Temporary Labour Migration and Care Work: The Japanese Experience
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Open Access
Type
ArticleAbstract
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 ...
See moreAround 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.
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See moreAround 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.
See less
Date
2013-01-01Publisher
SAGE PublishingLicence
The final, definitive version of this paper has been published as: Ford, M., Kawashima, K. (2013). Temporary Labour Migration and Care Work: The Japanese Experience. Journal of Industrial Relations, 55(3), 430-444. DOI: 10.1177/0022185613480750 Published by SAGE Publishing, All rights reserved.Citation
Ford, M., Kawashima, K. (2013). Temporary Labour Migration and Care Work: The Japanese Experience. Journal of Industrial Relations, 55(3), 430-444.Share