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Dear Colleagues:

I am pleased to share this recent publication by Routedge, hb and ebook. This was originally an Abe Fellowship funded project, subsequently supported by my universities as well. 

International mobility is not a new concept as people have moved throughout history, voluntarily and forcibly, for personal, familial, economic, political, and professional reasons. Yet, the mobility of technical talent in the global economy is relatively new, largely voluntary, structurally determined by market forces, and influenced by immigration policies.

With over a decade’s worth of extensive research in India, Japan, Finland, and Singapore, this book provides an alternative understanding of how capitalism functions at the global level by specifically analyzing the international movement of technical professionals between India and Japan. There are three factors that inform this study: the services transition away from manufacturing, the movement of technical professionals in the world economy, and the demographic crisis facing Japan. The dynamics of changing capitalism are examined by theorizing the emergence of the services sector in the USA and Japan, analyzing the pronounced social inequality in India that is the basis for the global supply of highly skilled technical professionals, and providing considerable empirical data on the flows of professionals to these two countries to indicate Japan’s institutional inflexibility in accommodating foreign talent. The author anticipates that Japanese industry will shed some of its institutional rigidity due to the pressures of competition and the scarcity of technical professionals.

Table of Contents
Foreword by Andres Solimano
1. Capital Accumulation and the International Mobility of Labor: An Introduction 
2. Changing Structures of Accumulation and International Mobility of Technical Professionals 
3. Changing Structures of Accumulation from Manufacturing to Services 
4. Positioning Japan in the International Mobility of Skilled Professionals 
5. Changing Structures of Accumulation and Indian Labor Mobility 
6. Crisis and Accumulation Challenges in Japan’s IT Industry 
7. Institutional Stickiness and Really Existing Capitalism 
8. The Final Push for Accumulation in India and Japan 
9. Concluding Remarks on Accumulation, International Mobility, and Distributive Implications

Additional details can be found here: 
http://www.tandf.net/books/details/9780415564953/

I will be happy to send a book discount form should anyone be interested.

Best wishes. Anthony
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Anthony P. D'Costa, Chair & Professor of Contemporary Indian Studies
Australia India Institute and School of Social & Political Sciences
University of Melbourne, 147-149 Barry Street, Carlton VIC 3053, AUSTRALIA
Ph: +61 3 9035 6161, http://www.aii.unimelb.edu.au/ 
New Book: After-Development Dynamics (on South Korea)

New Book Series (Dynamics of Asian Development)
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