Category: Hokkaido Farm Abuse Case

Disability Employment Hokkaido Farm Abuse Case Japan

Concerns Over Farm Labour Conditions for People with Disabilities in Japan Prompts Push for Self-Regulation

In Japan, growing concerns about the exploitation of people with disabilities on farms—where they are sometimes assigned meaningless tasks or treated as sources of funding—have led to calls for reform. In response, the Association for the Promotion of Employment for Persons with Disabilities has introduced a voluntary certification system to encourage farms and other businesses to self-regulate and provide fair, meaningful work. The initiative aims to promote transparency, ethical labor practices, and the dignity of disabled workers in an industry increasingly reliant on their participation.

Employment Hokkaido Farm Abuse Case Japan Welfare

As Farms in Japan Continue to Use Agencies for Disabled Workers, Concerns About ‘Padding’ & Meaningfulness of Jobs Remain

In early May 2024 it was reported how, as the employment rate for people with disabilities rose in April 2024, the number of businesses providing work opportunities to people with disabilities on behalf of companies is expanding. However, it is becoming clear that many businesses, but seemingly especially farms, use agencies to hire people with disabilities, without giving them actual work to do; one employee who had a disability was told “coming to the farm is your job.”

Abuse Hokkaido Hokkaido Farm Abuse Case Intellectual disabilities Japan Podcast

Disability News Japan Podcast: The Shog-A.I. Shimbun #3: Further Details on the ‘Hokkaido Farm Abuse Case’

Whilst reading about the ranch operator in northern Japan’s Hokkaido who admitted in court on March 12th that they had not paid intellectually disabled workers for decades, giving them only “snacks and juice,” Barrier Free Japan went back to their blog and re-read reports.