Updated on 2025/03/18

写真b

 
KAWASHIMA Kumiko
 
*Items subject to periodic update by Rikkyo University (The rest are reprinted from information registered on researchmap.)
Affiliation*
College of Tourism Department of Culture and Tourism Studies
Graduate School of Tourism Doctoral Program in Tourism
Graduate School of Tourism Master's Program in Tourism
Title*
Associate Professor
Contact information
Mail Address
Campus Career*
  • 4 2021 - Present 
    College of Tourism   Department of Culture and Tourism Studies   Associate Professor
  • 4 2021 - Present 
    Graduate School of Tourism   Master's Program in Tourism   Associate Professor
  • 4 2021 - Present 
    Graduate School of Tourism   Doctoral Program in Tourism   Associate Professor
 

Papers

  • Why Migrate to Earn Less? Changing Tertiary Education, Skilled Migration and Class Slippage in an Economic Downturn Peer-reviewed

    Kumiko Kawashima

    Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies   1 - 19   12 3 2020

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    Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:Informa UK Limited  

    DOI: 10.1080/1369183x.2020.1720629

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  • Longer-Term Consequences of ‘Youth’ Migration: Japanese Temporary Migrants in China and the Life Course Peer-reviewed

    Kumiko Kawashima

    Journal of Intercultural Studies39 ( 6 ) 658 - 672   11 11 2018

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    Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:Carfax Publishing  

    <p>This paper examines Japanese ‘youth’ in their mid-twenties to mid-thirties who participated in temporary migration to Dalian, a northeastern Chinese city, at a turning point in their life course. They left economically stagnant Japan to work in the digital service outsourcing sector targeting the Japanese market, by providing remote customer service in their native language. While the workers enjoy some perks of corporate employment and skilled migrant status, migration reduces their salaries to levels comparable to Japanese minimum wages, and the constantly shifting nature of immigration control and offshore outsourcing renders their presence fundamentally precarious. Based on semi-structured interviews, I argue that geographical mobility affords a temporary refuge from the normative expectations of a settled adult life, but in this liminal time–space, classed and gendered life course norms continue to frame the migrants’ interpretation of their presents and futures. My findings show that the remote service workers simultaneously engage in multiple temporalities of suspended life back home, increasing stasis in the present and anticipated futures through imagined migration. The analysis illustrates that cross-border mobility produces freedom from the constraints of expected life transitions, but also potential entrapment through new modes of exploitation.</p>

    DOI: 10.1080/07256868.2018.1533537

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  • Service Outsourcing and Labour Mobility in a Digital Age: Transnational Linkages between Japan and Dalian, China Peer-reviewed

    Kumiko Kawashima

    Global Networks17 ( 4 ) 483 - 499   10 2017

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    Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:Wiley  

    DOI: 10.1111/glob.12157

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  • Introduction for a Special Section on Mobilities and Exceptional Spaces in Asia

    Kumiko Kawashima, Brenda S.A. Yeoh

    Asian Anthropology16 ( 1 ) 1 - 3   2 1 2017

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    Authorship:Lead author   Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:Informa UK Limited  

    DOI: 10.1080/1683478x.2016.1253248

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  • Regulatory Approaches to Managing Skilled Migration: Indonesian Nurses in Japan Peer-reviewed

    Michele Ford, Kumiko Kawashima

    The Economic and Labour Relations Review27 ( 2 ) 231 - 247   6 2016

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    Authorship:Lead author   Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:SAGE Publications  

    This article examines the Japan–Indonesia Economic Partnership Agreement, an agreement that has allowed Japan to supplement its local healthcare workforce while continuing to sidestep the thorny issue of labour and immigration policy reform and Indonesia to increase its skilled workers’ access to the Japanese labour market at a time when it was making a concerted effort to reorient migrant labour flows away from informal sector occupations. Despite the programme’s many problems, it has contributed to the use of trade agreements as a mechanism for regulating labour migration, and so to the normalisation of migrant labour as a tradable commodity rather than a discrete area of policy-making, with all the attendant risks that normalisation brings.

    DOI: 10.1177/1035304616629580

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    Other Link: http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full-xml/10.1177/1035304616629580

  • Temporary Labour Migration and Care Work: The Japanese Experience Peer-reviewed

    Michele Ford, Kumiko Kawashima

    Journal of Industrial Relations55 ( 3 ) 430 - 444   6 2013

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    Authorship:Lead author   Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:SAGE Publications  

    Around the world, advanced industrial societies are facing a demographic time bomb that has enormous implications for the workforce in general, but for workforce planning and industrial relations in the health sector and related industries in particular. Japan, which has traditionally resisted structured forms of labour migration, has responded by establishing labour migration schemes for nurses and other care workers from selected South and Southeast Asian countries. This article examines the responses of different industrial relations actors to the first of these schemes. It begins by describing the opening up of hospitals and residential care facilities to temporary labour migrants from the Philippines and Indonesia, before turning to a discussion of the roles played by trade unions and employers and an evaluation of the outcomes of the programme to date. The article demonstrates the potential pitfalls of trade-driven labour migration schemes and their implications for the sector and the migrant workers concerned.

