Aso 2.0 and beyond: Reflections on a decade of rural well-being research in Japan

Conference @Department of East Asian Studies, University of Vienna / October 31 - November 2, 2024

 About the Conference

This conference thrives to round up a decade of our joint investigation of well-being and rural society in Japan. Participants present their own research findings and discuss their work experience in and with a multidisciplinary team of researchers from the University of Vienna. Keeping in mind the long-term perspective of the project pointing out into the future, we are also interested in unexpected turnouts and the breaching-out into new research clusters, actually and potentially. Last not least, we think that reflections on the twisted paths of coping with calamities amid natural disasters and the Covid 19-pandemic may yield valuable lessons for the conceptualization of future research proposals of similar scope. Ultimately, the gathering of core members, associate researchers, and graduate student researchers is expected to bring about a better understanding of individual and co-authored findings in the light of the larger objectives and ambitions of the Aso 2.0 research initiative. 

 Dates

  • October 31, 2024, 18:00~20:00 (CEST)
  • November 1, 2024, 9:00~19:00 (CEST)
  • November 2, 2024, 9:00~15:30 (CEST)

 Conference Programme

Day 1 – Thursday, Oct 31, 18:00~20:00 (CEST)

  • 18:00~20:00: Kick-off event (= u:japan lecture s09e03)
    • "You'll never walk alone?" The meaning of social relations and belonging for happiness in rural Japan
      Wolfram Manzenreiter
    • Reception

Day 2 – Friday, November 1, 9:00~19:00 (CEST)

  • 09:00~10:30: "Social networks and well-being"
    • Chair: Hanno Jentzsch
    • Social capital and subjective well-being in rural Japan
      Stefan Hundsdorfer
    • Overcoming the concept of a closed rural society: Multiple mobilities of urban-rural migrants in Aso's neighboring communities
      Cornelia Reiher
    • Happiness as a by-product: The impact of civic engagement on women's well-being in rural Japan
      Antonia Miserka
  • Coffee break 
  • 11:00~12:30: "Women actors of happiness in rural Japan"
    • Chair: Florian Purkarthofer
    • Happiness of female lifestyle migrants to depopulated settlements: A case study from Shiga Perfecture
      Shunsuke Takeda
    • Well-being amongst multiple responsibilities: Mothers of the Aso region 
      Johanna Mayr
    • In the shadow of another volcano: Elderly women's well-being in Sakurajima
      Lenka Miyanohara
  • Lunch break
  • 14:00~15:30: "Rural spaces beyond municipal boundaries"
    • Chair: Adam Greguš
    • Governing in-migration: Regional management organizations as gatekeepers and agents of integration for urban-rural migrants
      Hanno Jentzsch
    • Rural well-being and diversity in contemporary Japan: Of foreign, single and nomad lifestyle migrants
      Susanne Klien
    • Complementing rural field work by using secondary statistics: Potentials and limitations in the Aso context
      Ralph Lützeler
  • Coffee break
  • 16:00~17:30: "Mobilization of social resources"
    • Chair: Anna Linder
    • One crisis after another: Finding ways to overcome the impacts of compounded disasters and challenges in struggling rural areas
      Signy Goto-Spletzer
    • From well-being to spaces of resilience in the Aso region
      Sebastian Polak-Rottmann
    • Exploring the role perception of healthcare workers in rural Japan
      Melanie Steinbrugger
  • 19:00~22:00: Dinner

Day 3 – Saturday, November 2, 9:00~15:30 (CEST)

  • 09:00~10:30: "Utilization of natural and heritage resources"
    • Chair: Andreas Eder-Ramsauer
    • Sustaining the Aso region: Challenges and strategies in the circular and ecological sphere
      Tomohiro Ichinose
    • Conversation of the Aso grasslands: Assessing the feasibility of policies utilizing social capital
      Shinya Ueno
    • Natural disasters and regional revival in Aso
      Kyosuke Kashiwagi
  • Coffee break
  • 11:00~12:30: "New topics emerging"
    • Chair: Ralf Windhab
    • Stumbling upon furry friends in Aso: Transitioning to studying Japan's urban-rural divide through the lens of pets
      Barbara Holthus
    • A sociable personality and sociocentrism in Japan: The role of extraversion in securing social support resources and emic relational well-being
      Dionyssios Askitis
    • The making and remaking of heterotopias in rural Gifu: Actor-network analysis of globalized space usage
      Stefan Böckl
  • Lunch break
  • 14:00~15:30: "Looking back, looking forward: Beyond Aso 2.0"
    • Chair: Wolfram Manzenreiter
    • Well-being in rural life in Kyushu: One family's perspective
      Joy Hendry
    • Future shock and the Aso region
      Johannes Wilhelm
    • Aso Archives Initiative and Aso 1.0, University of Vienna: The potential of Aso as a meeting point for various academic disciplines
      Naoki Haruta
    • A long-term perspective beyond Aso 2.0: Wrap-up and next steps
      Wolfram Manzenreiter

 Contributors & Abstracts (in alphabetical order)

  • Title: A sociable personality and sociocentrism in Japan: The role of extraversion in securing social support resources and emic relational well-being
  • Abstract:

    While determinants of Anglo-American well-being concepts have been studied at large, more research on these has yet to emerge regarding “emic” Japanese well-being constructs. One of the predictors most determinant of “etic” well-being is extraversion. This study anticipates that extraversion is more strongly associated with emic well-being. Stratified Japanese data (n = 2,500) was examined using regression analyses. The results illustrate the importance of extraversion as a determinant of well-being overall and of emic aspects in particular, also exhibiting a stronger moderation effect on social-level well-being predictors with emic well-being. Results also point to extraversion in well-being -motivated behaviors, specifically U-turn migration behavior, while showing little regional variability. The implications of these findings for personality psychology and the etic and emic understanding of well-being are discussed. This research lends further support to the idea that extraverts can lead a “happy” life in the Japanese context, despite tropes of the contrary.

