-Outline-

Session2: International Politics and Human Movement (refugees/immigrants)

Chair: Asahiko Hanzawa, Meiji Gakuin University


   International politics heavily influence human movement. Wars and crises in particular are often the direct causes of mass human movement such as repatriation, expatriation and forced migration. More generally in recent times, the broad international politico-economic structure, such as the Cold War, American hegemony, and economic inequity, have stimulated the more constant flow of humans in an even larger scale.


   In (East) Asia, it is often pointed out that the Cold War is not yet over. The United States, the only remaining superpower which survived the confrontation, would prefer to emphasise that there are still many who flee from the communist regime in North Korea. North Korean refugees may be compared to those who escaped from mainland China a few decades earlier, on which the historian Dr. Chi-Kwan Mark will focus. At the same time, the current United States administration is intensifying its ‘war against terror’ by trying to control general cross-border human movement insisting that they endanger national security.


   Just as the Cold War was an ideological war in which propaganda played a central role, the 'war on terror' after 9/11 abounds with discourse that is strongly politicised. Dr. Nobue Suzuki, an anthropologist, will enlighten us by analysing in what way cross-border marriages have been 'represented' by the governments of the United States and its allies, taking a close look at the issue of Filipina entertainers in Japan.