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Immigration to Japan

According to the Japanese Ministry of Justice, the number of foreign residents in Japan has steadily increased in the post Second World War period, and the number of foreign residents (excluding illegal immigrants and short-term foreign visitors and tourists staying more than 90 days in Japan) was more than 2.76 million at the end of 2022.[1] Being a country with a total estimated population of 125.57 million in 2020,[2] the resident foreign population in Japan amounts to approximately 2.29% of the total population.

Foreign residents in Japan

History edit

 
Foreigners in Japan as of the end of 2017, by country

Due to geographic remoteness and periods of self-imposed isolation, the immigration, cultural assimilation and integration of foreign nationals into mainstream Japanese society has been comparatively limited. Historian Yukiko Koshiro has identified three historically significant waves of immigration prior to 1945; the 8th-century settlement of Korean artists and intellectuals; the asylum offered to a small number of Chinese families in the 1600s; and the forced immigration of up to 670,000[3] Korean and Chinese laborers during the Second World War.[4]

After 1945, unlike the guest worker immigration encouraged in other advanced industrial economies such as Germany, Japan was for the greater part able to rely on internal pools of rural labor to satisfy the manpower needs of industry. The demands of small business owners and demographic shifts in the late 1980s, however, gave rise for a limited period to a wave of tacitly accepted illegal immigration from countries as diverse as the Philippines and Iran.[5]

Production offshoring in the 1980s also enabled Japanese firms in some labor-intensive industries such as electronic goods manufacture and vehicle assembly to reduce their dependence on imported labor. In 1990, new government legislation provided South Americans of Japanese ancestry such as Japanese Brazilians and Japanese Peruvians with preferential working visa immigration status. By 1998, there were 222,217 Brazilian nationals registered as residents in Japan with additional smaller groups from Peru. In 2009, with economic conditions less favorable, this trend was reversed as the Japanese government introduced a new program that would incentivize Brazilian and Peruvian immigrants to return home with a stipend of $3000 for airfare and $2000 for each dependent.[6]

As of the second half of 2015, with an increasingly elderly Japanese population and lack of manpower in key sectors such as construction, IT services and health care, Japanese politicians are again debating the need to expand temporary foreign labor pools, through the use of short-term trainee programs.[7]

Current immigration statistics edit

Resident foreign nationals in Japan that are counted in immigration statistics of permanent residents and mid-long-term residents (granted resident visas for 12 months or more) include individuals and their registered dependents with:

  • Special permanent resident status
  • Permanent Resident status
  • Status of Residence based on Status or Position (Descendants of Japanese nationals)
  • Individuals living in the country as registered spouses of Japanese nationals
  • Individuals granted limited duration employment visas
  • Individuals granted limited duration student or academic research visas
  • Individuals on limited duration Technical Intern Training Program visas
  • Registered refugee and asylum seekers

From 2013 published government reports, the proportion of foreign residents granted permanent resident status in Japan exceeded 30%. Although, if foreign residents granted permanent resident status, spouses of Japanese nationals, fixed domicile residents (those of Japanese ancestry) and ethnic Koreans with residence in Japan are included, the number of resident foreigners granted permanent residence effectively exceeds 60%.[8]

Japan receives a low number of immigrants compared to other G7 countries.[9] This is consistent with Gallup data, which shows that Japan is an exceptionally unpopular migrant destination to potential migrants, with the number of potential migrants wishing to migrate to Japan 12 times less than those who wished to migrate to the US and 3 times less than those who wished to migrate to Canada,[10] which roughly corresponds to the actual relative differences in migrant inflows between the three countries.[9] Some Japanese scholars have pointed out that Japanese immigration laws, at least toward high-skilled migrants, are relatively lenient compared to other developed countries, and that the main factor behind its low migrant inflows is because it is a highly unattractive migrant destination compared to other developed countries.[11] This is also apparent when looking at Japan's work visa programme for "specified skilled worker", which had less than 3,000 applicants, despite an annual goal of attracting 40,000 overseas workers.[12]

Immigration to Japan by resident status edit

Special Permanent Resident edit

The published statistics on foreign nationals resident in Japan includes zainichi Koreans with tokubetsu eijusha Special permanent resident status 292,702.[1]

Permanent Resident edit

Foreign nationals already long-term residents in Japan under another visa category such as a working visa or as the spouse of a Japanese national are eligible to apply for permanent residence status. The granting of permanent residence status is at the discretion of the Immigration Bureau and dependent on satisfaction of a number of detailed criteria such as length of stay, ability to make an independent living, record of tax payments and documented contributions to Japan in terms of public service or professional activities.[13] According to the Migrant Integration Policy Index, permanent residency laws were less stringent than those in the United States and the United Kingdom.[14]

Immigration through marriage edit

International marriage migration used to represent as much as 25% of permanent migration flows to Japan, but this trend has been in decline since a peak in 2006. In the 1980s increasing numbers of Japanese men were registering marriages in Japan to women from China, Korea and the Philippines.[15]

In 2006, according to data released by the Japanese Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare, 44,701 marriages, or 6.11% of all marriages registered in Japan were to a foreign national. In 2013, this number had fallen to 21,488 marriages or 3.25% of all marriages registered in Japan.[16] Of the 21,488 international marriages registered in Japan in 2013, 15,442 or 71.77% were marriages involving a foreign bride, compared to 6,046 or 28.23% where the groom was non-Japanese.

