Meeting and Helping Japan’s Homeless Part 4
LWIF (2017)
Film Review
In part 4, filmmakers interview homeless men living in one the Emergency Centers run by various NGOs. They also look at a street feeding and outreach program run by a non-profit organization called Sanyukai.
Part 5 looks at figures documenting the improvement in Japanese homelessness. In 2017, the official Japanese government homeless count was 5,534 – a private research group with did actual nighttime counts came up with a figure closer to 15,000.
This makes Japan’s level of homelessness roughly the same as Canada’s (8 per 100,000 population)
The US has 55 homeless people per 100,000 population.
The new Japanese number contrasts with close to 60,000 homeless (estimated by private researchers) in 2003.
Filmmakers attribute most of this improvement to the governments expansion of their Livelihood Protection Program. In 1995 only 880,000 citizens received Livelihood Protection. At present that figure is 2.2 million. At this point, nearly any Japanese resident with a home address can qualify.