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Migrations and Diversifications in the UK and Japan: NODE UK|Japan webinar​

Mon, 13 Dec

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Online via Zoom (Registration required)

Institute for Research into Superdiversity (IRiS) & Institute of Asian Migrations On 13 December at 10:00 (GMT)/19:00 (JST) we are launching the special issue of Comparative Migration Studies edited and authored by members of the NODE UK|Japan academic network.

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Migrations and Diversifications in the UK and Japan: NODE UK|Japan webinar​
Migrations and Diversifications in the UK and Japan: NODE UK|Japan webinar​

Date and Venue

13 Dec 2021, 19:00 – 21:00 GMT+9

Online via Zoom (Registration required)

About the Event

NODE Special Issue Launch:

Migrations and diversifications in the UK and Japan

Date and venue:

December 13th 2021, 10:00-12:00 GMT / 19:00-21:00 JST 

Online via Zoom

Speakers:

Prof. Jenny Phillimore (University of Birmingham, UK)

Prof. Gracia Liu-Farrer (Waseda University, Japan)

Prof. Nando Sigona (University of Birmingham, UK)

On 13 December at 10:00 (GMT)/19:00 (JST) we are launching the special issue of Comparative Migration Studies edited and authored by members of the NODE UK|Japan academic network. We will hear from editors and authors celebrate the network with the launch of the new NODE portal. All articles are available open access on Comparative Migration Studies website. The network is funded by the Economic and Social Research Council and the Japan Foundation.

This collection of papers compares migration and resultant processes of socio-demographic and cultural diversification in the UK and Japan. It examines different aspects of migration and integration in these two countries from multiple disciplinary perspectives and using a wide range of methods.  Immigrants form a core part of the society in not only countries such as the UK but also Japan where the onset of contemporary migration is more recent. Though facing different political circumstances and social realities, they have many areas of comparability and convergence. Both have had old and new forms of migration and diversities and although there are many political, economic, and social differences they share the challenge of attracting sufficient skilled and unskilled labour.  Either have, or are attempting to, resist high levels of migration yet both understand that future prosperity depends on migration.  This special issue deepens the empirical knowledge of ongoing migration and integration processes in these two countries through a comparative lens, uses empirical comparison to push for theoretical development, and, by bringing in two contrasting cases and multi-disciplinary approaches, offers methodological innovation. The contributors to this issue examine a wide range of topical issues from attitudes to, and racialisation of, migrants; labour market challenges, law and policy; migration infrastructures, and the production of illegality; transnational marriage and integration; conviviality and contact in migrant-run restaurants; international retirement migration; refugee integration and practices of migrant retention.  The issue offers new directions for comparative work on migration and, for Japanese scholarship to bring a new perspective to thinking about migration and associated diversifications.

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NODE UK|Japan is a research network set up by the University of Birmingham’s Institute for Research into Superdiversity (IRIS) and Waseda University’s Institute of Asian Migrations (IAM) to undertake comparative research exploring old and new migrations and processes of diversification in UK and Japan The network is funded by the UK’s ESRC and the Japan Foundation. the NODE UK|Japan network is working to create a sustainable network of academics

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