Japan registered marriage statistics alone may not present a comprehensive picture of the numbers of international marriages in Japan as marriages registered overseas may also contribute to total immigrant spouse numbers. Once married, foreign spouses may also, if certain criteria are satisfied, change their visa status to Permanent Resident or other visa categories. 2012 Ministry of Justice data indicates that of all foreigners in Japan, 7.5% are resident in Japan under a visa designation as a spouse of a Japanese national.[17]

Long term residents on limited duration employment edit

At in the end of June 2022 there were 2,760,635 foreigners residing in Japan. Of this number 1,181,203 were considered long-term, but non permanent residents; those granted visas for a duration of 12 months or more. The majority of long-term residents in Japan on limited duration work or study visas were from Asia. Chinese made up the largest portion of this group with 744,551, followed by Vietnamese with 476,346, and Koreans with 412,340. Filipino, Nepalese, Indonesian and Taiwanese long-term residents totaled 47,956, and those from other Asian countries totaled 554,246.[1]

Country Foreigners
  China 744,551
  Vietnam 476,346
  South Korea 412,340
  Philippines 291,066
  Brazil 207,081
    Nepal 125,798
  Indonesia 83,169
  United States 57,299
  Thailand 54,618
  Taiwan 54,213

In 2022, Technical Intern Training Program visas account for nearly 327,689 of the number. Vietnamese made up the largest group with 160,563, followed by Chinese with 37,4891, and Indonesians with 34,459.[1]

Student visas edit

According to the Japan Student Services Organization (JSSO), as of 2021, 242,444 international students are residing in Japan. Chinese made up the largest portion of this group with 114,255, followed by Vietnamese with 49,469, and Nepalis with 18,825.[18]

Refugees and asylum seekers edit

Japan is a signatory to the UN 1951 Refugee Convention as well as the 1967 Protocol. The country therefore has made a commitment to offer protection to people who seek asylum and fall into the legal definition of a refugee, and moreover, not to return any displaced person to places where they would otherwise face persecution.

Japan has historically been one of the world's most generous donors to refugee relief and resettlement programs overseas.[19] In 2014 it was the world's 2nd largest financial contributor to UNHCR programs.[20] Japanese diplomat Sadako Ogata served as the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees from 1991 to 2000.

As of December 2015 Japan had 13,831 asylum applications under review.[21] In 2016, more than 10,000 applications for refugee status in Japan were received and in the same year 28 asylum applications were approved.[22] In 2015, more than 7,500 people applied for refugee status and 27 asylum applications were approved. In 2014, more than 5000 applications were made and 11 applications were approved.[23] Recent low approval rates for asylum applications follow historic trends; in a 22-year period from 1982 to 2004, a total of 330 applications for asylum were approved, an average of 15 per year.[24]

Overview of asylum applications in Japan 2012 - 2018[22][25][26][27]
Year Total number of asylum applications received Total number of asylum applications approved
2012 2,545 18
2013 3,260 6
2014 5,000 11
2015 7,686 27
2016 10,901 28
2017 19,628 20
2018 10,493 42

Whereas in Germany and Canada around 40% of asylum applications are approved, in Japan the number averages 0.2 percent.[28] On occasion, where Japan has stopped short of granting official refugee status, a limited number of applicants have been granted permission to stay on humanitarian grounds.[29] In 2016, 97 refugee applicants were granted permission to stay on this basis. Decisions on refugee status in Japan are often slow, and confirmation of deportation orders are not widely published. Resubmission of asylum claims by previously unsuccessful applicants often occurs.[30]

Closure of asylum application legal loophole edit

Between 2010 and January 2018, a rise in the number of asylum seekers in Japan was attributed in part to a legal loophole related to the government administered Technical Intern Training Program.[23] In 2015, 192,655 vocational trainees mainly from developing economies were working in Japan in factories, construction sites, farms, food processing and in retail. Although total numbers are small, following a change in rules in 2010, asylum applications jumped four-fold, fueled by asylum seekers from Nepal, Turkey and Sri Lanka.[31] Rising numbers of vocational trainees reportedly made formal asylum applications in order to change employers and escape reported employment abuses and low pay.[32] The government-backed vocational program allows trainees to work on either one or three year contracts. Although the chances of refugee status been granted in Japan are exceptionally small, asylum applicants were permitted to get a job six months after applying for refugee status and, significantly, to make their own choice of employer.

