Japan

Imperialism

Japan doesn’t have a huge history of immigration but it has a history of forced labor recruitment, colonization, and emigration. Since the 1980s there has been an increase in illegal immigration from Bangladesh, Thailand, the Philippines, Pakistan, Malaysia and Iran. Japan is a foreign aid donor, investor, and exporter of consumer goods.


 * The U.S. has played a similar role in the regions and countries where most of its immigrants first came from. With two-year debate, a new law was passed and became effective in June 1990.


 * The 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act been passed than it came under attack in 1990 a new Immigrant Act was signed. Immigrants usually don’t have the same occupational distribution as citizens in receiving countries.


 * The 1960s expanded U.S. economic and military activity in Asia and the Caribbean Basin.
 * In the 1960s and 1970s, the United States played an important role in the world economic system.


 * This central military, political, and economic role helped the formation of conditions that made people make the choice to migrate.


 * In the 1970s and 1980s were newly industrialized countries of South and Southeast Asia whose extremely high growth rates were mainly to foreign investment in export manufacturing.


 * The United Nations Demographic Yearbook (1985) and World Population Prospects (1987) show that in the mid-1980s the United States received about 19% of global permanent emigration.


 * Migration has increased because the links between the U.S. and several Third World countries through the internationalization. In major cities there has been an increase in both high-income and low-incomeProxy-Connection: keep-alive Cache-Control: max-age=0 0jobs.
 * The labor market and creating conditions for the large supply of immigrant workers. Immigrant workers in manufacturing have contributed to reduced costs of production.


 * There’s been an increase in the number of legal immigrant workers for low-wage jobs.
 * Although high-level work flows are clearly related to the internationalization of the Japanese economy.


 * The export of consumer goods have contributed to a strong Japanese presence in many Asian countries. Japan's help towards global foreign direct investment (FDI) has increased.


 * By 1982, it had become the leading net exporter of FDI, with a gross outflow of $4.5 billion, surpassing the United Kingdom's $4.4 billion.


 * In 1980 and 1981 Japan's importance as a capital exporting country had been noticed by others more then before.
 * In 1983, a year of contracts in direct foreign investment, Japan's decline was smaller than any of other leading countries.
 * In 1986, Japan's direct foreign investment flow had risen to $14.3 billion,
 * In 1987 to $19.4 billion, for a stock of $80 billion.
 * In 1990 Japan had passed the most of the leading Western European capital exporters.


 * Over the last few years, a increased share of Japan's foreign investment has been going to Asia.
 * By 1986, Japan's FDI stock in South, Southeast, and East Asia stood at $22.1 billion.


 * There was an increased Japanese direct investment in Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, the Philippines, and Indonesia. Internationalization was rapid growth in overseas during the 1980s.

became the largest single donor of overseas development assistance in Asia.
 * Japan surpassed West Germany in 1983, France in 1984, and in 1988 became the largest donor, surpassing the U.S. In the 1980s, Japan

The last three major immigration reforms in the U.S., passed in 1965, 1986, and 1990, have sought to control immigration through measures aimed at regulating legal and preventing illegal immigration.
 * U.S. Immigration Policy: The Latest Changes


 * The 1965 amendment to the Immigration and Naturalization Act was meant to open up the United States to more immigration and would allow the government to control immigration and reduce illegal immigration . The 1965 law brought major changes in immigration patterns.

The Japanese Parliament recently approved several amendments to the law on the entry of immigrants. The Immigration Control and Refugee Recognition Law was passed on December 8, 1989, and became effective on June 1, 1990. It was a redo of a 1981 revision of a previous law. The amendments increased the number of job categories. The country accepted foreign workers usually on three-year stays.
 * The New 1990 Immigration Law in Japan


 * By 1989, such permits had increased to 72,000, and by 1991, to over 200,000; however, this still represents a very small proportion of Japan ' s 65 million person work force.

== Hawaii was the first state to migrate by japanese people. But japanese immigrants started immigrate to hawaii long before hawaii was even thought of being a state. But the main reason that they immigrated there was because of the sugar and fruit plantations that big business had there. Then when the business started to notice that Japanese immigrants were good hard working people they started to ask agents from Japan to send hard working young men for they can pay them very little money for they can work on the fruit/ sugar plantations. ==
 * == Hawaii ==

Source Citation Sassen, Saskia. "Economic internationalization: the new migration in Japan and the United States." //Social Justice// 21.2 (1994): 62+. //Student Resource Center - Gold//. Web. 22 Jan. 2010. <http://find.galegroup.com/gps/start.do?prodId=IPS&userGroup &n

Connor's Law: The laws that are in place now about immigration regulate how many immigrants are allowed at a time and how long they can stay on work visas.

My law is that immigrants who legally enter the United States must abide by a set of "rules" that they must follow until they become a naturalized citizen (live in United States for 4+ years). The set of rules are as follows: must have a job within the United States, must abide by the State in which they resides laws, must be above poverty line, must be able to speak a little English, must not be immigrating from their country of origin on criminal charges, and must apply for citizenship.

Josh's Law: The immigration laws today are allowing the immigrants to bend the rules and stay here longer than expected and they are not paying taxes.

My law is that there will be no such things as working visas. When an immigrant goes to become a citizen of the united states, it is a lifetime passport. That means once you get the passport and citizenship, you can leave the country and come back as many times as you want for the rest of your life. That will solve a lot of problems. If you enter the country illegally then you will be deported and will be forced to get legal citizenship and will spend 5 years in a US prison as their punishment.