一般注記type:text
Social Markers of Acculturation: Building a Shared Understanding in Japan
Using the Keio Grant for the Development of Academic Research, my research about Social Markers of Acculturation ("SMA") has advanced in two ways: 1. First, I completed an academic paper about which SMA Japanese people expect immigrants to master to be socially accepted in Japanese society and workplaces. 2. Second, I could develop and test a quantitative measure of acceptance in Japanese society and workplaces for migrants in Japan.
For #1 above, I completed a paper, "Constructing Who Can Be Japanese: A Study of Social Markers of Acceptance in Japan" which is now being reviewed for publication in an international journal. I presented this research at the International Association for Cross-Cultural Psychology's 24th International Congress, held at the University of Guelph in Guelph, Canada (July 2, 2018). This paper was delivered as part of a symposium, for which I was the chairperson, entitled, "Social Markers of Acculturation: The Accessibility and Process of Gaining Host Culture Acceptance for Immigrants in Five Nations." Based on the strength of this research, I have been invited to serve as the co-editor of a special edition of the International Journal of Intercultural Relations (published by Elsevier) to be published sometime in 2019, which will be devoted to research related to social markers of acceptance for immigrant populations around the world.
For #2 above, I finished a paper, "A New Framework of Workplace Acculturation: The Need to Belong and Constructing Ontological Interpretive Spaces," which was accepted for publication in the journal Intercultural Communication for the July, 2018 issue. I presented this research at Ritsumeikan University's College of Business Administration (November 1, 2018) in a talk entitled, "National Group and Organizational Belonging: A New Framework for Successful Intercultural Communication in Business." Also, I recruited participants for a quantitative study to establish the validity and reliability of a survey designed to measure the two dimensions in my theoretical framework. Approximately 200 people have taken the survey so far, and I am continuing to recruit new participants to increase the reliability of the survey results.
I have decided to use all of my budget of 200,000 yen to pay for the IACCP 24th International Congress at Guelph University because the costs of attending the conference exceeded the amount of this Keio Grant for the Development of Academic Research.
連携機関・データベース国立情報学研究所 : 学術機関リポジトリデータベース(IRDB)(機関リポジトリ)