Permits enabling legal employment six months after application for refugee status were discontinued by the Justice Ministry in January 2018. Workplace inspections and illegal immigration deportation enforcement activities were subsequently stepped up aimed at curbing alleged abuse of the refugee application system.[33]

Illegal immigration edit

According to Ministry of Justice (MOJ) estimates, the number of foreign nationals staying illegally in Japan beyond their authorized period of stay dropped to approximately 60,000 as of January 1, 2015.[34] Illegal immigrant numbers had peaked at approximately 300,000 in May 1993, but have been gradually reduced through a combination of stricter enforcement of border controls, workplace monitoring and an expansion of government run foreign worker programs for those seeking a legal route to short term employment opportunities in Japan.

Border controls at ports of entry for foreign nationals include examination of personal identification documentation, finger printing and photo recording. Security at both air and maritime ports is closely controlled. As a result, according to MOJ data, the single largest source of illegal immigrants in Japan are those foreign nationals found to have stayed illegally beyond the 90 day time period of the temporary visitor visa.

Immigrant integration into Japanese society edit

Naturalisation edit

In 2015, 9,469 applications for Japanese citizenship were approved. The number of foreign residents in Japan applying to naturalize and obtain Japanese citizenship peaked in 2008 at more than 16,000, but declined to 12,442 in 2015. Processing of applications can take up to 18 months. Application criteria are set deliberately high and inspectors are granted a degree of discretion in interpretation of eligibility and good conduct criteria.[35] Apart from the requirement to renounce foreign citizenship, naturalization criteria are similar to other developed countries such as the US, although there is no citizenship test.[36][37] About 80 percent of naturalization applications in Japan are approved, compared to about 90 percent in the US.[38][39][40]

Most of the decline in applications is accounted for by a steep reduction in the number of Japan-born Koreans taking Japanese citizenship. Historically the bulk of those taking Japanese citizenship have not been new immigrants but rather Special Permanent Residents; Japan-born descendants of Koreans and Taiwanese who remained in Japan at the end of the Second World War.[citation needed]

Ethnicity and nationality edit

The concept of minzoku (民族, "ethnic group") as represented in Japanese makes no distinction between racial, ethnic, and national identities. Where the census of the United Kingdom, for example, separates ethnic or racial background from nationality,[41] the Japanese Census and Statistics Bureau do not distinguish between the two.[42]

The definition of ethnic and racial boundaries alongside national ones leads many people to represent Japan as tan’itsu minzoku kokka (単一民族国家, "an ethnically homogeneous nation"), with an explicit purity of blood and culture.[43] In 2005, future Prime Minister Tarō Asō described Japan as being a nation of "one race, one civilization, one language and one culture"[44] and in 2012, this claim was repeated by former Governor of Tokyo Shintaro Ishihara.[45]

The concept of a unified minzoku retains a legal authority. A 1984 amendment to the Japanese Nationality Act made citizenship jus sanguinis, tied to blood rather than place of birth.[citation needed] Japanese citizenship is exclusive: those who naturalize must renounce their first nationality, and those who are born Japanese but with a second citizenship must choose between them by the time they are 20 years old.

Public opinion towards immigration edit

Overall, polls find that Japanese public opinion toward immigration is similar to other G7 countries. A 1999 review article of opinion polls show attitudes broadly neutral and less negative than other developed countries.[citation needed]

In 1993, 64% of respondents supported allowing firms facing labor shortages to hire unskilled foreign workers.[46] A 2017 poll by Gallup shows a similar attitude 24 years later, with Japan middling among developed countries in terms of public positivity towards immigration, ranking close to France, Belgium and Italy.[47] In a Nikkei survey from 2019, 69% of respondents said an increase in foreigners was "good".[48] Japanese who are college educated are almost 50% more likely to favor immigration for both economic and cultural reasons.[49]

A 2019 Pew Research Center poll found Japanese respondents had more positive views of immigrants than respondents in most countries.[50] Another Pew Research Center poll found Japanese respondents were the least likely to support a reduction in immigration, and among the most likely to support an increase in immigration, of the 27 countries surveyed.[51]

A 2016 poll by the Asahi Shimbun found that 34% of its readers opposed an expansion of immigration to maintain Japan's economic status in the face of a shrinking and rapidly aging workforce, while 51% of its readers supported increased immigration.[52]

However, a large poll of 10,000 native Japanese conducted later that year, between October and December 2015, found more opposition to increasing foreign immigration.[53] Over half of Asahi Shimbun's readers who responded to a 2016 poll said that immigrants should respect Japanese culture and obey Japanese customs, while about one quarter said that Japanese people should embrace diversity.[54] On the other hand, one of the common arguments for restricting immigration is based on safeguarding security, including public order, protecting welfare mechanisms, cultural stability, or social trust.[55]

Another poll conducted by the Asahi Shimbun in 2018 showed an increase in opposition to immigration: 43% of the readers who responded were against the increase of immigrant workers, and 45% of those readers were in favor.[56]

Immigration detention edit

Japanese immigration law permits indefinite detention without a court order including for those that overstay and those who seek asylum.[57] Three immigration detention centers are maintained by immigration bureau for long-term detainees:[58][59]

Additionally, 16 regional detention houses are managed for short-term detention.[59] However, many of the long-term detainees have been detained in regional short-term detention houses that lack facilities such as common rooms and recreational area.[59] Some detainees spend significant time (up to 13 days) in isolation due to disciplinary measures.[59] Practices of immigration bureau has been criticized for the "lack of transparency", "indefinite detention"[59] and its "arbitrary" nature.[57]

See also edit

  • Japanese diaspora - Information on historical and current migration trends from Japan.

