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Examples
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The picture I come away with is one of much better economic times ahead for the descendants of the long-suffering Sakhalin Koreans, although they will face a new round of cultural adjustments very similar to those faced by the many Latin American Nikkeijin now working in Japan.
Sakhalin Koreans and Business Development « Far Outliers 2004
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They are Nikkeijin, ethnic Japanese, or fractionally ethnic Japanese, who are descendants of emigrants from Japan who went to South America in search of agricultural work.
Shock of Gray Ted C. Fishman 2010
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One station down from the Nikkeijin are three Chinese workers in goggles and work clothes.
Shock of Gray Ted C. Fishman 2010
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The Nikkeijin on the Taisei shop floor hail from Brazil and Peru.
Shock of Gray Ted C. Fishman 2010
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Typically, a Nikkeijin earns $2,500 a month in a Japanese factory, more than even doctors, lawyers and professors in Brazil.
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Known as Nikkeijin, these second - and third-generation descendants of Japanese migrants to Latin America have stampeded in.
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Envisioned as a labor source that wouldn't threaten the country's monoculture, Nikkeijin proved to be as foreign as their passports.
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Their descendants were discriminated against for decades, but by the 1990s a “Nikkeijin movement” began to arise, and interest in Japanese connections has grown with the availability of Nikkei visas.
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Their descendants were discriminated against for decades, but by the 1990s a “Nikkeijin movement” began to arise, and interest in Japanese connections has grown with the availability of Nikkei visas.
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More than 250,000 Nikkeijin, mainly from Brazil, now work in Japan….
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