Prisons and Forced Labour in Japan

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A01=Pia Jolliffe
Ainu indigenous rights
Ainu Moshir
Author_Pia Jolliffe
British Coal Exporters
carceral geography
Category=NH
Category=NHF
Central Highway
colonial administration
convict labour studies
Early Modern Japan
Early Tokugawa Period
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Extraterritoriality Clause
Farm Horses
forced labour
Forced Labour Camps
Forced Prison Labour
Goseibai Shikimoku
Great Famine
Head Guard
history
Hokkaido
Interior Minister
Ishikari Plain
Ishikari River
Japanese history
Japanese legal history
Juvenile Delinquents
Kuroda Kiyotaka
Meiji Government
Meiji penal system
Mitsui Corporation
Northern Sea Route
penal servitude in Hokkaido
Pia Maria Jolliffe
Political Convicts
Prison Labour
prisons
Soy Sauce
Sulphur Mine
Sulphur Mountain

Product details

  • ISBN 9780815383208
  • Weight: 226g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Oct 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Prisons and Forced Labour in Japan examines the local, national and international significance of convict labour during the colonization of Hokkaido between 1881 and 1894 and the building of the Japanese empire.

Based on the analysis of archival sources such as prison yearbooks and letters, as well as other eyewitness accounts, this book uses a framework of global prison studies to trace the historical origins of prisons and forced labour in early modern Japan. It explores the institutionalization of convict labour on Hokkaido against the backdrop of political uprisings during the Meiji period. In so doing, it argues that although Japan tried to implement Western ideas of the prison as a total institution, the concrete reality of the prison differed from theoretical concepts. In particular, the boundaries between prisons and their environment were not clearly marked during the colonization of Hokkaido.

This book provides an important contribution to the historiography of Meiji Japan and Hokkaido and to the global study of prisons and forced labour in general. As such, it will be useful to students and scholars of Japanese, Asian and labour history.

Pia Maria Jolliffe is a Research and Teaching Associate at the Nissan Institute of Japanese Studies and a Research Fellow at Blackfriars Hall, University of Oxford, UK. She is the author of Learning, Migration and Intergenerational Relations: The Karen and the Gift of Education (2016).

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