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December 7, 2025

u:japan lectures - Natalie-Anne Hall: "Migration, Aging and Japan's Sustainable Society"

From: u:japan lectures : Department of East Asian Studies : University of Vienna <ujapanlectures.ostasien@univie.ac.at>
Date: 2025/10/24

Dear Colleagues,
The Department of East Asian Studies - Japanese Studies at the University of Vienna would like to draw your attention to the upcoming hybrid u:japan lecture:

Natalie-Anne Hall (Cardiff University, UK):
"Migration, Aging and Japan's Sustainable Society"

Date and time: Thursday, October 30, 2025, 18:00~19:30 (CEST, UTC +2h)

Location: Onsite @ Campus of the University of Vienna Department of East Asian Studies, Japanese Studies room JAP 1 (2K-EG-21), University Campus Hof 2.4, Spitalgasse 2, 1090 Vienna, Austria
https://japanologie.univie.ac.at/index.php?id=23548#c646040

Online: Join the lecture via Zoom (no registration necessary):
https://univienna.zoom.us/j/68164873234?pwd=IaLv2MvIFWQ9JPuVuLUfcga9WSfxOT.1
Meeting-ID
: 681 6487 3234 | Passcode: 739103

Abstract: The labour shortages experienced by Japan due to societal aging are a harbinger of challenges soon to face nations throughout the developed world. Immigration has long been considered one of the fastest ways to counter this problem, but Japanese governments have been notoriously cautious about adopting this strategy. This volume is the first to examine migration in Japan from the view of sustainable society and the UN Sustainable Development Goals, including 'Good Health and Wellbeing', 'Decent Work', and 'Reduced Inequalities'. While migrants are frequently rendered policy tools or policy problems, the chapters contribute important empirical and historical insights into the human face of migration. The book addresses a broad range of issues, including migrants' diverse contribution to urban society, minority aging, caregiving, and hate speech. How do Vietnamese villagers secure employment in Japan, and why do some disappear? Can the circular migration of Southeast Asian nurses under EPA agreements be sustained? With many of these groups and issues having rarely been addressed in English-language scholarship thus far, this book offers an invaluable bridge between scholars based in Japan and around the world. The voices, analyses and recommendations offered here will be of interest to scholars, policymakers, and third-sector actors supporting migrants.
In this talk, I give an overview of the key contributions from each chapter before focusing in on Chapter 6, which is about online 'hate speech'. This chapter calls for attending to Japan's unique techno-social context when studying this phenomenon, and for the centring of racism within this. With renewed academic and media attention to 'anti-foreigner' sentiment in the wake of Sanseito's recent electoral breakthrough, now is an important moment to consider carefully the direction of scholarship on online hate and the implications of this for equality and social justice for migrants and ethnic minority groups in Japan.

For more information on the speaker and future events at u:japan, please follow the link below:
https://japanologie.univie.ac.at/ujapanlectures/

We look forward to your participation!
Lola Moreau, Florian Purkarthofer and Ralf Windhab

PS: If you missed a lecture or want to review, head to our recorded lectures section:
https://japanologie.univie.ac.at/ujapanlectures/records/

u:japan lectures
Department of East Asian Studies / Japanese Studies at the University of Vienna
E-mail: ujapanlectures.ostasien@univie.ac.at

Kindly sponsored by the Toshiba International Foundation:
https://www.toshibafoundation.com/

Approved by ssjmod at 04:40 PM