    DOI: 10.1177/0022185613480750

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    Other Link: http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full-xml/10.1177/0022185613480750

  • Review of Vogt, Gabriele and Roberts, Glenda S. (eds) Migration and Integration: Japan in Comparative Perspective, Munich: Iudicum

    Kumiko Kawashima

    Electronic Journal of Contemporary Japanese Studies12 ( 3 )   2013

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  • Becoming Asian in Australia: Migration and a Shift in Gender Relations among Young Japanese Peer-reviewed

    Kumiko Kawashima

    Intersections: Gender and Sexuality in Asia and the Pacific ( 31 ) 1 - 10   2012

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    Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:The Australian National University  

    Japanese temporary migration has been on the increase over the last few decades, and thousands of Japanese students and Working Holiday Makers (WHMs) enter the country every year.[1] Upon arrival, these temporary migrants become minority members of a society where the white majority has cultural dominance over the 'ethnic' Others. By drawing on the concept of 'contact zones', in this article I explore the question of minority migrants' agency with a focus on everyday representations of unequal racial relations-as viewed from their standpoints. I pay particular attention to the intersection between the structural power relations in which migrants-as-agents are located, and how these actors discursively develop desirable subject positions. By responding to the theme of this Special Issue titled 'Post-Colonial and Contemporary Sexual Contact Zones in East Asia and the Pacific', my analysis deals with interview narratives which explicitly refer to gendered aspects of being young Japanese newcomers in Australia.

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  • Japanese Working Holiday Makers in Australia and Their Relationship to the Japanese Labour Market: Before and After Peer-reviewed

    Kumiko Kawashima

    Asian Studies Review34 ( 3 ) 267 - 286   9 2010

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    Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group  

    <p>The Working Holiday is a relatively new but rapidly growing form of transnational mobility. In Australia, Working Holiday Makers (WHMs) form the largest group of Japanese temporary migrants, and their numbers have been increasing. In this paper, I will discuss the experience of returned WHMs in the light of Japanese labour practice. For my interlocutors, the motivations for taking a Working Holiday were frequently related to their dissatisfaction with their status and future prospects as workers. In order to understand this popular but under-researched form of transnational migration, it is therefore important to consider their self-perceptions about their worker status when they re-entered the Japanese workforce, and how they think their life course has changed due to the Working Holiday experience. The employment experience of WHMs upon their return to Japan illuminates their position in the home society in which their migratory decision-making was situated.</p>

    DOI: 10.1080/10357823.2010.508765

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  • Review of Elise K. Tipton, Modern Japan: A Social and Political History Second Edition. London and New York: Routledge

    Kumiko Kawashima

    Intersections: Gender and Sexuality in Asia and the Pacific20   2009

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Books and Other Publications

  • Idō to kyōkai: Ekkyōsha kara miru ōsutoraria

    Sayoko Iizasa, Mayumi Kamata( Role: Contributor ,  Column 7 Kakudai suru wākingu horidē seido to imin rōdō)

    Shōwadō  3 2024  ( ISBN:9784812223055

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    Total pages:vi, 350, 7   Responsible for pages:125-130   Language:Japanese

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  • Idō to kyōkai: Ekkyōsha kara miru ōsutoraria

    Sayoko Iizasa, Mayumi Kamata( Role: Contributor ,  Chapter 6 Wākingu horidē: Wakamono no kokusai idō to aidentitī keisei)

    Shōwadō  3 2024  ( ISBN:9784812223055

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    Total pages:vi, 350, 7   Responsible for pages:109-124   Language:Japanese

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  • Tangled mobilities : places, affects, and personhood across social spheres in Asian migration

    Fresnoza-Flot, Asuncion, Liu-Farrer, Gracia( Role: Contributor ,  Social Mobility and Labour Migration under Recession: Exploring Generational Differences among Japanese Migrants in China)

    Berghahn Books  2022  ( ISBN:9781800735675

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    Total pages:ix, 268 p.   Language:English

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  • Destination China: Immigration to China in the Post-Reform Era

    Angela Lehmann, Pauline Leonard( Role: Contributor ,  Japanese Labour Migration to China and IT Service Outsourcing: The Case of Dalian)

    Palgrave Macmillan US  2019  ( ISBN:9781137557100

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    Total pages:XIII, 238   Responsible for pages:123-145   Language:English Book type:Scholarly book

    DOI: 10.1057/978-1-137-54433-9_6

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  • 'Gurōbaru jinzai' o meguru seisaku to genjitsu

    Yasumasa, Igarashi, Akashi, Junichi, Tezuka, Shiori( Role: Contributor ,  Dairen no nihon muke autosōshingu to nihonjin genchisaiyōsha = Dalian's Japan-bound outsourcing and locally hired Japanese workers)

    Akashi Shoten  6 2015  ( ISBN:9784750341910

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    Total pages:251p   Responsible for pages:136-152   Language:Japanese Book type:Scholarly book

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  • Internationalising Japan : Discourse and Practice

    Breaden, Jeremy, Steele, Stacey, Stevens, Carolyn S.( Role: Contributor ,  Uneven Cosmopolitanism: Japanese Working Holiday Makers in Australia and the ‘Lost Decade’)

    Routledge  2014  ( ISBN:9780415735704

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    Total pages:xiv, 212 p.   Responsible for pages:106-124   Language:English Book type:Scholarly book

    DOI: 10.4324/9781315818801

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  • Hito no idō jiten: Nihon kara ajia e, ajia kara nihon e

    Katuo, Yoshiwara, Iyotani Shinzō, Shiobara, Yoshikazu, Sekine, Masami, Yamashita, Shinji, Yoshiwara, Naoki( Role: Contributor ,  Ajia taiheiyō ni mukau nihonjin jakunen rōdōsha)

    Maruzen Shuppan  11 2013  ( ISBN:9784621087190

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    Total pages:xxii, 528p   Language:Japanese Book type:Dictionary, encyclopedia

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  • Ekkyō suru rōdō to 'imin'

    Igarashi, Yasumasa( Role: Contributor ,  Ōsutoraria no wākinguhoridē rōdōsha: Rosujene sedai no ekkyō to kikan)

    Ōtsuki Shoten  11 2010  ( ISBN:9784272301829

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    Total pages:313p   Responsible for pages:231-270   Language:Japanese Book type:Scholarly book

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