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  2. Firearm and Sword Possession Control Law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firearm_and_Sword...

    Since then, control on guns became increasingly strict for civilians, leading to a number of revisions and new laws during the Meiji Restoration. [2] After World War II , the Japanese military was disarmed, which led to the Japanese government eventually enacting the Swords and Firearms Possession Control Law in 1958 to prevent gang fights ...

  3. Yasui v. United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yasui_v._United_States

    He then graduated from the University of Oregon in 1937, and that college’s law school in 1939. [5] Yasui, U.S. Army reservist, [6] then began working at the Japanese Consulate in Chicago, Illinois, in 1940, remaining there until December 8, 1941, when he then resigned and returned to Hood River. [5]

  4. Firearms of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firearms_of_Japan

    Later, Japan developed the very successful bolt action Arisaka series rifles, which was the Japanese service rifle until the end of World War II. [28] Japan produced relatively few submachine guns during World War II, the most numerous model was the Type 100 submachine gun of which 24,000–27,000 were produced, compared, for example, with the ...

  5. Security Treaty between the United States and Japan

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Security_Treaty_Between...

    The Security Treaty between the United States and Japan (日本国とアメリカ合衆国との間の安全保障条約, Nippon-koku to Amerika Gasshūkoku to no aida no anzen hoshō jōyaku) was a treaty signed on 8 September 1951 in San Francisco, California by representatives of the United States and Japan, in conjunction with the Treaty of San Francisco that ended World War II in Asia.

  6. Sword hunt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sword_hunt

    The number of swords forfeited was over three million. This is the first time that Japanese peasants were disarmed completely. Today, Japan has a Sword and Firearms Law which, much like gun control laws around the world, governs the possession and use of weapons in public. The purchase and ownership of certain swords within Japan is legal if ...

  7. Anti-Japanese sentiment in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Japanese_sentiment_in...

    Anti-Japanese sentiment against American citizens of Japanese descent in the United States would peak during World War II, when the Empire of Japan became involved in the Pacific War theater. After the war, the rise of Japan as a major economic power in the 1970s was seen as a widespread economic threat to the United States and also led to a ...

  8. Internment of Japanese Americans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internment_of_Japanese...

    During World War II, over 2,200 Japanese from Latin America were held in concentration camps run by the Immigration and Naturalization Service, part of the Department of Justice. Beginning in 1942, Latin Americans of Japanese ancestry were rounded up and transported to American concentration camps run by the INS and the U.S. Justice Department.

  9. Korematsu v. United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korematsu_v._United_States

    Japanese American Assembly Center at Tanforan race track, San Bruno. In the wake of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and the report of the First Roberts Commission, President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066 on February 19, 1942, authorizing the War Department to create military areas from which any or all Americans might be excluded, and to provide for the necessary ...