Contemporary Japan
Volume 26, Issue 2, 2014, Pages 263-280
Representing the alternative: demographic change, migrant eldercare workers, and national imagination in Japan (Article)
Świtek B.*
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a
University College London, United Kingdom
Abstract
When in August 2008 a group of 208 Indonesians undertook hands-on training in nursing and eldercare in Japan under the provisions of the Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA), their arrival fed directly into debates over the appropriate means to tackle the various projected problems coming with Japan’s aging society and declining population. In this light, the EPA scheme, offering an unprecedented possibility for the Indonesian workers to remain in Japan permanently, came to be debated in terms of Japan’s stance on immigration and Japanese self-representations as a nation. As such, although numerically insignificant and officially not aimed at supplementing the Japanese labor market, the scheme triggered debates over the future shape of Japanese society, and how, and whether, foreigners could be included in it. Against this background, in this article I consider the relationship between the demographic changes and the way a nation imagines who can or should belong. I suggest that the media representations of the EPA trainees and the debates surrounding the program were expressions of particular ideologies of a Japanese nation trying to position itself vis-à-vis the projected demographic changes and globalizing processes, which brought about a need for a redefinition of certain representations of contemporary Japanese society. © 2014, © 2014 The Author(s).
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85026251444&doi=10.1515%2fcj-2014-0013&partnerID=40&md5=6d0e8bc25a2b3325def646a92e180b3a
DOI: 10.1515/cj-2014-0013
ISSN: 18692729
Cited by: 4
Original Language: English