References edit

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  56. ^ "入管法の改正「今国会、必要ない」64% 朝日世論調査". 20 November 2018.
  57. ^ a b "HRN Releases Statement Calling for the Prohibition of Arbitrary Detention in Immigration Facilities in Japan and Related Legal Reforms". Human Rights Now. 31 October 2019. Retrieved 8 July 2020.
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  59. ^ a b c d e "Japan Immigration Detention". Global Detention Project. March 2013. Retrieved 8 July 2020.

External links edit

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immigration, japan, according, japanese, ministry, justice, number, foreign, residents, japan, steadily, increased, post, second, world, period, number, foreign, residents, excluding, illegal, immigrants, short, term, foreign, visitors, tourists, staying, more. According to the Japanese Ministry of Justice the number of foreign residents in Japan has steadily increased in the post Second World War period and the number of foreign residents excluding illegal immigrants and short term foreign visitors and tourists staying more than 90 days in Japan was more than 2 76 million at the end of 2022 1 Being a country with a total estimated population of 125 57 million in 2020 2 the resident foreign population in Japan amounts to approximately 2 29 of the total population Foreign residents in Japan Contents 1 History 2 Current immigration statistics 3 Immigration to Japan by resident status 3 1 Special Permanent Resident 3 2 Permanent Resident 3 3 Immigration through marriage 3 4 Long term residents on limited duration employment 3 5 Student visas 4 Refugees and asylum seekers 4 1 Closure of asylum application legal loophole 5 Illegal immigration 6 Immigrant integration into Japanese society 6 1 Naturalisation 6 2 Ethnicity and nationality 6 3 Public opinion towards immigration 7 Immigration detention 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory edit nbsp Foreigners in Japan as of the end of 2017 by countryDue to geographic remoteness and periods of self imposed isolation the immigration cultural assimilation and integration of foreign nationals into mainstream Japanese society has been comparatively limited Historian Yukiko Koshiro has identified three historically significant waves of immigration prior to 1945 the 8th century settlement of Korean artists and intellectuals the asylum offered to a small number of Chinese families in the 1600s and the forced immigration of up to 670 000 3 Korean and Chinese laborers during the Second World War 4 After 1945 unlike the guest worker immigration encouraged in other advanced industrial economies such as Germany Japan was for the greater part able to rely on internal pools of rural labor to satisfy the manpower needs of industry The demands of small business owners and demographic shifts in the late 1980s however gave rise for a limited period to a wave of tacitly accepted illegal immigration from countries as diverse as the Philippines and Iran 5 Production offshoring in the 1980s also enabled Japanese firms in some labor intensive industries such as electronic goods manufacture and vehicle assembly to reduce their dependence on imported labor In 1990 new government legislation provided South Americans of Japanese ancestry such as Japanese Brazilians and Japanese Peruvians with preferential working visa immigration status By 1998 there were 222 217 Brazilian nationals registered as residents in Japan with additional smaller groups from Peru In 2009 with economic conditions less favorable this trend was reversed as the Japanese government introduced a new program that would incentivize Brazilian and Peruvian immigrants to return home with a stipend of 3000 for airfare and 2000 for each dependent 6 As of the second half of 2015 with an increasingly elderly Japanese population and lack of manpower in key sectors such as construction IT services and health care Japanese politicians are again debating the need to expand temporary foreign labor pools through the use of short term trainee programs 7 Current immigration statistics editSee also Demography of Japan Foreign residents Resident foreign nationals in Japan that are counted in immigration statistics of permanent residents and mid long term residents granted resident visas for 12 months or more include individuals and their registered dependents with Special permanent resident status Permanent Resident status Status of Residence based on Status or Position Descendants of Japanese nationals Individuals living in the country as registered spouses of Japanese nationals Individuals granted limited duration employment visas Individuals granted limited duration student or academic research visas Individuals on limited duration Technical Intern Training Program visas Registered refugee and asylum seekersFrom 2013 published government reports the proportion of foreign residents granted permanent resident status in Japan exceeded 30 Although if foreign residents granted permanent resident status spouses of Japanese nationals fixed domicile residents those of Japanese ancestry and ethnic Koreans with residence in Japan are included the number of resident foreigners granted permanent residence effectively exceeds 60 8 Japan receives a low number of immigrants compared to other G7 countries 9 This is consistent with Gallup data which shows that Japan is an exceptionally unpopular migrant destination to potential migrants with the number of potential migrants wishing to migrate to Japan 12 times less than those who wished