Thursday, February 5, 2026 | 7:00-8:30 PM ET REGISTER FOR ZOOM
The Future Is Foreign: Women and Immigrants in Corporate Japan (Cornell University Press, 2025)
Presenter: Hilary Holbrow, Assistant Professor of Japanese Politics and Society, Indiana University
Discussant: Ulrike Schaede, Professor of Japanese Business, University of California San Diego
Moderator: Sara Kang, Postdoctoral Fellow in the Society of Fellows, Princeton University
The Modern Japan History Association invites the wider community to a conversation with Hilary Holbrow (Indiana), who will be speaking about her new book The Future Is Foreign: Women and Immigrants in Corporate Japan (Cornell University Press, 2025). Japan is at the forefront of global population decline. The Future Is Foreign nvestigates how elite Japanese firms are responding to this unprecedented challenge. Hilary Holbrow argues that labor shortages push Japanese firms to hire more immigrants and women, and to ease excessive demands on all workers. At the same time, not all employees benefit equally. Japanese women's enduring overrepresentation in low-status clerical roles reinforces gender biases that hold all women back. In contrast, the small but growing presence of white-collar Asian immigrant workers weakens the ethnic prejudices of their Japanese colleagues. Despite Japan's reputation for xenophobia, white-collar immigrant men disproportionally reap the dividends of Japan's shrinking population. The Future Is Foreign sheds new light on the processes that perpetuate inequality in Japanese firms, and in organizations worldwide. While managers and policymakers often assume that increasing women and minorities' representation in leadership will erode prejudice, Holbrow reveals that the people we see when we "look down" the organizational hierarchy are more important to the social construction of bias than are the people we see when we "look up." Ulrike Schaede (UCSD) will serve as interlocutor.
The Modern Japan History Association is a tax-exempt 501(c)(3) non-profit organization supported by member contributions.