Withdrawal and Belonging: Ethnographic Insights from a Hikikomori Rehabilitation Center in Japan

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March 6, 2026

Withdrawal and Belonging: Ethnographic Insights from a Hikikomori Rehabilitation Center in Japan
Withdrawal and Belonging: Ethnographic Insights from a Hikikomori Rehabilitation Center in Japan

Volume 24

Abstract: This research note examines how people labeled as hikikomori—prolonged social withdrawal—navigate isolation, moral judgment, and attempts at rehabilitation. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in a rural rehabilitation center, it situates their experiences within broader social transformations in post-industrial Japan. Departing from accounts that frame hikikomori primarily through diagnosis or individual pathology, this note foregrounds lived experience and the moral dimensions of rehabilitation. It argues that hikikomori are not anomalies at society’s edges, but rather windows into how contemporary Japan organizes value, recognition, and social connection, and that further ethnographic work is needed to illuminate these dynamics.

Keywords: Hikikomori, Rehabilitation, Hikikomori Industry, Ethnography, Social Isolation

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Volume 24

About the author:

Alain Julian is a cultural anthropologist and philosopher whose work examines loneliness, social withdrawal, and forms of belonging in contemporary Japan. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork and philosophical analysis, his research explores how moral expectations, work, and care shape experiences of isolation. He is currently preparing a doctoral research project on hikikomori and social withdrawal in Japan.

Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus is a peer-reviewed publication, providing critical analysis of the forces shaping the Asia-Pacific and the world.

    About the author:

    Alain Julian is a cultural anthropologist and philosopher whose work examines loneliness, social withdrawal, and forms of belonging in contemporary Japan. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork and philosophical analysis, his research explores how moral expectations, work, and care shape experiences of isolation. He is currently preparing a doctoral research project on hikikomori and social withdrawal in Japan.