Posts

A Few Suggestions to Make Immigration Processing Smoother in Japan

Every time the author travels to the immigration office here in Tokyo, he cannot avoid the feeling that the place is almost designed to spite foreigners living in this fair city. Situated in the midst of the city's commercial warehouse area right next to the Port and stacks of shipping containers, the brutalist concrete monstrosity seems to swallow thousands of foreigners living across the city and the surrounding region, away from the preying sight of locals who no doubt would feel unease from seeing such huge congregations of foreigners in one place.

The Value of Being Able to "Wing It" in International Communications

The practicing official was a nervous wreck.  Shaking hard enough that scribbling down his own name on the form was difficult.  His scorers, standing right behind him to watch his every move, kept interrupting the simulation to point out which steps he forgot to take and which fields on the forms he forgot to fill.  Such interruptions only made the official even more nervous.  He stuttered through his scripted lines to the foreign "athlete" and made more mistakes when filling out the "athlete's" personal information.  Correcting those mistakes meant filling out more revision forms, which created more opportunities to make mistakes.

Workers at Japanese Festivals: the Last Bastion of "Japaneseness" in Low-Level Service Industry?

"Now, this job is exclusively for males.  Workers are required to wear all-black suits...there should be no stripes of any kind on the suit.  The shirt underneath should be white, and there should be no color buttons on the shirt...only black or white buttons.  Dress shoes also need to be black.  For people who have hair that is not black, the hair needs to be dyed black before showing up for work.  Also, no facial hair of any kind.  No mustache, no beard.  The face needs to be completely clean-shaven.  No exceptions..."  The lady nonchalantly went on to describe the requirements for the job.

The Precarious Summer Vacation of a PhD Student

For most people, the image of being a student is probably one of habit.  With a set schedule of classes, seminars, and exams, students know where to go when, and when there are no classes, they spend a significant amount of time in libraries and study rooms completing their assignments and prepare for exams.  The student life is imagined to be a very regimented one, where the student would know exactly where to go and what to do during the course of their semesters.  Their only free time would be during summer and winter vacations when they are free to take up jobs or internships in preparation for full-time jobs.

Implicit Xenophobia of Japanese Apartment Hunting

Theoretically, finding an apartment in Tokyo should not be all that difficult.  Any residential area is full of apartment blocks in all forms and price ranges.  Those who seek a new residence only need to go down to one of many national chains of apartment middlemen for quick inquiries and will be shown several units of preferable size and price in a matter of hours.  The agencies take care of the paperwork and contact with landlords, and the client moves in a matter of days.

What Can Factories Show to Pique the Interests of Consumers?

In an era of the general public being inundated with different kinds of museums displaying a wide variety of exhibits , for any to really stand out from the competitive crowd, new methods are needed to draw in the interest of potential museum-goers.  Factory tours, at the first glance, fit the bill extremely well.  But presenting how everyday products are made from scratch via seeing the process actually at work in a normal setting, factor tours tend to provide a much more interactive experience for the general public, in ways that static displays of words and pictures cannot.

Do the Impoverished Deserve to Get Their Culture Eradicated?

A recent news that is causing controversy is the plan for the Danish government to get rid of the country's ethnic ghettos by more forcefully assimilating its non-white migrant communities.  It is just a long line of growing trend of migrant host countries to compel migrants to assimilate faster through political and sometimes legal means.  The French bans Muslim headscarves , in plenty of countries (including the US), knowing the national language as a prerequisite for naturalization, and here in Japan, foreigners have to change to a Japanese surname upon becoming a citizen.