"In between postings he was to take semesters as a visiting professor in international treaty law, his specialty, at Harvard and at Oxford."
[5]
From 1979 to 1981, while serving as visiting professor at
Harvard, Owada "remain[ed] on the Foreign Ministry payroll with the title of Minister at the Embassy in Washington, and would resume his career with another plum posting the following year."
[9]
After this, however, the Owadas would move again to
Moscow
save for Masako, who would stay behind to enroll as a student at
Harvard.
[10]
Post-DiplomatEdit
The judges of the ICJ elected Owada as their president from 2009 to 2012, making Owada the first Japanese judge to hold that post.
Having been
re-elected to the ICJ in 2011, Owada's term now expires on 5 February 2021.
[12]
He received 170 out of 192 votes in the General Assembly on the first round, more than any other candidate,
[12]
and 14 out of 15 votes in the Security Council on the first round.
[13]
Owada had been nominated by the Japanese national group of the Permanent Court of Arbitration (as well as the national groups of 32 other countries).
[14][15]
His father Takeo is descended from the Owada
clan, whose head Shinroku—Masako's 4th-great grandfather
[16]—was called to
Murakami
in 1787 to serve the Naito clan that the
Tokugawa
shogun had installed as the city's rulers sixty-seven years earlier.
[16]
After the fall of the shogunate, the Owadas participated in a salmon-fishing cooperative,
[2]
the proceeds of which provided schooling for many local children, including Takeo.
[2]
Takeo became principal of a prefectural high school in modern-day
Joetsu City
and head of its board of education.
[2]
Takeo and his wife would have seven children, all of whom survived infancy to graduate from university or teaching college.
[2]
His five sons all graduated from
University of Tokyo—Akira, who would become a lecturer of Chinese literature at
Senshu University; Takashi, who would become a lawyer; Hisashi; Osamu, who would become head of the
Japan National Tourist Organization; and Makoto, who would become an inspector at the
Ministry of Transportation's Ports and Harbors Bureau.
[17]
His two daughters Yasuko and Toshiko would marry highly, the former to managing director of
Krosaki-Harima
Tadashi Katada and the latter to one-time managing director of the
Industrial Bank of Japan
(IBJ) Kazuhide Kashiwabara.
[2]
Wife and ChildrenEdit
In 1962, at age 30, Hisashi married twenty-five-year-old Yumiko Egashira, introduced to him by a mutual friend and later employer
Takeo Fukuda.
[18]
A year later, their eldest daughter Masako was born in Tokyo,
[19]
followed by twins Reiko and Setsuko in the summer of 1966 in Switzerland.
[7]