St. John, Hope2014-01-142014-01-142013-03-19http://hdl.handle.net/1773/24428Honorable Mention, 2013 Library Research Award for Undergraduates, Non-Senior DivisionOsaka has long been a hub of labor and industry in Japan. The Kamagasaki district near the famed Osaka Loop Line became the epicenter of day labor, even originating its own type of labor market – yoseba. Formally renamed the Airin district in the 1960s, the area has since fallen under the radar, despite its importance in Japanese labor history. Its decline from a marketplace of human capital to a receptacle of the aging, unskilled workers is evidence of an economic shift that has gone unmirrored by the space itself. This paper explores possible reasons the Kamagaski/Airin district has been unable to adapt to Japan’s changing economy and the social, political and cultural outcomes of its stagnation.enKamagasaki: The Legacy of Poverty and Uprising in Urban SpacesOther