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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20210607T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20210607T150000
DTSTAMP:20260507T001828
CREATED:20210531T092308Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210531T095218Z
UID:239-1623074400-1623078000@www.blog.japan.uni-muenchen.de
SUMMARY:Vortrag am 7. Juni 2021\, 14 Uhr CET "Migrant Labor in Japan’s Agriculture: New Schemes and Social Inclusion" (Glenda Roberts\, Noriko Fujita)
DESCRIPTION:This study queries newcomer migrant labor in Japan\, from the perspectives of various stakeholders: the government\, farmers and other employers\, and local communities. Migrant labor schemes have existed in Japan under the guise of homeland visitation (Brazilian Japanese workers since 1990) and ‘Technical Interns and Trainees’ (TITP\, widely understood as short-term workers in the guise of ‘training’\, since 1993). The latest scheme\, however\, is a genuine ‘front-door’ short-term labor scheme. Former Prime Minister Abe insisted strongly and repeatedly that this is not a move toward opening the country for immigration. How do the stakeholders see it? What sort of social inclusion\, if any\, do they envision for these newcomer migrant workers? Do local communities see these workers as desirable or as threats\, and to what extent do they influence how the labor schemes are operated? How is the new system coordinated in tandem with TITP? We seek to answer these questions from our initial fieldwork in Aichi and Kyoto prefectures in 2019 and 2020\, tracing from pre-to post-inception of the new scheme. \nGlenda S. Roberts obtained her PhD in Anthropology from Cornell University in 1986. After holding research and academic positions in Honolulu from 1988\, she has lived and worked in Japan since 1996\, first at the University of Tokyo Institute of Social Sciences\, and then\, from 1998 to the present\, at the Graduate School of Asia-Pacific Studies of Waseda University\, where she is Professor. Her major areas of research are on gender\, work\, family\, and migration policy in contemporary Japan. Her most recent works on migration include\, with L. Lessard-Phillips and J. Phillimore\, “Policy and politics of migration post-1945\,” IRiS Working Paper Series\, No. 34/2019. University of Birmingham NODE 2019\, https://superdiversity.files.wordpress.com/2019/11/iris-node-wp-3-2019.pdf and “An Immigration Policy by any other name: Semantics of Immigration to Japan.” Social Science Japan Journal\, Volume 21\, Issue 1\, 19 January 2018\, Pages 89-103. https://doi.org/10.1093/ssjj/jyx045 . She is the former President of the Society for East Asian Anthropology of the American Anthropological Association. She also served on the 6th and 7th Deliberative Councils for Immigration Control Policy\, Ministry of Justice\, Japan\, \nNoriko Fujita\, Ph.D.\, is Researcher at Waseda University Institute for Asia-Pacific Studies and Lecturer at Osaka University of Economics. She can be reached at noriko.kutsuna@toki.waseda.jp. Her ethnographic research focuses on gender\, labor\, and family in contemporary Japan\, as well as migrant policy for new comer foreign workers and their conditions of social inclusion in Japan. Her publications include articles\, “Corporate Transfers for Dual-Career Couples: From Gendered Tenkin to Gender-Equal Negotiations?” (Social Science Japan Journal\, 24 (1) [2021]: pp. 163-83) and “Tenkin\, New Marital Relationships\, Women’s Challenges in Employment and Family” (U.S.-Japan Women’s Journal\, 50 [2016]: pp. 115-35). Her latest studies focus on two different phenomena which show signs of change in contemporary Japanese society. One is short-term migration to the agricultural industry. The other is an increase of Japanese families who are living with pets including dogs and cats. She seeks to answer why and how these phenomena occur through qualitative research of actors and various stakeholders. With these diverse approaches\, she also attempts to imagine the future of Japanese society. \nMonday\, 2pm-3pm (CEST)\, 9pm-10pm (JST)\, 8am-9am (EDT) \nThe lecture will be conducted via Zoom. You are kindly requested to register with Zoom in advance. \nJoin Zoom Meeting\nhttps://lmu-munich.zoom.us/j/92309246995?pwd=S0JXVXQrNS9ZR3dxdmFWNE5CZDVpdz09 \nMeeting ID: 923 0924 6995\nPasscode: 356365
URL:https://www.blog.japan.uni-muenchen.de/event/vortrag-am-7-juni-2021-14-uhr-cet-migrant-labor-in-japans-agriculture-new-schemes-and-social-inclusion-glenda-roberts-noriko-fujita/
CATEGORIES:Vortrag
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20210610T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20210610T140000
DTSTAMP:20260507T001828
CREATED:20210531T091800Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210531T095842Z
UID:236-1623330000-1623333600@www.blog.japan.uni-muenchen.de
