Download The Changing Face of Japanese Retail: Working in a Chain Store (Nissan Institute/Routledge Japanese Studies) eBook
by Louella Matsunaga
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Bibliographic Details. Title: The Changing Face of Japanese Retail:. Publisher: Routledge. This book examines employment structure, working practice and recruitment strategies in Japanese retail in the 1990s through a case-study of one large chain store
Bibliographic Details. Publication Date: 2001. This book examines employment structure, working practice and recruitment strategies in Japanese retail in the 1990s through a case-study of one large chain store. Issues focused on include gender in the workplace, changing notions of corporate community and the impact of Japan's recent recession.
Working in a Chain Store. by Louella Matsunaga. series Nissan Institute/Routledge Japanese Studies.
This book examines employment structure, working practice and recruitment strategies in Japanese retail in the 1990s through a case-study of one large chain store.
Case Studies in Immunology. The Molecules of Life. Living in a Microbial World. Please accept our apologies for any inconvenience this may cause.
THE NISSAN INSTITUTE/ROUTLEDGE JAPANESE STUDIES SERIES ii. The changing face of the Japanese company.
The changing face of Japanese retail: Working in a chain store (Routledge, 2012). Newman, Benjamin . and John V. Kane. Backlash against the 'Big Box', Local Small Business and Public Opinion toward Business Corporations. Public Opinion Quarterly 78 (2014): 984-1002. The Anti-Chain Store Movement, Localist Ideology, and the Remnants of the Progressive Constitution, 1920-1940.
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Unlike previous books on Japanese nightlife, Allison's ethnography of one specific hostess club (here referred to as Bijo) . This is a book that will appeal to anyone interested in gender roles or in contemporary Japanese society.
Unlike previous books on Japanese nightlife, Allison's ethnography of one specific hostess club (here referred to as Bijo) views the general phenomenon from the eyes of a woman, hostess, and feminist anthropologist. Observing that clubs like Bijo further a kind of masculinity dependent on the gestures and labors of women, Allison seeks to uncover connections between such behavior and other social, economic, sexual, and gendered relations.