Published Online: 2014-9-2
Published in Print: 2014-9-1
©2014 Komine, published by De Gruyter Open
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Articles
- Preface
- New aspects of Japan’s immigration policies: is population decline opening the doors?
- When migrants became denizens: understanding Japan as a reactive immigration country
- “Having it all” – at what cost? Strategies of Chinese highly skilled women in Japan to combine career and family
- “Place making” in Kawakami: aspirations and migrant realities of Chinese “technical interns”
- Representing the alternative: demographic change, migrant eldercare workers, and national imagination in Japan
Keywords for this article
immigration management;
nikkeijin;
migrants;
highly skilled migrants;
denizenship
Creative Commons
BY-NC-ND 3.0
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Articles
- Preface
- New aspects of Japan’s immigration policies: is population decline opening the doors?
- When migrants became denizens: understanding Japan as a reactive immigration country
- “Having it all” – at what cost? Strategies of Chinese highly skilled women in Japan to combine career and family
- “Place making” in Kawakami: aspirations and migrant realities of Chinese “technical interns”
- Representing the alternative: demographic change, migrant eldercare workers, and national imagination in Japan