to migrate to the US and 3 times less than those who wished to migrate to Canada 10 which roughly corresponds to the actual relative differences in migrant inflows between the three countries 9 Some Japanese scholars have pointed out that Japanese immigration laws at least toward high skilled migrants are relatively lenient compared to other developed countries and that the main factor behind its low migrant inflows is because it is a highly unattractive migrant destination compared to other developed countries 11 This is also apparent when looking at Japan s work visa programme for specified skilled worker which had less than 3 000 applicants despite an annual goal of attracting 40 000 overseas workers 12 Immigration to Japan by resident status editSpecial Permanent Resident edit Main article Special permanent resident Japan The published statistics on foreign nationals resident in Japan includes zainichi Koreans with tokubetsu eijusha Special permanent resident status 292 702 1 Permanent Resident edit Foreign nationals already long term residents in Japan under another visa category such as a working visa or as the spouse of a Japanese national are eligible to apply for permanent residence status The granting of permanent residence status is at the discretion of the Immigration Bureau and dependent on satisfaction of a number of detailed criteria such as length of stay ability to make an independent living record of tax payments and documented contributions to Japan in terms of public service or professional activities 13 According to the Migrant Integration Policy Index permanent residency laws were less stringent than those in the United States and the United Kingdom 14 Immigration through marriage edit International marriage migration used to represent as much as 25 of permanent migration flows to Japan but this trend has been in decline since a peak in 2006 In the 1980s increasing numbers of Japanese men were registering marriages in Japan to women from China Korea and the Philippines 15 In 2006 according to data released by the Japanese Ministry of Health Labour and Welfare 44 701 marriages or 6 11 of all marriages registered in Japan were to a foreign national In 2013 this number had fallen to 21 488 marriages or 3 25 of all marriages registered in Japan 16 Of the 21 488 international marriages registered in Japan in 2013 15 442 or 71 77 were marriages involving a foreign bride compared to 6 046 or 28 23 where the groom was non Japanese Japan registered marriage statistics alone may not present a comprehensive picture of the numbers of international marriages in Japan as marriages registered overseas may also contribute to total immigrant spouse numbers Once married foreign spouses may also if certain criteria are satisfied change their visa status to Permanent Resident or other visa categories 2012 Ministry of Justice data indicates that of all foreigners in Japan 7 5 are resident in Japan under a visa designation as a spouse of a Japanese national 17 Long term residents on limited duration employment edit At in the end of June 2022 there were 2 760 635 foreigners residing in Japan Of this number 1 181 203 were considered long term but non permanent residents those granted visas for a duration of 12 months or more The majority of long term residents in Japan on limited duration work or study visas were from Asia Chinese made up the largest portion of this group with 744 551 followed by Vietnamese with 476 346 and Koreans with 412 340 Filipino Nepalese Indonesian and Taiwanese long term residents totaled 47 956 and those from other Asian countries totaled 554 246 1 Country Foreigners nbsp China 744 551 nbsp Vietnam 476 346 nbsp South Korea 412 340 nbsp Philippines 291 066 nbsp Brazil 207 081 nbsp Nepal 125 798 nbsp Indonesia 83 169 nbsp United States 57 299 nbsp Thailand 54 618 nbsp Taiwan 54 213In 2022 Technical Intern Training Program visas account for nearly 327 689 of the number Vietnamese made up the largest group with 160 563 followed by Chinese with 37 4891 and Indonesians with 34 459 1 Student visas edit According to the Japan Student Services Organization JSSO as of 2021 242 444 international students are residing in Japan Chinese made up the largest portion of this group with 114 255 followed by Vietnamese with 49 469 and Nepalis with 18 825 18 Refugees and asylum seekers editJapan is a signatory to the UN 1951 Refugee Convention as well as the 1967 Protocol The country therefore has made a commitment to offer protection to people who seek asylum and fall into the legal definition of a refugee and moreover not to return any displaced person to places where they would otherwise face persecution Japan has historically been one of the world s most generous donors to refugee relief and resettlement programs overseas 19 In 2014 it was the world s 2nd largest financial contributor to UNHCR programs 20 Japanese diplomat Sadako Ogata served as the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees from 1991 to 2000 As of December 2015 Japan had 13 831 asylum applications under review 21 In 2016 more than 10 000 applications for refugee status in Japan were received and in the same year 28 asylum applications were approved 22 In 2015 more than 7 500 people applied for refugee status and 27 asylum applications were approved In 2014 more than 5000 applications were made and 11 applications were approved 23 Recent low approval rates for asylum applications follow historic trends in a 22 year period from 1982 to 2004 a total of 330 applications for asylum