This book proposes a solution to three interrelated problems facing Japan: the rapidly declining population, a decrease in working age adults, and a lack of social and Economic vitality.
Leonard earned a Ph D in international public policy from Osaka University..
Graham B.
Eldridge is former associate professor of Japanese political and diplomatic history at Osaka University.
Robert D.
About the Author Hidenori Sakanaka established the Japan Immigration Policy Institute and is the author of almost two dozen books about Immigration policy in Japan.
This is the first time his thoughts appear in book-length form in English.
The author has spent close to fifty years working in the field of Immigration and was one of the first to identify the pending population crisis as early as the mid-1970s.
Hidenori Sakanaka, the former director of the Tokyo Regional Immigration Bureau, proposes that Japan accept ten million immigrants, including refugees, over the next fifty years, and articulates the benefits of this measure for Japan and its future.
This book proposes a solution to three interrelated problems facing Japan: the rapidly declining population, a decrease in working age adults, and a lack of social and Economic vitality