Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1080/09512748.2020.1806914
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dc.titleFearful States: The Migration-Security Nexus in Northeast Asia
dc.contributor.authorKonrad Kalicki
dc.date.accessioned2022-02-21T09:17:00Z
dc.date.available2022-02-21T09:17:00Z
dc.date.issued2020-09-16
dc.identifier.citationKonrad Kalicki (2020-09-16). Fearful States: The Migration-Security Nexus in Northeast Asia. The Pacific Review 35 (1) : 59-89. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1080/09512748.2020.1806914
dc.identifier.issn0951-2748
dc.identifier.urihttps://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/215748
dc.description.abstractHow does the notion of state security inform national approaches to managing cross-border in-migration in the increasingly interconnected but volatile Northeast Asian region? This paper explores this question by focusing on the intermestic politics of labor importation. Specifically, it theorizes the multidimensionality and multifunctionality of security fears that inform Japan’s and Taiwan’s approaches to the admission of low-skilled foreign workers. The paper proposes a comprehensive conceptual framework that explicates these relationships and argues that Northeast Asian labor importation regimes were formed at the intersection of a threefold logic of state security. Whereas economic security acted as an enabling (inclusionary) factor in both Japan and Taiwan and motivated the acceptance of foreign workers, internal security in Japan and external security in Taiwan acted as constraining (exclusionary) factors, which directly and distinctively conditioned the resulting policies. Moreover, ever since their inception in the immediate aftermath of the Cold War, the divergent policy regimes have been interlocked in these economic-internal and economic-external dynamics of state security.
dc.publisherTaylor & Francis
dc.sourceTaylor & Francis
dc.subjectForeign labor policy
dc.subjectInternational migration
dc.subjectJapan
dc.subjectsecurity
dc.subjectTaiwan
dc.typeArticle
dc.contributor.departmentJAPANESE STUDIES
dc.description.doi10.1080/09512748.2020.1806914
dc.description.sourcetitleThe Pacific Review
dc.description.volume35
dc.description.issue1
dc.description.page59-89
dc.published.statePublished
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