were approved an average of 15 per year 24 Overview of asylum applications in Japan 2012 2018 22 25 26 27 Year Total number of asylum applications received Total number of asylum applications approved2012 2 545 182013 3 260 62014 5 000 112015 7 686 272016 10 901 282017 19 628 202018 10 493 42Whereas in Germany and Canada around 40 of asylum applications are approved in Japan the number averages 0 2 percent 28 On occasion where Japan has stopped short of granting official refugee status a limited number of applicants have been granted permission to stay on humanitarian grounds 29 In 2016 97 refugee applicants were granted permission to stay on this basis Decisions on refugee status in Japan are often slow and confirmation of deportation orders are not widely published Resubmission of asylum claims by previously unsuccessful applicants often occurs 30 Closure of asylum application legal loophole edit Between 2010 and January 2018 a rise in the number of asylum seekers in Japan was attributed in part to a legal loophole related to the government administered Technical Intern Training Program 23 In 2015 192 655 vocational trainees mainly from developing economies were working in Japan in factories construction sites farms food processing and in retail Although total numbers are small following a change in rules in 2010 asylum applications jumped four fold fueled by asylum seekers from Nepal Turkey and Sri Lanka 31 Rising numbers of vocational trainees reportedly made formal asylum applications in order to change employers and escape reported employment abuses and low pay 32 The government backed vocational program allows trainees to work on either one or three year contracts Although the chances of refugee status been granted in Japan are exceptionally small asylum applicants were permitted to get a job six months after applying for refugee status and significantly to make their own choice of employer Permits enabling legal employment six months after application for refugee status were discontinued by the Justice Ministry in January 2018 Workplace inspections and illegal immigration deportation enforcement activities were subsequently stepped up aimed at curbing alleged abuse of the refugee application system 33 Illegal immigration editAccording to Ministry of Justice MOJ estimates the number of foreign nationals staying illegally in Japan beyond their authorized period of stay dropped to approximately 60 000 as of January 1 2015 34 Illegal immigrant numbers had peaked at approximately 300 000 in May 1993 but have been gradually reduced through a combination of stricter enforcement of border controls workplace monitoring and an expansion of government run foreign worker programs for those seeking a legal route to short term employment opportunities in Japan Border controls at ports of entry for foreign nationals include examination of personal identification documentation finger printing and photo recording Security at both air and maritime ports is closely controlled As a result according to MOJ data the single largest source of illegal immigrants in Japan are those foreign nationals found to have stayed illegally beyond the 90 day time period of the temporary visitor visa Immigrant integration into Japanese society editSee also Cultural assimilation and Intercultural competence Naturalisation edit In 2015 9 469 applications for Japanese citizenship were approved The number of foreign residents in Japan applying to naturalize and obtain Japanese citizenship peaked in 2008 at more than 16 000 but declined to 12 442 in 2015 Processing of applications can take up to 18 months Application criteria are set deliberately high and inspectors are granted a degree of discretion in interpretation of eligibility and good conduct criteria 35 Apart from the requirement to renounce foreign citizenship naturalization criteria are similar to other developed countries such as the US although there is no citizenship test 36 37 About 80 percent of naturalization applications in Japan are approved compared to about 90 percent in the US 38 39 40 Most of the decline in applications is accounted for by a steep reduction in the number of Japan born Koreans taking Japanese citizenship Historically the bulk of those taking Japanese citizenship have not been new immigrants but rather Special Permanent Residents Japan born descendants of Koreans and Taiwanese who remained in Japan at the end of the Second World War citation needed Ethnicity and nationality edit The concept of minzoku 民族 ethnic group as represented in Japanese makes no distinction between racial ethnic and national identities Where the census of the United Kingdom for example separates ethnic or racial background from nationality 41 the Japanese Census and Statistics Bureau do not distinguish between the two 42 The definition of ethnic and racial boundaries alongside national ones leads many people to represent Japan as tan itsu minzoku kokka 単一民族国家 an ethnically homogeneous nation with an explicit purity of blood and culture 43 In 2005 future Prime Minister Tarō Asō described Japan as being a nation of one race one civilization one language and one culture 44 and in 2012 this claim was repeated by former Governor of Tokyo Shintaro Ishihara 45 The concept of a unified minzoku retains a legal authority A 1984 amendment to the Japanese Nationality Act made citizenship jus sanguinis tied to blood rather than place of birth citation needed Japanese citizenship is exclusive those who naturalize must renounce their first nationality and