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01b01u00please,please take a look of this, i need to submit it soon05002u02b02h1
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01b01u00Chapter 1: Introduction02u02b02h1
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00 02b00The focus of the present research is Peruvian emigration to 010200, usually known as the “return migration”01a
00[1]02a00. Among the migratory flows of exiting 010200, the ubiquitous nature of Peruvian expatriate is common. Expression such as “in everywhere there is a Peruvian”, “all Peruvians want to migrate”, or “Yeah! I met a Peruvian…how come?...he/she left Peru and was a worker in…;” are commonly heard in USA, Canada and Europeans countries where the numbers of immigrants are high in proportion to the population, often causing a new configuration of the social structure of those countries; however when it turns to Peruvian immigrants in Japan, the panorama is different, because this recent migratory flow in direction to Japan is still new compared with other countries.02br
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00 00The specific theme that I approached in this context of the Peruvian migratory flow to 010200 or Nikkei- Peruvian (descendants of Japanese) is the Peruvian family. To deepen 00the knowledge of the characteristics of the Peruvian family in 010200 allows an integral approaching of the migratory phenomenon, since the use of the household as unity for analysis includes all the family members, independent of birth country. 02br
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00 00The Peruvian immigration to 010200 holds certain peculiar particularities. Some of those particularities are the primordial focus of the research, and it is characterized by the distinctive context of the emigrant’s new process of communication among family members, changing roles compared with the traditional family in 010200, and these features involved in a context of indecision of returning or not to 010200.02br
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00The paper is divided in six parts. In chapter one I make an introduction to the topic, explaining the current situation and the need for scholar research. In chapter two I review the recent theoretical and empirical literature on international migration, 01i
00Nikkei02i00 return migration and migrants in 010200. In chapter three I provide a useful background and an overview of the characteristics of the Japanese Peruvians that reside in 010200. In chapter four I show the methodology employed in the study, data collection and the configuration of the sample. In chapter five I offer explanations of the findings of the study. In part chapter six I discuss the effects of migration in the Japanese Peruvian community as in the host society. At the end of this thesis I offer the conclusions of the study. 02br
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00Finally, I expect that this study can contribute to the dearth of research related to familial problems inside the Peruvian community, however still remain a number of topics that need specialized investigation. I consider that further research oriented to fill the lack of expert knowledge and the promotion of advance debate should be foster, in this way the acquisition of valuable information can bridge the existent gap.02br
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00[1]02a00 The return migration is specifically targeted at Peruvians of Japanese descend; many non Japanese-Peruvians have gone to 010200 to work as factory laborers. This study includes all individuals with the Peruvian nationality. 010id9