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Key Insight If sport equity is conceived as a bridge, Japan’s policy framework can be understood as constructing robust access roads on both ends: on one side, highly calibrated governmental policy guidance; on the other, long-term corporate career commitments. Together, these structures enable athletes to transition securely from the competitive arena into broader social participation. Episode Overview Welcome to JohnChat. This episode continues the in-depth discussion from the previous installment, featuring two doctoral researchers—Rong-Yu Fan, a Ministry of Education–funded doctoral student at the University of Tsukuba, and Han-Lin Yeh, a doctoral candidate at National Taiwan Normal University—who engage in a comparative analysis of sport equity policies and practices in Japan and Taiwan. Fan provides a detailed examination of Japan’s well-established athlete employment system, which delineates athletic careers into three primary pathways: full-time training, dual-track arrangements combining employment and training, and post-retirement transition into corporate roles. Central to this system is Japan’s enduring emphasis on lifetime employment, which allows athletes with disabilities not only to extend their competitive careers but also to leverage their resilience and discipline as corporate representatives or specialized professionals. The conversation further addresses how Japan’s Sports Agency operationalizes policy through clearly defined Key Performance Indicators (KPIs), strategically allocating public funding to private corporations and non-profit organizations—such as NHK and Yamaha—to deliver large-scale sport expos and elite competitions. These initiatives are supported by evidence-based research and big-data analytics, reinforcing the promotion of sport participation across the population. In reflecting on Taiwan’s newly established Ministry of Sports, Yeh and host John consider how Japan’s model may offer valuable reference points—particularly in designing incentive structures that encourage corporate engagement in career planning for athletes with disabilities, and in fostering the concept of “inclusive membership” as a socially embedded norm rather than a policy mandate. In this vision, sport functions not merely as physical activity, but as a social bridge capable of transcending structural and cultural barriers. Whether your interest lies in public policy development, corporate social responsibility, or the long-term trajectories of athletes, this episode offers a rigorous and thought-provoking perspective on the evolving landscape of inclusive and equitable sport. -- Hosting provided by SoundOn (https://www.soundon.fm/)