those who are born Japanese but with a second citizenship must choose between them by the time they are 20 years old Public opinion towards immigration edit Overall polls find that Japanese public opinion toward immigration is similar to other G7 countries A 1999 review article of opinion polls show attitudes broadly neutral and less negative than other developed countries citation needed In 1993 64 of respondents supported allowing firms facing labor shortages to hire unskilled foreign workers 46 A 2017 poll by Gallup shows a similar attitude 24 years later with Japan middling among developed countries in terms of public positivity towards immigration ranking close to France Belgium and Italy 47 In a Nikkei survey from 2019 69 of respondents said an increase in foreigners was good 48 Japanese who are college educated are almost 50 more likely to favor immigration for both economic and cultural reasons 49 A 2019 Pew Research Center poll found Japanese respondents had more positive views of immigrants than respondents in most countries 50 Another Pew Research Center poll found Japanese respondents were the least likely to support a reduction in immigration and among the most likely to support an increase in immigration of the 27 countries surveyed 51 A 2016 poll by the Asahi Shimbun found that 34 of its readers opposed an expansion of immigration to maintain Japan s economic status in the face of a shrinking and rapidly aging workforce while 51 of its readers supported increased immigration 52 However a large poll of 10 000 native Japanese conducted later that year between October and December 2015 found more opposition to increasing foreign immigration 53 Over half of Asahi Shimbun s readers who responded to a 2016 poll said that immigrants should respect Japanese culture and obey Japanese customs while about one quarter said that Japanese people should embrace diversity 54 On the other hand one of the common arguments for restricting immigration is based on safeguarding security including public order protecting welfare mechanisms cultural stability or social trust 55 Another poll conducted by the Asahi Shimbun in 2018 showed an increase in opposition to immigration 43 of the readers who responded were against the increase of immigrant workers and 45 of those readers were in favor 56 Immigration detention editThis section is an excerpt from Immigration detention Japan edit Japanese immigration law permits indefinite detention without a court order including for those that overstay and those who seek asylum 57 Three immigration detention centers are maintained by immigration bureau for long term detainees 58 59 Higashi Nihon Nyukoku Kanri Center Ushiku Ibaraki East Japan capacity 700 Nishi Nihon Nyukoku Kanri Center Ibaraki Osaka West Japan Omura Nyukoku Kanri Center Omura Nagasaki capacity 800 Additionally 16 regional detention houses are managed for short term detention 59 However many of the long term detainees have been detained in regional short term detention houses that lack facilities such as common rooms and recreational area 59 Some detainees spend significant time up to 13 days in isolation due to disciplinary measures 59 Practices of immigration bureau has been criticized for the lack of transparency indefinite detention 59 and its arbitrary nature 57 See also editJapanese diaspora Information on historical and current migration trends from Japan References edit a b c d 令和4年6月末現在における在留外国人数について in Japanese Immigration Services Agency of Japan 14 October 2022 Retrieved 29 January 2023 人口推計 Population estimate PDF stat go jp Archived PDF from the original on 12 February 2023 Retrieved 13 September 2021 STATISTICS OF JAPANESE GENOCIDE AND MASS MURDER Retrieved 15 February 2016 Brody Betsy 2002 Opening the Door Immigration Ethnicity and Globalization in Japan New York Routledge p 31 ISBN 978 0 415 93192 2 Brody Betsy 2002 Opening the Door Immigration Ethnicity and Globalization in Japan New York Routledge p 34 ISBN 978 0 415 93192 2 Tabuchi Hiroko 23 April 2009 Japan Pays Foreign Workers to Go Home New York Times retrieved 18 August 2009 Sekiguchi Toko 14 April 2015 Japan Skirts Immigration Debate by Offering Internships to Foreigners The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2 September 2016 Kodama Takashi 29 May 2015 Japan s Immigration Problem PDF Daiwa Daiwa Institute of Research p 9 Retrieved 2 September 2016 a b Interactive charts by the OECD OECD Data Retrieved 16 March 2020 Number of Potential Migrants Worldwide Tops 700 Million Gallup com 8 June 2017 Retrieved 16 March 2020 Oishi Nana 2012 The Limits of Immigration Policies The Challenges of Highly Skilled Migration in Japan American Behavioral Scientist 56 8 1080 1100 doi 10 1177 0002764212441787 S2CID 154641232 Japan cries Help wanted but few foreigners heed the call Nikkei Asian Review Retrieved 17 March 2020 Permission for Permanent Residence Immigration Bureau of Japan Retrieved 28 September 2016 Permanent Residence MIPEX 2015 www mipex eu Retrieved 17 March 2020 International Migration Outlook 2012 OECD Publishing 2012 p 190 ISBN 978 92 64 17723 9 A Look at International Marriage in Japan Nippon Foundation Nippon com 19 February 2015 Retrieved 26 September 2016 平成23年末現在における外国人登録者統計について 法務省 Japan Ministry of Justice 22 February 2012 Archived from the original on 19 April 2012 Retrieved 10 March 2014 2021 令和3 年度外国人留学生在籍状況調査結果 Retrieved 6 March 2023 Burke Roland 28 September 2010 Japan welcomes Burmese refugees BBC News Online Retrieved 26 August 2016 McCurry Justin 9 September 2015 Japan