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    Japanese Diaspora and the Narratives of Migrants:The Case of Australia and Diasporic Literature
    Oishi, N (Global Institute for Japanese Studies, Korea University, 2022-12-01)
    The overseas emigration of Japanese citizens has been on the rise in the last three decades, reaching at the level of 1.34 million in 2021 (MOFA 2022). While the COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in its downturn, the number of Japanese citizens who obtained permanent residence overseas continued to increase, hitting a record high of 537,662 in 2021 (MOFA 2022). This article examines the factors behind this growing overseas emigration of Japanese citizens, particularly looking at its flows to Australia, which is now the second most popular destination for Japanese permanent residents. Based on the narratives of 62 research participants, this article will present the basic ideal types of Japanese emigrants and examine the themes that appeared prominently in their emigration decision-making, including the acquisition of global experience, work-life balance, gender inequality, aversion of disaster/environmental and long-term economic risks, and political concerns. It will also discuss the ways in which Japanese emigration and the diversifying experiences of Japanese citizens have impacted Japanese literature so far and how the growing presence of ‘global nomads’ moving across multiple borders is likely to enrich the Japanese literature in the future by challenging the existing understanding of “Japaneseness” and the meaning of migration.
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    Country Risks and Brain Drain: The Emigration Potential of Japanese Skilled Workers
    HORIUCHI, Y ; OISHI, N (Oxford University Press (OUP), 2022)
    While most existing research attributes contemporary Japanese emigration to the pursuit of a better lifestyle, recent qualitative studies point out that concern about country risks is a significant driver . We explore Japan’s brain-drain potential and factors shaping Japanese skilled workers’ interest in emigrating to other countries based on our original survey with an experimental component. We first undertake descriptive analysis using respondents in the (baseline) control group and examine what types of Japanese skilled workers are interested in emigration. We then use respondents in the control and treatment groups to test our preregistered hypotheses regarding the impact of information about Japan’s country risks on their attitudes. The results of our descriptive analysis show that respondents with overseas experience and younger respondents are particularly motivated to consider emigration. Another notable finding is that respondents who distrust the government and media are also more likely to consider leaving Japan than those who do not. Furthermore, through our randomized survey experiment, we find that exposure to information about long-term economic risk encourages people to consider living abroad in the future. These results suggest that the brain drain from Japan is likely to continue, pointing to a need for policy actions to tackle it.
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    Skilled or unskilled?: The reconfiguration of migration policies in Japan
    Oishi, N (Informa UK Limited, 2021-07-21)
    While Japan has long been perceived as a country with restrictive immigration policies, it has been rapidly widening its immigration gates through various policy reforms in the past decade. The most prominent policy shift in Japan took place in 2018 when the government decided to officially open its labour market to migrants who work in 14 occupational sectors, including agriculture, elder care and construction, which used to be considered ‘unskilled’ and 'semi-skilled' in previous migration schemes. This study analyses how the major shifts in Japan’s migration policies have been introduced through the redefinition of ‘skills’ and ‘skilled migrants’. In doing so, it integrates the scholarly debates on immigration policymaking in Japan and the literature on the conceptualisation of skills. By reviewing the development of skilled migration policies and some impactful discourses driven by global, national and regional forces, this study argues that the ambiguous nature of ‘skills’ and the multi-level merits as outcomes have facilitated the major policy transformation in Japan.
