ABSTRACT

Japan’s Household Registration System (koseki seido) is an extremely powerful state instrument, and is socially entrenched with a long history of population governance, social control and the maintenance of social order. It provides identity whilst at the same time imposing identity upon everyone registered, and in turn, the state receives validity and legitimacy from the registration of its inhabitants. The study of the procedures and mechanisms for identifying and documenting people provides an important window into understanding statecraft, and by examining the koseki system, this book provides a keen insight into social and political change in Japan.

By looking through the lens of the koseki system, the book takes both an historical as well as a contemporary approach to understanding Japanese society. In doing so, it develops our understanding of contemporary Japan within the historical context of population management and social control; reveals the social effects and influence of the koseki system throughout its history; and presents new insights into citizenship, nationality and identity. Furthermore, this book develops our knowledge of state functions and indeed the nation state itself, through engaging critically with important issues relating to the koseki while at the same time providing a platform for further investigation. The contributors to this volume utilise a variety of disciplinary areas including history, gender studies, sociology, law and anthropology, and each chapter provides insights that bring us closer to a comprehensive grasp of the role, effects and historical background of what is a crucial and influential instrument of the Japanese state.

This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of Japanese history, Japanese culture and society, Japanese studies, Asian social policy and demography more generally.

chapter I|18 pages

The koseki

part II|90 pages

Nation, empire and occupation

chapter 5|14 pages

Creating spatial hierarchies

The koseki, early international marriage and intermarriage

chapter 6|18 pages

Managing “strangers” and “undecidables”

Population registration in Meiji Japan

chapter 7|16 pages

Sub-nationality in the Japanese empire

A social history of the koseki in colonial Korea 1910–45 1

chapter 8|18 pages

Blood and country

Chūgoku zanryū koji, nationality and the koseki

chapter 9|22 pages

Jus koseki

Household registration and Japanese citizenship

part III|90 pages

The present

chapter 11|16 pages

Sexual citizenship at the intersections of patriarchy and heteronormativity

Same-sex partnerships and the koseki

chapter 12|18 pages

Birth registration and the right to have rights

The changing family and the unchanging koseki

chapter 13|18 pages

Officially invisible

The stateless (mukokusekisha) and the unregistered (mukosekisha)

chapter 14|18 pages

Challenging the heteronormative family in the koseki

Surname, legitimacy and unmarried mothers 1