Japan Teachers Union Explained

Japan Teachers Union
Location Country:Japan
Affiliation:Rengo
Members:290,857 (2009)
Native Name:Nihon Kyōshokuin Kumiai
Founded:1947
Headquarters:Tokyo, Japan
Key People:Ryosuke Kato, president; Yasunaga Okamoto, general secretary
Website:Official website

, abbreviated, is Japan's oldest labor union of teachers and school staff. Established in 1947, it was the largest teachers union until a split in the late 1980s. The union is known for its critical stance against the ruling conservative Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) on such issues as Kimigayo (the national anthem), the Flag of Japan, and the screening of history textbooks during the LDP's near continuous one-party rule since 1955. Today Nikkyōso is affiliated to the trade union confederation Rengo. It had 290,857 members as of December 2009.[1]

History

Nikkyōso was founded in June 1947, with assistance from the Japan Communist Party (JCP), as a national federation of local prefectural teachers unions, although in practice each of these unions had considerable autonomy and its own strengths and political orientation. At the time of its founding, Nikkyōso represented almost every single school teacher, university professor, and school staff member in Japan. Initially under the influence of the JCP, in 1950 Nikkyōso joined the nationwide Sōhyō labor confederation and thereafter became more closely affiliated with the Japan Socialist Party (JSP).

From the earliest days of its foundation, Nikkyōso took an extremely militant line against a series of conservative governments in Japan, leading to considerable antagonism between the union and the Ministry of Education. Major points of contention included government requirements that teachers sing the national anthem and salute the Japanese flag in class, training requirements for new teachers, government efforts to recentralize education, efforts to protect school autonomy, government curriculum mandates, and textbook censorship.

From the perspective of the conservative government and right-wing groups in Japan, Nikkyōso was viewed as akin to public enemy number one, as it was seen to be indoctrinating Japan's youth and college students into left-wing, pro-union, and even communistic modes of thought. The decade of the 1950s saw successive conservative governments attempt to break the power of Nikkyōso by introducing a "teacher efficiency ratings system," which the government could then use as an excuse to fire the most militant teachers, and which Nikkyōso fought tooth and nail to prevent. In his book The Enigma of Japanese Power, Karel van Wolferen describes the clashes between conservative forces and Nikkyōso during this period, including Ministers of Education who had previously served in the "Thought Police" of the 1930s using thugs to systematically attack union members, break up union meetings, and eliminate local elected boards of education. In 1961, police even uncovered a plot by right-wing groups to assassinate the leaders of Nikkyōso.

In the latter half of the 1950s, however, Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi made smashing Nikkyōso one of his personal missions. In 1958, Kishi finally succeeded in installing the long-delayed teacher efficiency ratings system, allowing the Ministry of Education to fire teachers almost at will. In the aftermath of this epoch-making defeat, Nikkyōso went into decline and began gradually losing members.

In the late 1980s, long-running internal disagreements within Nikkyōso on political orientation and on Nikkyōso's relationships to other national labor organizations finally produced major internal schisms. The union thus became less effective than in previous years at a time when the national government and the Ministry of Education were moving aggressively ahead with a major educational reform. Nikkyōso had staunchly opposed many of the proposed reforms by the Ministry, but it failed to forestall changes in certification and teacher training that it had viewed as an existential threat to its own survival. The new Nikkyōso leadership that emerged after several years of internal discord seemed to take a more conciliatory approach to the Ministry and reform issues, but Nikkyōso membership continued to decline thereafter.

Presidents

1947: Araki Shozaburo

1950: Oka Saburo

1952: Takeshi Kobayashi

1962: Miyanohara Sadamitsu

1971: Motofumi Makieda

1983: Shoju Ohba

1990s:

2004: Yasuo Morikoshi

2008: Yuzuru Nakamura

2012: Ryosuke Kato

See also

References

Works cited

External links

Notes and References

  1. Rengo website Rengo brochure 2010-2011 Retrieved on July 6, 2012