SUMMARY:Vortrag am 10. Juni 2021\, 13 Uhr CET "Municipal Politics of De/Re-population in Japan" (Ken Hijino)
DESCRIPTION:For decades\, many of Japan’s communities have seen exodus of the young in search of education and employment opportunities in the major cities. During 2010-2015\, 1\,419 (82.5%) municipalities out of 1\,719 in Japan experienced population decline. The responses to and impacts of such depopulation\, mainly but not exclusively in rural areas\, have been widely documented and analyzed. \nRecent research has tried to locate Japan’s depopulating regions in the comparative theory of “peripheralization” occurring through the four processes of out-migration\, disconnection\, dependence\, and stigmatization. Studies argue that a critical determinant of “peripheralization” is lack of political agency\, which can and have been countered by exercising power creatively. Various studies demonstrate how communities effectively turn dependence on external resources\, such as national subsidies\, in their favour to attract new residents and businesses. Mayors and their initiatives also emerge regularly in various analyses to be vital in fighting demographic and economic decline. \nDespite this recognition on the importance of political factors in depopulating communities\, few studies appear to investigate systematically the extent and process of political contestation behind policy choices to adapt to or combat depopulation. This talk will therefore begin to explore the municipal politics of depopulation in Japan\, primarily in the electoral arena: how are elected officials and candidates positioning themselves and contesting issues concerning depopulation during their campaigns? In particular\, we analyze such contestation in two policy areas: 1) various measures aimed at attracting young families and people to relocate to the municipality and 2) closure and merger of public schools. \nKen Hijino is Professor of law at Kyoto University. Specializes in party politics and local democracy. After graduating from Wesleyan University worked as a journalist at the Financial Times Tokyo bureau. Earned his PhD at the Cambridge University Faculty of Oriental Studies. Was an associate professor in Keiō University’s Graduate School of System Design and Management until taking up his present post in 2014. His recent works include Local Politics and National Policy: Multilevel Policy Conflicts in Japan and Beyond (Routledge\, 2017)\, “Japanese Local Government” in Handbook of Japanese Politics (Oxford University Press\, 2020)\, “What drives Japanese regional elections? Multilevel factors and partisan independents” (Regional and Federal Studies\, 2020) and\, together with Ishima Hideo: “Multi-level muddling: Candidate strategies to ‘nationalize’ local elections” (Electoral Studies\, 2021). He is currently researching the politics of the periphery\, focusing on municipal and prefectural level party organizations and campaigning in LDP-dominated strongholds on issues of urban-rural cleavage\, depopulation\, economic decline\, and inter-regional competition and disparity. He also writes occasional general audience pieces on Japanese local politics for Nippon.com. \nYou are kindly requested to register with Zoom in advance: \nhttps://lmu-munich.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJcqfu6sqDgqEtAV1-8ezZcGJy_VzBEz2VJj
URL:https://www.blog.japan.uni-muenchen.de/event/vortrag-am-10-juni-2021-13-uhr-cet-municipal-politics-of-de-re-population-in-japan-ken-hijino/
CATEGORIES:Vortrag
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20210614T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20210614T150000
DTSTAMP:20260507T001828
CREATED:20210607T122000Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210607T122259Z
UID:257-1623679200-1623682800@www.blog.japan.uni-muenchen.de
SUMMARY:Vortrag am 14. Juni 2021\, 14 Uhr CET: „The Question of Immigrant Belonging in an Ethnonationalist Japan" (Gracia Liu-Farrer)
DESCRIPTION:Japan identifies itself as a nation whose nationhood is founded on the ideology of a common descent (Befu 2001). Japan did not have such a unified ethno-based self-understanding before the modernizing movement known as the Meiji Restoration (1868). Rather\, the Tokugawa regime’s “rule by status”—a practice that segregates the ruled by groups—created segmented cultural traditions and practices. Such an ethnonationalist identity was also put aside during the period of imperial expansion. In the aftermath of World War Two\, facing the collapse of empire and as a way to cope with the defeat\, Japan redefined itself as an ethno-national society\, categorizing the millions of imperial subjects from its former colonies as “foreigners”. This ethnonationalism\, popularized and institutionalized in the decades thereafter\, is a major reason for Japan’s reluctance toward immigration\, despite labor shortages brought by the demographic transformation into an ageing society. This ethno-nationalist identity is also at the root of Japan’s many institutional and social dilemmas in dealing with immigrants.