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Asian Studies - East Asia - Japan, Immigration & Emigration - Government Policy, Foreign Labor, Immigration & Emigration - United States, Immigration & Emigration - Asia, Labor Policies
Temporary Workers or Future Citizens? by Myron Weiner and  Tadashi Hanami β€” book cover

Temporary Workers or Future Citizens?

by Myron Weiner and Tadashi Hanami
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Overview

In both Japan and the United States, migration, refugee, and citizenship policies have become highly contentious political issues. Japan, traditionally a closed society with the lowest proportion of foreigners of any major industrial country, has struggled to utilize the recent influx of illegal migrants without incorporating them into Japanese society and citizenship. The United States, a country built by immigrants, today grapples with the impact of legal and illegal migrants on employment and social services.

Myron Weiner and Tadashi Hanami have assembled a distinguished group of American and Japanese demographers, economists, historians, lawyers, political scientists, and sociologists to examine Japan's and America's very different approaches to employer demands for labor, control over illegal migration, the incorporation of migrants, the legal rights and social benefits of foreign residents and illegal migrants, the claims of refugees and asylum seekers, and the issues of citizenship and nationality.

Temporary Workers or Future Citizens places the economic issues of migration in a cultural context, by revealing how the collective identities of Americans and Japanese shape the way each society regards immigrants and refugees.

About the Author, Myron Weiner and Tadashi Hanami

Myron Weiner is Professor of Political Science at MIT, chair of the External Research Advisory Committee of UNHCR, and author of numerous works, including The Global Migration Crisis.

Author of Managing Japanese Workers, Tadashi Hanami is Professor of Labor Law and former Dean of Sophia University Law School, and Research Director General of the Japan Institute of Labor.

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Editorials

Booknews

Offers variety of perspectives on the different immigration debates within the two countries and the divergent policies they have generated. In 15 papers from a November 1994 workshop in Cambridge, Massachusetts, explores the history of incorporating migrants into the workforce and society, rights and benefits, US and Japanese views of Germany's policies, controlling migration, and refugee and asylum policies. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

Book Details

Published
January 31, 1998
Publisher
New York : New York University Press, 1998.
Pages
336
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780814793268

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