Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/46561
Title: Postcolonial migrations and diasporic linkages between Latin America and Japan and Spain
Authors: Ávila Tàpies, Rosalía 
Domínguez-Mujica, Josefina 
UNESCO Clasification: 53 Ciencias económicas
550606 Historia de la economía
Keywords: Migration linkages
Preferential migration legislation
Pendular mobility
Japan
Spain, et al
Issue Date: 2015
Publisher: 0117-1968
Journal: Asian and Pacific Migration Journal 
Abstract: In the late 1980s, both Japan and Spain revised their legislation to confer preferential immigration rights to citizens from former colonies or their own diasporic descendants based on historical, cultural or ethnic belonging to the ancestral homeland. During the economic crisis, Spain, in 2008, and Japan, in 2009, reversed their policies through a government-sponsored voluntary return program for these preferred migrants. When the economy recovered, Japan in 2013 revisited its return migration program, resulting in pendular migrations driven by politics and macro-economic trends. This suggests that historical or cultural ties that favor the citizens of former colonies and diasporic communities have reinforced two-way transoceanic migratory processes, thereby contributing to strengthening ‘old migration geographies.’
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/46561
ISSN: 0117-1968
DOI: 10.1177/0117196815610677
Source: Asian and Pacific Migration Journal[ISSN 0117-1968],v. 24, p. 487-511
Appears in Collections:Reseña
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