\nDespite the lack of effective immigration policy\, since the 1980s\, millions of immigrants have entered and settled in Japan. Given such an institutional and cultural context\, how do these immigrants understand their own positions in this society and become attached? This presentation draws on immigrants’ narratives of belonging to understand how\, in a country that rejects the notion of immigration and adheres to an ethnonationalist identity\, immigrants find their sense of belonging\, define home\, and construct their relationships with Japanese society. It explores how immigrants’ cultural backgrounds\, migration experiences\, socioeconomic circumstances\, and social relationships as well as master narratives of nationhood and concepts of personhood affect people’s conception of home and belonging\, perceived relationships with Japan\, and future mobility intentions. These findings help us grasp the social and psychological mechanisms of people on the move and understand the cultural repertoires from which they draw to interpret their situations. Immigrants’ diverse narratives of belonging also highlight the dilemma of Japan as an ethnonationalist immigrant society. \nGracia Liu-Farrer (Ph.D. Sociology\, University of Chicago)\, is Professor at the Graduate School of Asia-Pacific Studies\, and Director of Institute of Asian Migration at Waseda University\, Japan. Her research examines immigrants’ economic\, social and political practices in Japan\, and the global mobility of students and professional migrants. She is the author of books Labor Migration from China to Japan: International Students\, Transnational Migrants (Routledge\, 2011)\, Handbook of Asian Migrations (co-edited with Brenda Yeoh\, Routledge\, 2018)\, and Immigrant Japan: Mobility and Belonging in an Ethno-nationalist Society (Cornell University Press\, 2020). \nMonday\, 2pm-3pm (CEST)\, 9pm-10pm (JST)\, 8am-9am (EDT) \nThe lecture will be conducted via Zoom. You are kindly requested to register with Zoom in advance. \nJoin Zoom Meeting\nhttps://lmu-munich.zoom.us/j/92309246995?pwd=S0JXVXQrNS9ZR3dxdmFWNE5CZDVpdz09 \nMeeting ID: 923 0924 6995\nPasscode: 356365
URL:https://www.blog.japan.uni-muenchen.de/event/vortrag-am-17-juni-2021-14-uhr-cet-the-question-of-immigrant-belonging-in-an-ethnonationalist-japan-gracia-liu-farrer/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20210617T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20210617T140000
DTSTAMP:20260507T001828
CREATED:20210610T100039Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210610T100039Z
UID:275-1623934800-1623938400@www.blog.japan.uni-muenchen.de
SUMMARY:Vortrag am 17. Juni 2021\, 13 Uhr CET „Trans-Imperial Perspectives from an Imperial Center: Anarchist Thought and Practice in Interwar Japan“ (Robert Kramm)
DESCRIPTION:Anarchist theory and practice have global aims of liberation. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth century\, anarchism furnished a comprehensive critique and analysis of state rule\, capitalism and imperialism\, and it offered alternative models of being in contrast to established regimes of power. As recent research has demonstrated\, anarchist thought and practice was a modern and appealing intervention\, also in anti-colonial libertarian struggles for liberation. Yet\, how does anarchism play out in an imperial formation\, Japan\, in which anarchists were simultaneously subjugated to Western imperialism and its epistemological hegemony\, but simultaneously positioned within a non-white imperial center? \nThis talk investigates anarchist theory and practice in the 1920s and 1930s Japan. Interwar Japan’s anarchists’ trans-imperial perspectives emerged from a modern critique of the present and the engagement with anarchist and/or communalist ideas and experiences in Asia\, Africa\, Russia\, and Western Europe. The paper focuses on concepts and interventions of a rather unknown group\, the Nōson Seinen Sha\, highlighting a global consciousness even among anarchists\, who did not become famous for their cosmopolitan adventures. Members of the group developed highly sophisticated concepts of liberation and implemented new forms of living in communal farming that challenged the forces of capitalism\, imperialism\, and increasing militarization. \nIn doing so\, they simultaneously positioned themselves against established conservative and fascist agrarianism as well as Marxist dogmatism. Despite their repression by the imperial state\, they offered a radical\, universalist yet pragmatic way of being in autarchic farming village communes that corresponded with similar ideas and movements worldwide. \nRobert Kramm holds a doctoral degree in history from ETH Zurich and is currently