After graduation in 1962 Toyama joined the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sport, Science, and Technology. She was one of the first women to become a bureaucrat there, rising quickly to head departments and bureaus.[1] She worked mostly in higher education, and became the director-general of the higher education bureau. After leaving government work, she became the ambassador to Turkey in June 1996[2] and the director of the National Museum of Western Art in April 2000.
Toyama was the Minister of Education, Culture, Sport, Science, and Technology in the first Koizumi Cabinet in 2001.[3] She worked there for two and a half years, until 2003.[4] During her tenure Toyama released a plan to reform Japan's national universities by reorganizing internal structures and make thirty of Japan's universities "world-class".[5] There were also changes to how researchers obtain funding, including the newly established "Centers of Excellence", which made academic departments compete for funding. The "Toyama plan" was built on work that she had done during her previous government work.[6]
In 2017 she became the head of the Mt. Fuji World Heritage Center in Shizuoka.[10] Toyama is also a trustee of the Tokyo Organizing Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games.[11]
Selected bibliography
Toyama, Atsuko (2013). Koshikata no ki : Hitosuji no michi o ayunde gojunen. Kamakurashunjusha. ISBN9784774005942. OCLC848060489.]