More than Just Monsters: The Social Factors Behind Parental Child Abuse in Japan

Society

Sugiyama Haru [Profile]

When a five-year-old girl died from parental abuse earlier this year, the heart-rending note she left behind mobilized public sympathy and stirred the government to pass a raft of emergency measures. But if we truly want to get to the root of the problem, we need to understand the social factors that sometimes drive young parents to neglect and abuse their own children.

Reluctance to Use Public Services

In all three cases, the parents themselves suffered violence or neglect as children, and grew up in isolation. As adults, they continued to face numerous difficulties and struggled to build a stable position for themselves in society. And in all cases, they chose to keep these difficulties a secret. Even if they had used public services while things were going relatively smoothly, once problems arose they would (or could) no longer turn to them for help.

Including the recent case in Meguro, the mothers were all in their teens or slightly older when they gave birth. These were women who had missed out on the kind of education and upbringing that might have equipped them to find a place in adult society. They had tried to find a place for themselves by marrying and starting a family at a young age. But women like this are at a high risk of falling into serious poverty if their marriages collapse and they start working to support themselves with children in tow.

Part of the reason why the mother in Osaka was driven to work in the sex industry is the reality of contemporary society, where it is difficult for a woman to earn enough money to bring up a child on her own. Many women, including single mothers, work in the sex industry because it is hard for them to earn a steady income in other lines of work. But although the barrier to entry is low, women working in the sex industry have no rights as workers and are treated as mere merchandise. In the process, they sometimes lose the ability to give their children the care and attention they need. And there is often a strong stigma attached to the idea of receiving public assistance as a single mother. They probably also feel psychological pressure to hide the fact they are not capable of fulfilling their roles as mothers.

Simply lashing out at these people as “evil” monsters does not solve anything. The reality is that they lacked the time and the money to bring up their children properly, and missed out on the essential support they needed from public services.

Building a Support Network for Young Parents

This is not the first time that a spate of child abuse cases has scandalized the public and dominated the news. In the early 1970s, the public imagination was captivated and horrified in equal measure by the “coin locker baby” incidents, in which newborn babies were abandoned in railway station coin lockers. According to a survey carried out by the Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare in 1973, as many as 251 children under the age of three had died as a result of violent abuse or neglect. In most cases, the people responsible were blood relatives of the victims. The total number of children abused in this way was many times larger than the equivalent figure today.

In fact, between 2005 and 2014, pregnant women and new mothers in the 23 municipalities of central Tokyo were three times more likely to die from suicide than from illness or disease. Pregnancy can drive socially disadvantaged women to despair—this basic fact has not changed since the days of the coin locker babies. If the mother dies alone, it is suicide; if she takes her baby with her, it is considered a joint suicide (shinjū); if the mother does not die but the baby does, it is considered a case of child abuse. Most often, the children who die from child abuse are less than one year old.

Since the case in Meguro earlier this year, steps have been taken to strengthen the Child Guidance Centers and the services they can provide. This is an important move. But the most effective policy the government could take would be to do more to help young people become more integrated into society, equipping them to meet people and feel confident about asking for help, and put a framework in place so that bringing up a child is no longer the responsibility of the parents alone but also the responsibility of the wider society. When parents feel excluded by society, their frustration and desperation can sometimes lead them to use horrendous violence against children, the most vulnerable members of that society.

In 2016, the Child Welfare Law was revised to prioritize the rights and best interests of the child. In 2017, the Ministry of Welfare published a vision for childcare and a new society, outlining the process by which it will work to make the ideals of child welfare a reality.

Part of the vision includes plans to increase the number of foster parents and make more use of the “special adoption system,” to reduce the number of children placed in institutions. This aspect of the plan was widely reported. But the vision also includes plans to build “comprehensive child and family support centers” around the country, strengthening the role of social workers, and joining forces with doctors, volunteers, and other resources in the community to create a comprehensive network of support that will help families to bring up their children.

The idea that bringing up children is the responsibility of the family is deeply rooted in Japanese society. Many parents have internalized this way of thinking, which makes it difficult for them to ask for help when difficulties arise.

Bringing up children is an endeavor that requires the support of society as a whole. If more people come to accept this idea, in the long run it will surely make horrific incidents of this kind less likely in the future, and reduce the number of children losing their lives in such tragic circumstances.

(Originally published in Japanese on August 31, 2018. Banner photo: A person leaves flowers in front of the apartment building where Funato Yua died after suffering neglect and abuse at the hands of her parents. Photograph taken June 8, 2018. © Tamaki Tatsurō, Mainichi Shimbun/Aflo.)

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Sugiyama HaruView article list

Born in Tokyo in 1958. Worked as a magazine editor after graduating from Waseda University’s School of Humanities and Social Sciences and has since worked as a freelance investigative reporter. Works include Negurekuto—ikuji hōki, Mana-chan wa naze shindaka (Neglect: What Caused Little Mana’s Death?), which received the Shōgakukan Nonfiction Prize  and Imin kanryū—Nambei kara kaettekuru Nikkeijintachi (Completing the Immigration circle: The Return of Ethnic Japanese from Latin America).

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