Freigeist-Fellow of the VolkswagenStiftung in the School of History at LMU Munich. At LMU\, he is the principal investigator of the research group “Radical Utopian Communities”\, and a member of the Munich Centre for Global History and the Young Center of LMU’s Center for Advanced Studies. Before coming to Munich\, he was a post-doctoral fellow in the Society of Fellows in the Humanities at the University of Hong Kong and the Kulturwissenschaftliches Kolleg in Konstanz. His field is global history\, history of everyday life and modern Japanese\, European\, and North American history with a combined focus on the history of the body\, race and sexuality\, and anarchism and communal life. His first book\, Sanitized Sex\, was published in 2017 by University of California Press\, and he co-edited Global Anti-Vice Activism: Fighting Drinks\, Drugs\, and ‘Immorality’ (Cambridge University Press\, 2016). \nYou are kindly requested to register with Zoom in advance: \nhttps://lmu-munich.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJcufuqqqzwuEt2DQrZr4Cq5MjZLJVAXb3au
URL:https://www.blog.japan.uni-muenchen.de/event/vortrag-am-17-juni-2021-13-uhr-cet-trans-imperial-perspectives-from-an-imperial-center-anarchist-thought-and-practice-in-interwar-japan-robert-kramm/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Forschungskolloquium,Vortrag
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20210621T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20210621T150000
DTSTAMP:20260507T001828
CREATED:20210614T075313Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210614T075313Z
UID:278-1624284000-1624287600@www.blog.japan.uni-muenchen.de
SUMMARY:Vortrag am 21. Juni 2021\, 14 Uhr CET „Labour Crossings: The Making of Cross-border Labour Markets between Japan and Vietnam“ (Aimi Muranaka)
DESCRIPTION:This study presents how is a cross-border labour market between Japan and Vietnam is constructed by Japanese private intermediary actors. The Japanese government has been implementing de-facto migration policies and still denies the introduction official migratory measures despite the accelerated drop in the working population. Positioned in the literature of the international migration industry\, this research investigates how the Japanese private actors are fulfilling the absence of concrete political measures and in particular\, Japanese temporary staffing firm and recruitment company take part in establishing the cross-border labour market. The literature of the international migration industry has largely contributed to discuss how the private actors manage\, facilitate and control a migration\, and the studies on this field in Asia chiefly shed light on the low-skilled labour migration which is often heavily restricted by the country’s migratory policy in this region. Studies on the migration industry of the skilled migration in Asia still remains underexplored\, and this research provides a case by examining the labour migration of the Vietnamese IT professionals to Japan. Based on a qualitative ethnographic fieldwork\, findings of this study can be summarised as follow: firstly\, the Japanese intermediatory actors secure a link with Japanese and Vietnamese educational institutions in Vietnam to supply and to train necessary skilled workforces. In addition to the Vietnamese migrant workers\, the intermediatory actors mobilise employers via an organized recruitment trip to Vietnam. This work argues that the Japanese private intermediary actors exercise a pivotal role in establishing and managing the cross-border labour market. \nDr. Aimi Muranaka is a post-doc researcher in Institute of East-Asian Studies at University of Duisburg-Essen. She has completed her Ph.D. dissertation in Duisburg and affiliated with Waseda University during her fieldwork in Japan. Since this year\, she now works for a BMBF funded four-year project “‘Skill’ in the Migration Process of Foreign Workers in Asia” collaborating with other 4 young scholars in different German universities and research institution. Under this large project\, she will conduct an individual project which investigates links between Japanese educational institutions\, namely language schools\, and the intermediary companies. This project attempts to unravel how do they involve in the ‘construction’ of the skills of Vietnamese IT mid-skilled workers and how these workers experience the labour market integration. Additionally\, in the male-dominant IT-sector\, this study examines what are experiences of female IT professionals from Vietnam in the labour market integration. In Duisburg-Essen University\, she involves in ‘Output activity’ group at Interdisciplinary Centre for Integration & Migration research (InZentIM). \nMonday\, 2pm-3pm (CEST)\, 9pm-10pm (JST)\, 8am-9am (EDT) \nThe lecture will be conducted via Zoom. You are kindly requested to register with Zoom in advance. \nJoin Zoom Meeting\nhttps://lmu-munich.zoom.us/j/92309246995?pwd=S0JXVXQrNS9ZR3dxdmFWNE5CZDVpdz09 \nMeeting ID: 923 0924 6995\nPasscode: 356365