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    静かなる流出:ポスト3.11における日本人高度人材の豪州への移住
    奈々, 大 ; 伊織, 濱 (東京大学(University of Tokyo), 2021-03-01)
    日本から海外への移住者は増加の一途を辿っている。海外在留邦人は130万人を超え、国外の永住権保持者は2017年に過去最多の48万4150人に達した 。オーストラリアは現在、邦人永住者が世界で2番目に多い国である。日本人の海外移住増加の背景には何があるのか。オーストラリアが移住先として人気の高い国の1つになっているのはなぜか。先進国の高度人材はよりよいライフスタイルを求めて移住するというのが一般的な理解であるが、本研究によれば、2011年3月の東日本大震災と福島第一原子力発電所事故の後に日本を離れた高度人材は、震災後に顕在化した現在および将来のリスクを懸念して移住を決めていた。本稿はインタビューによる詳細な質的調査をもとに、海外移住決定に関するナラティブ(語り)の中から浮かび上がった社会・政治・経済・環境リスクを分析する。この現象を包括的に理解するには今後さらに事例研究を積み重ねる必要があるが、本研究は3.11後の日本からの人材流出には、教育レベルの高い人々の間におけるリスクへの感応性の増大、リスク回避志向性、政治的意識といった幾つかの独自の特徴を内包していることを示唆している。
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    Suicide, underemployment and poverty: The gendered impacts of COVID-19 in Japan
    Oishi, N (Asia Institute, University of Melbourne, 2021-01-03)
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    ケア労働者の「北ー北」移動:豪州における日本人若年女性の低賃金労働とその課題 (“North-North” migration of care workers: low-wage labor for young Japanese women in Australia and its challenges)
    Oishi, N ; Ono, A ; Matsuo, M ; Mori, C (岩波書店 (Iwanami Shoten), 2020-12-17)
    This chapter examines the low-wage employment of young Japanese women who work as au pairs in Australia. The 'North-North' migration of care workers has been growing since young women are willing to work as cheap labour and their employers do not have to pay for travel expenses, visa or health insurance. Au pairs are particularly vulnerable, since they are not fully protected by labour laws. Japanese au pairs in Australia were paid only 4.75 dollars per hour on average. Many of them faced issues such as no contract, no overtime pay, no weekend/holiday pay rate and late payment. Four au pairs were not entirely unpaid throughout their stay. However, these Japanese au pairs remained silent as they had been taught that harmony, obedience, silence were virtues. They were too scared to making complaints against their host families since they might lose their accommodation. The lack of legal and social protection mechanisms for au pairs is a serious problem in Australia and many other industrialised countries. The exploitation of youths through a working holiday visa under the name of 'international exchange' should be more seriously scrutinised.
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    「海外における日本人の労働搾取 : 豪州のワーキングホリデー制度とその課題」'The Labour Exploitations of Japanese Abroad: the Working Holiday Program in Australia and its Challenges' (in Japanese)
    Oishi, N (The Japan Association for Advancement of ILO Activities, 2020-10)
    This article examines the labour exploitation of Japanese working holiday makers (WHMs) in Australia. Australia is the most popular destination for Japanese WHMs for the last 30 years, and over 10,000 Japanese youths are working in Australia. While the working holiday (WH) can provide valuable 'global experience' for young people, the current system is operating as a labour exploitation system where the majority of Japanese WHMs receive below minimum wage. Au pairs are particularly in a vulnerable situation as they work in private homes and are thus isolated and invisible. Given the reports that youths from other countries are also facing similar situations in Australia and elsewhere, more interventions and engagement are needed at the global levels.
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    Pacific: Japan, Australia, New Zealand
    Oishi, N ; Waters, MC ; Ueda, R (Harvard University Press, 2007)
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    Policy transfer from the UN to ASEAN: the case of trafficking in persons
    Qiao, G ; Oishi, N (Taylor & Francis, 2019)
    This article examines the policy transfer from the United Nations (UN) to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in the case of trafficking in persons (TIP). It presents pioneering empirical research that analyzes the processes and mechanisms of policy transfer between the UN and a regional organization. Institutional collective action and regime complex theories in international relations are used to complement the existing state-centric policy transfer framework. We argue that the UN-ASEAN policy transfer in TIP is characterized by a two-step process, starting with transfer from the UN to the ASEAN member states, followed by synthesis at the regional level. The consensus-based decision-making approach in ASEAN restricts transfer outcomes to a common low base of national preferences, which is the lowest common denominator. The ability of stakeholders in the TIP field to steer lesson drawing, emulation and coercive transfer at both the national and regional levels allows them to influence the lowest common denominator. At the same time, policy transfer to ASEAN is shaped by “forum-shopping” by the ASEAN member states and other stakeholders within the TIP regime complex, based on the comparative advantage between ASEAN and other cooperation mechanisms in solving TIP-related issues.