Talk:Foreign-born Japanese
From Academic Kids
Is this page still a candidate for deletion? It doesn't seem to be on the VfD page anymore, and it seems to have at least a few good links. Exploding Boy 08:33, Mar 16, 2004 (UTC)
I don't think "Foreign-born Japanese" is a good title because some ethnic Japanese were born in foreign countries. For example, Ozawa Seiji was born in Manchukuo. I'd like to rename this to "Naturalized Japanese." --Nanshu 02:46, 18 Mar 2004 (UTC)
If they are ethnically Japanese and born to a Japanese parent or parents but outside the country, then the term naturalized Japanese wouldn't cover them. The name is fine as it is.Exploding Boy 04:44, Mar 18, 2004 (UTC)
Hmmm, I assumed that this article covers those who were naturalized in Japan but there seems another idea. Anyway, Ozawa Seiji is a foreign-born Japanese in a literal sense but does not conform to the first sentence: "... later acquire Japanese citizenship." --Nanshu 01:29, 20 Mar 2004 (UTC)
Exploding Boy, I have to agree with Nanshu here. The way I see it, the definition of "foreign-born Japanese" in this page appears to be a defenition not in common use, and also quite arbitary. The article currently defines "foreign-born Japanese" as "a person who was originally born outside Japan and later acquired Japanese citizenship. " If you go by the current Nationality Law (国籍法), this will include (1) naturalized Japanese, (2) a person who is eligible to the exceptional "Acquisition of nationality by legitimation" (準正にともなう取得) article in the Nationality Law, (3) a person who was born outside Japan to Japanese parents but retroactively lost Japanese nationality because he/she did not "clearly indicate his or her volition to reserve Japanese nationality," but later reacquired Japanese nationality by article 17 of the Nationality Law, and (4) people who applyed to acquire Japanese nationality because of a special measure the Japanese government employed to reduce inequalities that arose because of the 1984 revision to the Nationality Law.
The way I understand it, anyone who acquires Japanese nationality and does not fall in to (2), (3) or (4), will have to go through the full naturalization process regardless of whether they are ethnic Japanese or not. Additionally, the revised Nationality Law gives Japanese nationality to anyone born to a Japanese parent, regardless of the country they were born in. This and the fact that (2), (3) and (4) are all exceptional cases make me feel that "naturalized Japanese" is much more inuitive.
By the way, Alberto Fujimori is not a "foreign-born Japanese person" if you go by the definition in this page - he acquired Japanese nationality at birth because his father had Japanese citizenship and registered Alberto Fujimori's birth at the Japanese embassy in Lima. Yes, the current law does prohibit dual nationality, but the old version wasn't that strict. Atsi Otani 07:27, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