URL:https://www.blog.japan.uni-muenchen.de/event/vortrag-am-21-juni-2021-14-uhr-cet-labour-crossings-the-making-of-cross-border-labour-markets-between-japan-and-vietnam-aimi-muranaka/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Vortrag
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20210628T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20210628T150000
DTSTAMP:20260507T001828
CREATED:20210617T085727Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210621T134801Z
UID:296-1624888800-1624892400@www.blog.japan.uni-muenchen.de
SUMMARY:Vortrag am 28. Juni 2021\, 14 Uhr CET „Migrant-led Diversification in Japan: Urban Superdiversity in Tokyo 2021?“ (Sakura Yamamura)
DESCRIPTION:Contemporary societies are increasingly characterized by the ‘diversification of diversity’ or: superdiversity (Vertovec\, 2007)\, particularly in the urban contexts\, where global flows of capital\, goods and people are concentrated (Sassen\, 2001; Castles et al.\, 2009). Although this connection between the global phenomenon of transnational migration and the local socio-spatial impacts on the cities appears evident\, empirical research on the “relationship of migrants and cities” (Çağlar and Glick-Schiller 2011) remains underexplored. At the same time\, Japan with its supposedly homogenous society appears to have finally caught up with the diversity turn\, too\, with its government’s recent historical opening of the country to low-skilled labor migration as well as measures to accommodate the mega-event Olympic Games in 2020 aiming at re-/attracting tourism and global players back. The Tokyo metropolitan region is indeed experiencing a new socio-spatial diversification process these days. \nIn this presentation\, I will illustrate how and where different transnational spaces are produced and spread beyond commonly known ethnic towns in Tokyo. It also discusses the crucial role of different economic actors in this urban diversification process: global economy and migration policies as structural forces but also local intermediary actors\, which manage and channel the flows of transnational migrants into specific city spaces. It gives new insights into the socio-spatial diversification dynamics a long-neglected but highly topical Asian arrival city\, and conceptually reflects such localized superdiversification of urban spaces on a global scale. \nDr. Sakura Yamamura is postdoctoral researcher in the Department for Socio-Cultural Diversity at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity in Göttingen\, Germany. With expertise in migration studies\, urban and economic geography\, her work focuses on the spatiality of social and economic activities in migrant-led diversification of society\, particularly in cities\, such as Tokyo\, Frankfurt and Amsterdam. Applying both quantitative and qualitative methods\, she works on the geographical localization and conceptual concretization of transnational spaces\, shedding new light on social-spatial urban transformations induced by the interaction of different transnational actors. Sakura studied Geography\, Sociology and Social/Cultural Anthropology at the University of Hamburg\, Université de Paris 1 – Sorbonne and the University of California Berkeley. She previously worked for the Migration Research Group at the Hamburg Institute of International Economics (HWWI)\, in the International Migration Division of the OECD\, and at the German Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF). She was Junior Visiting Fellow at the Maastricht Centre for Citizenship\, Migration\, and Development (MACIMIDE) at Maastricht University\, and lectured at the Geography Departments of the University of Hamburg and Kiel. Her research results have been published by leading journals\, such as Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies\, and as a monograph in Palgrave Macmillan\, with contributions in seminal volumes\, such as the Handbook on Superdiversity published by Oxford University Press. \nMonday\, 2pm-3pm (CEST)\, 9pm-10pm (JST)\, 8am-9am (EDT) \nThe lecture will be conducted via Zoom. You are kindly requested to register with Zoom in advance. \nJoin Zoom Meeting\nhttps://lmu-munich.zoom.us/j/92309246995?pwd=S0JXVXQrNS9ZR3dxdmFWNE5CZDVpdz09 \nMeeting ID: 923 0924 6995\nPasscode: 356365
URL:https://www.blog.japan.uni-muenchen.de/event/vortrag-am-28-juni-2021-14-uhr-cet-migrant-led-diversification-in-japan-urban-superdiversity-in-tokyo-2021-sakura-yamamura/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Vortrag
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.blog.japan.uni-muenchen.de/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/Yamamura1-e1623920209208.jpg
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