SOCIETY
False Claim of “Muslim Lunches” Makes Japan’s Kitakyushu a Hate Target
No, the city of Kitakyushu isn't offering "Muslim lunches" to students. Other schools in Japan, however, have - and with heartwarming results.
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Our society section covers the systems, policies, and social forces that shape daily life for people living in Japan - from immigration law and public health to demographic policy, workplace culture, and the treatment of marginalized communities. This is one of the broadest categories on this site because few aspects of Japanese life are untouched by the pressures of demographic change, labor shortages, and shifting social norms.
English-language coverage of Japan often defaults to cherry blossoms and bullet trains. We report on more structural themes. Our sourcing starts in Japanese - court documents, academic surveys, municipal records, Japanese-language journalism. We center voices that rarely appear in wire-service stories: immigrant workers navigating hostile visa rules, disabled students fighting for basic accommodations, persecuted foreign resident communities like the Kurdish population in Kawaguchi explaining their situation in their own words.
Several threads run persistently through our reporting. Japan's population crisis appears repeatedly, but not as an abstraction. We trace it through nursery school closures, the social exhaustion of singles facing marriage pressure, and the contradictions of a "bachelor tax" that generates more backlash than babies. Immigration is another constant: who gets to stay, under what conditions, and how hostility gets manufactured from misinformation, whether around a Kitakyushu school-lunch rumor or fears about a government initiative involving Africa.
We also write a lot about public health: an ADHD medication shortage that hits rural patients hardest, a black market in weight-loss drugs in Kabukicho, vaccine hesitancy sustained by government missteps. Across all of this, we document the gap between Japan's stated commitments - to disability rights, to Fukushima decontamination, to workplace safety - and what actually happens to the people those commitments were supposed to protect.
SOCIETY
No, the city of Kitakyushu isn't offering "Muslim lunches" to students. Other schools in Japan, however, have - and with heartwarming results.
SOCIETY
The woman, an employee of cosmetics maker D-Up, said the company's president called her a "stray dog" before putting her on leave.
SOCIETY
A simple misunderstanding led some Japanese citizens to protest an initiative they worry will lead to a flood of African immigrants.
SOCIETY
Japan has one of the lowest rates of gun crime in the world. How did it start, and how has it stayed…
SOCIETY
An attorney who represents families in disability cases explains how gaps in the law leave some disabled students stranded.
SOCIETY
In Japan, schools are supposed to make all reasonable accommodations for disabled students. One student says it wasn't so easy.
SOCIETY
Japan wants more women to give birth to counteract its declining birth rate. That's hard to do when nursery schools are rapidly…
LAW & CRIME
Following in the wake of the Nakai Masahiro scandal, another pop/TV star stands accused of multiple acts of harassment against staff.