Career
She was professor of Media Studies at the Faculty of Social Sciences of Ritsumeikan University in Kyoto from 1994 until her death. Suzuki was known for her work on media literacy, especially several seminal textbooks and the over one hundred workshops, symposia and media watch projects that she facilitated. She also introduced overseas research to Japan, for example through translations of work by Jerry Mander, Catharine MacKinnon, David Buckingham) and the Ontario Teacher"s Association.
In addition, Suzuki maintained an exceptionally high level of international networking.
She also participated in United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization-sponsored research and projects, and was involved in the Global Media Monitoring Project (1994, 2000 and 2005), for which she served as a steering committee member and a Japanese liaison. Although Suzuki had received her master"s degree in mass communications from Stanford University in 1966, she soon became critical of the mass communications research approach, especially its inherent view of people as "passive receivers" or consumers of information.
She instead began to develop a citizen-centered approach. Through her work with the Forum for Citizen"s Television and Media (FCT), which she co-founded in 1977, she focused on informed criticism of commercial television programming, especially for children, as well as of gender stereotypes and other misconceptions and biases found in the mainstream Japanese media.
Suzuki noted that "critical is creative" and saw media literacy as part of a bigger vision for media democratization.
An early advocate for communication rights in Japan, she championed an active role for citizens in media society, including in policy making.