takes no Syrian refugees yet despite giving 200m to help fight Isis The Guardian Retrieved 26 August 2016 Townsend Megan 15 August 2016 Meet the asylum seekers who are building Japan s roads despite being banned from working The Independent Retrieved 26 August 2016 a b Japan grants refugee status to 28 out of over 10 000 applicants The Mainichi Kyodo 11 February 2017 Archived from the original on 10 February 2017 Retrieved 12 February 2017 a b Yamagishi Chie 19 October 2015 Seeking a Loophole NHK World Retrieved 26 August 2016 Ellington Lucien 2009 Japan Santa Barbara ABC Clio p 333 ISBN 978 1 59884 163 3 法務省 平成28年における難民認定者数等について 速報値 Ministry of Justice Japan Retrieved 14 February 2017 Japan took in 20 asylum seekers in 2017 from nearly 20 000 applications Japan Today 14 February 2018 Retrieved 18 February 2018 No of asylum seekers in Japan falls for 1st time in 8 years Japan Today Archived from the original on 29 March 2019 Retrieved 3 March 2019 Wingfield Hayes Rupert 8 June 2016 Seeking asylum in Japan like being in prison BBC News Online Retrieved 26 August 2016 No entry The Economist 14 March 2015 Retrieved 26 August 2016 Harding Robin 13 February 2017 Japan Accepted 28 Refugees in 2016 Financial Times Retrieved 14 February 2017 Wilson Thomas 28 July 2015 Subaru s secret Marginalized foreign workers power a Japanese export boom Reuters Retrieved 27 August 2016 Iwamoto Kentaro 18 August 2016 Abuses rampant in foreign trainee program Japan labor ministry finds Nikkei Asian Review Retrieved 26 August 2016 Osumi Magdalena 27 February 2018 Japan rounds up 341 in first crackdown on asylum seekers working illegally The Japan Times Retrieved 28 February 2018 Basic Plan for Immigration Control 5th Edition PDF Immigration Bureau of Japan Japan Ministry of Justice Retrieved 29 August 2016 Inspectors Knock The Economist 20 August 2016 Retrieved 8 October 2016 THE NATIONALITY LAW www moj go jp Retrieved 16 March 2020 How to Apply for U S Citizenship USAGov www usa gov Retrieved 16 March 2020 帰化申請の不許可理由と不許可後の対策について 8 January 2021 Ito Masami 27 December 2011 Many angles to acquiring Japanese citizenship The Japan Times Online ISSN 0447 5763 Retrieved 16 March 2020 Number of people who became U S citizens reached five year high in fiscal 2018 Washington Post Archived from the original on 4 June 2019 Retrieved 16 March 2020 United Kingdom population by ethnic group United Kingdom Census 2001 Office for National Statistics 1 April 2001 Archived from the original on 7 January 2010 Retrieved 10 September 2009 法務省 Moj go jp Retrieved 10 March 2014 Dower John W 2012 Ways of Forgetting Ways of Remembering The New Press pp 48 64 ISBN 978 1595586186 Aso says Japan is nation of one race The Japan Times October 18 2005 Is Shintaro Ishihara the most dangerous man in Japan Japan Japan Times November 2012 retrieved 21 May 2013 Simon Rita J Lynch James P 1999 A Comparative Assessment of Public Opinion toward Immigrants and Immigration Policies The International Migration Review 33 2 455 467 doi 10 1177 019791839903300207 JSTOR 2547704 PMID 12319739 S2CID 13523118 New Index Shows Least Most Accepting Countries for Migrants 23 August 2017 Retrieved 25 October 2018 Nearly 70 of Japanese say more foreigners are good survey Nikkei Asian Review Retrieved 17 March 2020 Kage Rieko Rosenbluth Frances M Tanaka Seiki 22 February 2021 Varieties of Public Attitudes toward Immigration Evidence from Survey Experiments in Japan PDF Political Research Quarterly 75 216 230 doi 10 1177 1065912921993552 S2CID 233935536 Around the World More Say Immigrants Are a Strength Than a Burden Pew Research Center s Global Attitudes Project 14 March 2019 Retrieved 16 March 2020 Many worldwide oppose more migration both into and out of their countries Pew Research Center Retrieved 16 March 2020 51 of Japanese support immigration double from 2010 survey AJW by The Asahi Shimbun Ajw asahi com Retrieved 6 September 2015 Facchini G Margalit Y Nakata H 2016 Countering Public Opposition to Immigration The Impact of Information Campaigns PDF p 19 Our findings indicate that among the non treated sample only 29 of the population supported an increase in levels of immigration a finding that is consistent with the restrictive immigration policy stance currently pursued by the Japanese government Asahi readers say foreigners should assimilate but Japan must try harder Asahi Shimbun 17 February 2016 Retrieved 6 March 2016 Rochel Johan 2018 Protecting Japan from immigrants An ethical challenge to security based justification in immigration policy Contemporary Japan 30 2 164 188 doi 10 1080 18692729 2018 1478938 S2CID 158380485 入管法の改正 今国会 必要ない 64 朝日世論調査 20 November 2018 a b HRN Releases Statement Calling for the Prohibition of Arbitrary Detention in Immigration Facilities in Japan and Related Legal Reforms Human Rights Now 31 October 2019 Retrieved 8 July 2020 Bureau Immigration Immigration Bureau of Japan Website immi moj go jp Archived from the original on 1 July 2011 Retrieved 8 March 2011 a b c d e Japan Immigration Detention Global Detention Project March 2013 Retrieved 8 July 2020 External links editListen to this article 17 minutes source source nbsp This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 1 December 2017 2017 12 01 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles Points based Preferential Immigration Treatment for Highly Skilled Foreign Professionals Immigration Bureau Immi moj go jp Permanent Residence in Japan The Complete How to Guide Retrieved from 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