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This volume chronicles migrant lives in Japan and the Philippines during the COVID-19 pandemic. In particular, it focuses on the Japanese in the Philippines and the Filipinos in Japan, making it a valuable resource for those doing research on migrations between these two countries, and/or about migrations in Asia, in general.
Analyzing data gathered through interviews, surveys, content analyses, and ethnographies, the authors meticulously present critical findings and narrate migrants experiences of COVID-19. While the world has now eased back into a state of normality, the significant societal changes that have occurred cannot be denied. Hence, the book argues that it is imperative for the public to be informed how various types of migrants have experienced the pandemic, leading them to explore innovative ways to adapt to conditions during this health crisis.
The chapters in this volume are important in informing not only scholars studying migration, but also policy-makers, NGOs, and the general public, as to how non-citizens in these two countries have grappled with the challenges posed by the pandemic. It will also be a valuable resource for communities and governments around the world as they prepare for similar health crises in the near future.
List of contents
- Introduction: Migrant Lives in a Pandemic (Johanna O. Zulueta)
- The Filipino Residents in Japan, Grass-root Responses and Aggregate Narratives to National Policies in a time of Pandemic (Cherry Amor Yap)
- Physically Absent but Virtually Present: Filipino Migrants in Japan During the COVID-19 Pandemic (John Lee Candelaria)
- Japanese Expatriates at the Mercy of Harsh Lockdowns (Tomoaki Takeshita)
- Family life under lockdown: Can Filipino transnational families survive restricted spatial mobility? (Derrace McCallum)
- Children s Education and Migration Before and During Pandemic: Changing Views of Japanese Fathers of Japanese-Filipino Families in the Philippines (Yukinori Watanabe)
- Migrant Social Protection in Pandemic times: Experiences and Discourses of Filipino Immigrant Women in Tokyo (Jocelyn O. Celero)
- Everyday Mobilities among Foreign Students in Japan in the time of COVID-19 (Johanna O. Zulueta)
- The Rise of Social Media Entrepreneurs: Filipino Migrants in Japan during the COVID-19 Pandemic (Razel Navalta and Ryn Nhick Yambao)
- Care workers under JPEPA: Migrant Protection in Post-Pandemic Care Regime (Ron Vilog, Reiko Ogawa, and Ma. Rosario Piquero-Ballescas)
- The Road Less Traveled? A Duoethnography of Two Filipina Scholars and English Language Teachers in Japan During the COVID-19 Pandemic (Tricia Okada and Tricia Fermin)
- A Post-Pandemic World? Addressing Future Crises (Johanna O. Zulueta)
About the author
Johanna O. Zulueta is Professor at the Faculty of Sociology of Toyo University. She received her A.B. (Social Sciences) from the Ateneo de Manila University and her Ph.D. (Sociology) from Hitotsubashi University. She does research on migrations in East Asia, looking at issues related to ethnicities, military basing, gender and families, citizenship, return migration, and ageing.
Summary
This volume chronicles migrant lives in Japan and the Philippines during the COVID-19 pandemic. In particular, it focuses on the Japanese in the Philippines and the Filipinos in Japan, making it a valuable resource for those doing research on migrations between these two countries, and/or about migrations in Asia, in general.
Analyzing data gathered through interviews, surveys, content analyses, and ethnographies, the authors meticulously present critical findings and narrate migrants’ experiences of COVID-19. While the world has now eased back into a “state of normality,” the significant societal changes that have occurred cannot be denied. Hence, the book argues that it is imperative for the public to be informed how various types of migrants have experienced the pandemic, leading them to explore innovative ways to adapt to conditions during this health crisis.
The chapters in this volume are important in informing not only scholars studying migration, but also policy-makers, NGOs, and the general public, as to how non-citizens in these two countries have grappled with the challenges posed by the pandemic. It will also be a valuable resource for communities and governments around the world as they prepare for similar health crises in the near future.