Re: does not work at school and does not communicate. Japan's 500 thousand old solitary family: the longest has been isolated for more than 10 years.
[b] the Japanese government made a try for them to go to society to try [/b]
these tribes, most of which suffered the recession of the 80s economic bubble, and the pain of the fracture of Japanese traditional and modern interpersonal communication. Finally, they chose to deal with it in the most silent way.
however, for Japan, where the labor force is not developed, the existence of a large number of people living in seclusion is undoubtedly a stumbling block in economic development. According to a report released by the Japanese government in September 2017, the proportion of jobs and job seekers in Japan has reached 1.5:1, a gap that has reached the peak of nearly 40 years.
in addition to further aggravating the shortage of labour force, the living communities can not be self-sufficient and bring heavy burden to the family and social welfare system.
according to Bloomberg, in 2016, Japanese Prime Minister Abe Shinzo personally responded to the "hizers" problem and announced plans to open more advisory services at the end of 2016, hiring social workers to visit the "dwell people" in their homes, encouraging them to return to their jobs and revitalizing the declining labor market in Japan. .
one of them, a new organization called New Start, is committed to helping people reopen their work and social life.
in Japan, New Start is most famous for the "rental sister" project, where volunteers (usually young women, and a small number of men) visit dwells and talk to them from their bedroom doors.
New Start volunteers try to communicate at the doorway of the living person's bedroom from the photographer's personal website
organizer, usually, it takes one or two years to let the dwell out of the bedroom door. When a living person does not want to open the door, they leave letters at the door, expecting them to knock on each other's hearts.
New Start also carried out "security camps" - a small, special community set up for a family of dwells, with cafes, restaurants and so on, where people can communicate with other people with the same situation, accumulate work and social experience. New Start also invites local people to have parties together every week, trying to keep these relockites in touch with society.
New Start set the security camp appearance for the dwell people from the photographer's personal website
but it's not free: to join New Start, parents need to pay $2000 to $3000 a month for their children, with a specific amount as a child. The specific situation of the child is determined.
so far, the results of this attempt have not yet been known. Kageki Asakura, President of a public university in Tokyo, also admits that the visit of social workers is "adding psychological pressure to the family of dwell", even though more people who have been dwell, or pay attention to the family, are still working hard.