@article{oai:nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp:00004701, author = {宮崎, 千穂 and Miyazaki, Chiho}, journal = {国際開発研究フォーラム, Forum of International Development Studies}, month = {Aug}, note = {This paper is a historical study on the stance taken by the Japanese government regarding “mixed residence”(Naichi Zakkyo, the co-residence of Japanese and foreigners outside the designated settlements)in the Nagasaki neighborhood of Inasa. In 1861, the governor of Nagasaki granted permission for officers of the Russian squadron to use Japanese houses in Inasa as rest places, and subsequently the Russians hired Japanese women, ostensibly as maids but in reality as courtesans, to live with them there. As a result, Inasa, the so-called “Russian village,” developed into a unique mixed residence area used exclusively by foreign forces. The Meiji government continued to uphold the previous permission, in spite of the character of Inasa and its own ban on mixed residence areas as part of diplomatic policy forged in treaty negotiations. The reason for this is that the Meiji Government honored the permission granted by the Nagasaki governor and expected mixed residence itself to disappear after the effectuation of treaty amendments. As a result, the issue of mixed residence in Inasa was handled in the same way as other cases of mixed residence in the country. It can be said, therefore, that the mixed residence in Inasa, despite its unique character, was prescribed by government policy and was not treated as an exceptional political issue.}, pages = {71--91}, title = {不平等条約下における内地雑居問題の一考察 : ロシア艦隊と稲佐における「居留地外雑居問題」}, volume = {27}, year = {2004} }