Migrasi Jepang ke Malaysia
Riwayat migrasi Jepang ke Malaysia bermula dari akhir abad ke-19, saat negara tersebut menjadi bagian dari Kekaisaran Britania sebagai Malaya Britania.
Jumlah populasi | |
---|---|
21,385 (2014)[1] | |
Daerah dengan populasi signifikan | |
Kuala Lumpur dan Selangor | 5,275[2] |
Penang | 1,655[2] |
Johor | 944[2] |
Sabah | 400[2][3] |
Perak | 245[2] |
Sarawak | 212[2] |
Malaka | 138[2] |
Bahasa | |
Jepang, Melayu, Inggris[4] | |
Kelompok etnik terkait | |
Diaspora Jepang |
Tokoh terkenal
Referensi
Catatan
- ^ "The number of Japanese residents (April 2014)". Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Japan. Diakses tanggal 24 April 2014.
- ^ a b c d e f g Embassy of Japan 2009, §2
- ^ "Japan looks forward to strengthening ties with Sabah". Bernama. The Borneo Post. 1 August 2018. Diakses tanggal 3 August 2018.
- ^ Imaoka 1985, hlm. 354
- ^ Koh, Lay Chin (21 October 2005), "Endon's legacy to the country", New Straits Times, diakses tanggal 20 April 2010[pranala nonaktif permanen]
- ^ "36 Tadashi Takeda", Team Roster for 2008, JEF United, 2008, diarsipkan dari versi asli tanggal 3 August 2008, diakses tanggal 19 April 2010
Sumber
- Bayly, Christopher Alan; Harper, Timothy Norman (2007), Forgotten wars: freedom and revolution in Southeast Asia, Harvard University Press, ISBN 978-0-674-02153-2
- Denker, Mehmet Sami (1998), "Ties That Bind: Japan-Malaysian Economic Relations in Historical Perspective" (PDF), İktisadi ve idari bilimler fakültesi dergisi, 8 (1): 1–15, diarsipkan dari versi asli (PDF) tanggal 18 August 2011
- Furuoka, Fumitaka; Lim, Beatrice; Mahmud, Roslinah; Katō, Iwao (2007), "東マレーシアと日本の歴史的関係に関する考察" (PDF), 『東西南北』, 15: 309–321, diarsipkan dari versi asli (PDF) tanggal 30 September 2011
- Imaoka, Hiroki (1985), "Japanese management in Malaysia" (PDF), Southeast Asian Studies, 22 (4)[pranala nonaktif permanen]
- Leng, Yuen-choy (1978), "The Japanese Community in Malaya before the Pacific War: Its Genesis and Growth", Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 9 (2): 163–179, doi:10.1017/s0022463400009735, JSTOR 20062723
- Ono, Mayumi (2008), "Long-Stay Tourism and International Retirement Migration: Japanese Retirees in Malaysia", dalam Yamashita, Shinji, Transnational migration in East Asia: Japan in a comparative focus (PDF), Senri Ethnological Reports, 77, hlm. 151–162, ISBN 978-4-901906-57-9, diarsipkan dari versi asli (PDF) tanggal 22 July 2011
- Shiraishi, Saya; Shiraishi, Takashi, ed. (1993), The Japanese in colonial Southeast Asia, Southeast Asian Publications, 3, Cornell University, ISBN 978-0-87727-402-5. Chapters cited:
- Shiraishi, Saya; Shiraishi, Takashi (1993), "The Japanese in Colonial Southeast Asia: An Overview", The Japanese in colonial Southeast Asia, hlm. 1–20
- Shimizu, Hajime (1993), "The Pattern of Economic Penetration of Prewar Singapore and Malaysia", The Japanese in colonial Southeast Asia, hlm. 63–86
- Smith, Wendy A. (1994), "A Japanese Factory in Malaysia: Ethnicity as a management ideology", dalam Sundaram, Jomo Kwame, Japan and Malaysian development: in the shadow of the rising sun, Routledge, hlm. 154–181, ISBN 978-0-415-11583-4
- 田邉 保博 [Tanabe Yasuhiro] (2003), "マレイシア・クアラルンプール日本人学校の教育事情", Bulletin of the Center for Research in International Education (26): 109–111, diarsipkan dari versi asli tanggal 13 August 2011
- "コタキナバル日本人学校", 『海外子女教育』, 32 (3), 2005, ISSN 0287-7058
- Warren, James F. (September 2000), "New Lands, Old Ties and Prostitution: A Voiceless Voice", Intersections: Gender, History and Culture in the Asian Context (4), diakses tanggal 27 August 2012
- 『マレーシア在留邦人数の調査結果について』, Malaysia: Embassy of Japan, 14 February 2009
Bacaan tambahan
- Abdullah, Syed R. S.; Keenoy, Tom (1995). Japanese managerial practices in the Malaysian Electronics Industry: Two case studies. Journal of Management Studies. 32. hlm. 747–766. doi:10.1111/j.1467-6486.1995.tb00150.x.
- Raduan, Che Rose (2002). Japanese style management abroad: The case of Malaysian subsidiaries. Selangor, Malaysia: Prentice Hall, Pearson Education. ISBN 978-983-2473-01-5. OCLC 51554618.
- Smith, Wendy A. (1993). Japanese management in Malaysia. Japanese Studies. 13. hlm. 50–76. doi:10.1080/10371399308521875.