Development of Immigration Policy in Japan
Essay by review • February 2, 2011 • Research Paper • 5,814 Words (24 Pages) • 2,709 Views
Development of Immigration Policy in Japan
I Introduction: Immigration Flow
Any ЃgGaijinЃh that has come to Japan may have had the awkward feeling of an invisible barrier that is felt in the immigration policies of Japan. A country that is an island could be a reason of the peculiar (from the world standard) policies that the Japanese government has implemented throughout history.
My paper is divided in four sections. The first point that we should discuss is the chronological development of immigration flow in Japan. In particular, we will focus our attention on the history since World War II. Secondly, we will analyze the development of integration policy in Japan. Following that, we will consider the main issues recently discussed. Thirdly, we will examine the admission and control policy in Japan, as well as we will deal with the main issues recently caused by social changes. Lastly, we shall conclude with a criticism of a lacking a comprehensive administration office for integration policy. In Japan, the chronological development of immigration flow can be illustrated by the six
periods shown in table 1.
Table 1. Chronological development of immigration flow 1639-
(1) No immigration during the isolation period (1639-1853).
(2) Opening the door, large emigration and colonial immigration (1853-1945).
(3) Strictly controlled immigration and emigration (1945-1951).
(4) Strict immigration even during the time of advanced economic growth (1951-1981).
(5) Strict immigration but refugees accepted and aliensЃf rights are improved (1981-1990)
(6) Relatively strict immigration but ethnic repatriates (front door), trainees (side door)
and irregulars (back door) come to work as unskilled workers (1990- ).
1) Old Comers and New Comers
The number of registered foreigners has increased rapidly over a recent twenty-five year
period as shown in table 2.able Ѓ@Koreans are the major foreign group. Many of them are descendants of immigrants during the second period of colonial immigration. They are called Ѓgold comersЃh . Some new comer Koreans have immigrated to Japan while the number of old comer Koreans has decreased. That is why the number of Koreans does not vary greatly over these twenty-five years. However, the numbers of Chinese, Filipino, Brazilian and others are rapidly increasing because of JapanЃfs economic growth since the Plaza Agreement in Mid-1980s and they are called Ѓgnew comersЃh.
2) Advanced Economic Growth Period with Fewer Immigrants
A peculiar point of Japanese immigration history is the fourth period of advanced economic growth with fewer immigrants. In Europe, on the contrary, before the economic recession of the first oil crisis in 1973 liberal immigration policy led to a huge number of economic immigrants; the so called Ѓgguest workersЃh. What are the reasons that Japan had so little immigration at that time compared to other developed countries? A sociologist explained this observation by the following four factors:
1) Large domestic migration: Japan had more farmers than Western countries and many farmers moved from rural to urban industrial areas during the period of rapid economic growth (1955-1973);
2) Automation: Japan had succeeded in improving manufacturing techniques through microelectronics, robots and automation, and as a result, less demand arose for foreign unskilled workers;
3) Utilization of house wives, students and elderly people as part-time labor: In Japan, university students are able to work for some hours even on week days. Usually, high school students study hard but university students do not study as hard in Japan because the being accepted into a famous university is one the most important goals of the students. Additionally, labor unions are weak and managers could hire part-time (cheap) labor more flexibly than Western countries;
4) Long working hours (total hours worked in a year):
In 1982: 2100 hours in Japan, 1690 hours in West Germany and 1650 hours in France.
In the mid 1960s 2660 hours in Japan (Kajita, 1994, 18-21).
The explanation provided by a former official of the Ministry of Justice was based on the following three reasons:
1) dense population;
2) narrow land;
3) myth of a ЃemonoethnicЃf state.
It was stated that Ѓgour country is narrow, has a lot of mountains, has scarce resources, moreover, population is dense and constitutes a Ѓemonoethnic stateЃf, therefore, there is much anxiety about admitting foreignersЃf settlement, and generally, people consider it is contrary to the national interestЃh (Kuroda, 1988, 217-8). Ideology of the ethnic nationstate was against immigration in Japan.
II ЃgInternationalizationЃh Policy as Integration Policy
Japanese governments do not use the terms ЃgimmigrantsЃh or Ѓgimmigrant policyЃh (integration policy). The Immigration Control Order was issued in 1951 and influenced by the USA. At first, it had a category of entrance permission as permanent residents, which is similar to US ЃgimmigrantsЃh. However, nobody ever received such an entrance permission and the Order was abolished when the new Immigration Control and Refugee Recognition Act was enforced in 1982. The term Ѓgimmigration controlЃh is often used by the national government, and the term Ѓgalien policyЃh used by officials (for example see Sakanaka, 2001). The reform of the Immigration Control and Refugee Recognition Act was enforced in 1990. These three reforms of immigration control regulation are connected with the development of alien policy, which includes admission, control and integration policy. In Japan, the chronological development of alien policy after World War II can be illustrated by the three periods shown in table 3.
Table 3. Chronological development of alien policy
(1) Exclusion, discrimination and assimilation policy (1945-1979)
(2)
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