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This paper examines Japans de facto admission of unskilled foreign workers and the changing complexion of that work force since the mid-1980s. Included in the discussion are push and pull factors behind the massive arrival of workers from developing countries; the 1989 Reform; the different groups of arriving workers...; and the implications for Japans immigration policy. Underlying Japans ad hoc response to the arrival of unskilled foreign workers is a fear of disrupting social homogeneity a poorly conceived policy regarding the labor shortage faced by small-scale employers and a lack of recognition of contemporary patterns of migration worldwide. (EXCERPT)
Keiko Yamanaka (Fri,) studied this question.