Pacific Business Center Program, sponsored by the UH and the Economic Development Administration of the U.S. Department of Commerce, provides businesses, government agencies, and community groups, a variety of business consultant services at moderate cost. PBCP offers university students opportunities to work with its staff to assist its clients solve a wide variety of business problems. Such work includes market research, feasibility studies, product development, strategic and financial planning, loan packaging, and management consultation. PBCP serves clients in Hawai‘i, the Territories of American Samoa and Guam, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, the Republics of Palau and of the Marshall Islands, and the Federated States of Micronesia.

E-mail: pbcp@hawaii.edu
Web: www.hawaii.edu/pbcp

Pacific Research Institute for Information Systems and Management (PRIISM)

PRIISM is a center for research and educational activities. Drawing on a variety of academic disciplines, PRIISM focuses on information systems and technologies and management of organizations. Its primary objective is to promote research on the development, implementation, and use of information and communication technologies in organizations.

E-mail: priism@busadm.cba.hawaii.edu
Web: www.cba.hawaii.edu/Main.aspx?Menu=ResearchAndFaculty&Page=PRISM

Internships and Career Development

A full-time internship director helps to provide opportunities for students to gain real world experience while at the same time earning academic credits. Through the internship program, students are able to practice interviewing and communication skills and obtain hands-on work experience related to one’s major. Goals of the internship program are to strengthen students’ employment opportunities in the marketplace after graduation and to provide greater insight into a student’s selection of a career path and organizations suited to the student. CBA also provides a career development center that helps to connect students to prospective recruiters and job opportunities.

E-mail: busint@hawaii.edu
Web: www.cba.hawaii.edu/intern

International Study

In addition to the study abroad programs offered through the UH Manoa Study Abroad Center (see the “Student Life” section for more information), the following CBA sponsored programs are available.

Industry in Asia: Field Study

Each summer, up to 25 business students have the opportunity to participate in a 5-week, 6 credit course (BUS 477/677) which includes three weeks in Asia. In Asia, the students visit companies, factories, economic agencies and government offices to learn more about organizational structure, government policies and international competition and their effect on these units. Classes are held on campus the week before and after the field study. Some CBA scholarships are available on a competitive basis to help defray the costs.

CBA Exchange Agreements with Foreign Universities

UH CBA students can apply to study abroad in connection with several official exchange agreements between the UH CBA and foreign universities. These universities are: Aarhus School of Business in Denmark; Chulalongkorn University in Thailand; Copenhagen Business School in Denmark; Hitotsubashi University in Japan; Hong Kong University of Science and Technology; Keio University (Keio Business School) in Japan; WHU Koblenz-Otto Besheim Graduate School of Management in Germany; Korea University CBA; Reims School of Management in France (summer only); National Sun Yat Sen University in Taiwan; National University of Singapore; Seoul National University in Korea; Thammasat University in Thailand; Waseda University in Japan; and Yonsei University in Korea. In most cases, courses are offered in English for international students, language training is available, and the schools plan instructional excursions for visiting students. Tuition is waived for the students at the host university. Some scholarship assistance is available on a competitive basis to help defray travel costs. The student arranges his/her own travel and housing. For more information, contact the Office of Student Academic Services in BusAD B101 or at (808) 956-8215.