Peruvian migration to Japan
Total population | |
---|---|
52,842 (2011) | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Greater Tokyo Area, Chūkyō Metropolitan Area (near Nagoya)[1] | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Peruvian people, Japanese people, Japanese Peruvians, Brazilians in Japan |
There were estimated to be 52,842 Peruvians in Japan as of 2011. With a majority of them being descendants of earlier Japanese immigrants to Peru, while the rest are of other ethnicities.[2]
Migration history
In 1990, Japan introduced a new ethnicity-based immigration policy which aimed to encourage Japanese descendants overseas to come to Japan and fill the country's need for foreign workers.[2] From 1992 to 1997, data from Peru's Ministry of the Interior showed Japan as the fourteenth-most popular destination for Peruvian emigrants, behind the Netherlands and ahead of Costa Rica.[3]
Media
- International Press (newspaper)
- IPC (television station)
Education
There are the following Peruvian international schools (ペルー学校) in Japan:
- Mundo de Alegría - Hamamatsu
- Colegio Hispano Americano de Gunma - Isesaki, Gunma
Notes
- ↑ Aquino Rodríguez 1999, p. 7
- 1 2 Takenaka 2003, p. 223
- ↑ Aquino Rodríguez 1999, p. 3
References
- Aquino Rodríguez, Carlos (1999), "Migración internacional del trabajo: el caso de los peruanos en Japón", in Girado, Gustavo, 8va reunión del Grupo de Trabajo de Desarrollo de Discursos Humanos (PDF), Pacific Economic Cooperation Council
- Takenaka, Ayumi (2003), "Paradoxes of ethnicity-based migration: Peruvian and Japanese-Peruvian migrants in Japan", in Goodman, Roger, Global Japan: the experience of Japan's new immigrant and overseas communities, Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-29741-7
Further reading
- del Castillo, Alvaro (1999), Los peruanos en Japón, Gendai Kikakushitsu, ISBN 978-4-7738-9918-4, OCLC 255044795
- Vela Borda, Joel (June 2006), "Impacto de las remesas de los peruanos residentes en Japón" (PDF), Cuad. Difus., 11 (20)
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