  • Profile:

    Dionyssios Askitis has been a member of an interdisciplinary research team at the University of Vienna, funded by the DOC-team grant of the Austrian Academy of Sciences studying the relationship between social capital and well-being in rural Japan. In June 2024, he received his doctoral degree from the University of Vienna.

  • Affiliation: University of Vienna, Austria.
  • Title: The making and remaking of heterotopias in rural Gifu: Actor-network analysis of globalised space usage
  • Abstract:

    This presentation, part of an ongoing research project, focuses on the transformation of the former “Sato no Yu” Onsen in a small village in rural Gifu. By applying Actor-Network Theory (ANT) alongside the spatial theories of Henri Lefebvre and Michel Foucault, this study frames the bathhouse as a social actor within its evolving environment, exploring how material structures actively shape cultural, economic, and social networks in rural Japan. The closure of the bathhouse, which once played a central role in the local tourism strategy, and subsequent transformation into a French-run restaurant reveal its ability to shape the social dynamics of the village, affecting interactions between locals, tourists, city planners, and business owners, thereby creating new socio-spatial realities. The goal of this study extends beyond the onsen, encompassing other spaces in the village, such as a former school, a vacation home, and an artist’s farm. Each of these spaces, like the bathhouse, acts within a network of human and non-human agents, contributing to the complex dynamics that define rural Japan’s changing landscape.

  • Profile:

    Stefan Böckl graduated from the master program of Japanese Studies at the Department of East Asian Studies, University of Vienna. In October 2024 he successfully defended his thesis on the meanings of obscene humor (shimoneta) in Japan. He is a regular visitor to rural Gifu where he has been working in tourism and revitalization activities.

  • Affiliation: University of Vienna, Austria.
  • Title: One crisis after another: Finding ways to overcome the impacts of compounded disasters and challenges in struggling rural areas
  • Abstract:

    In July 2020, just as the COVID-19 pandemic started to take hold globally, Kuma Village in the Kumamoto Prefecture experienced one of its worst floodings ever recorded. The village was already facing various challenges, similar to many rural areas struggling with the impacts of demographic and economic decline. The compounded disasters of flooding and infectious diseases, however, highlighted the unique vulnerabilities and insecurities experienced by rural communities. The rapidly aging and declining population and the increased chance of catastrophic disasters create a new and challenging problem, even for Japan, which has built up a solid and effective response to disasters. By drawing on the human security approach, we can illustrate the problematic balance between the protection and empowerment of a local community that faces complex and interconnected challenges before and after the disaster. The findings of this presentation are based on research conducted with Lisette Robles for the JICA Ogata Research Institute.

  • Profile:

    Signy Goto Spletzer graduated from the master program of Japanese Studies at the Department of East Asian Studies, University of Vienna in 2021. Her master thesis on branding as a strategy of rural revitalization was published in the monograph series of the Department of East Asian Studies/Japanese Studies in 2023. Since then, she has moved to live in Kumamoto.

  • Title: Aso Archives Initiative and Aso 1.0, University of Vienna: The potential of Aso as a meeting point for various academic disciplines
  • Abstract:

    Aso is a crucial research base for the humanities due to its exceptional collection of historical materials. The area's grand landscape is connected with Shintoism and Buddhism, leading to the creation of numerous mythological and historical documents. The medieval documents of the Aso clan are renowned as vital sources in political history, while the modern archives of the Aso shrines offer rare insights into modern religious policies. Additionally, Aso is rich in historical materials related to community research, with past studies, including Aso 1.0 from the University of Vienna, contributing to the body of knowledge. However, the use of Aso’s diverse historical materials is often confined to individual academic fields, and there has been little coordinated research. This talk will introduce a project to build a unified archive to promote interdisciplinary collaboration and discuss the role of Aso 1.0 within this framework.

  • Profile:

    Naoko Haruta is Professor at the Faculty of Education at Kumamoto University. He specializes in medieval Japanese history (occupation theory and historical source theory). His most recent works include Rettō no chūsei-chika-monjo: Suwa, shikoku-sanchi, higo [Medieval documents from the archipelago: Suwa, Shikoku Mountains, Higo] (Editor, 2023), The Encyclopaedia of Environmental Sociology (Contributor, 2023) and Kumamoto-ken no chūsei-monjo — Chika-monjo no ikashikata — Shakai to ningen [Medieval documents in Kumamoto Prefecture – How to make the most of underground documents – Society and people] (2024).

  • Affiliation: Kumamoto University, Japan.
  • Title: Well-being in rural life in Kyushu: One family’s perspective
  • Abstract:

    Based on long-term friendship with members of one continuing family in the Kyushu rural fieldwork location where I have worked over a period of nearly 50 years, I plan to recount some aspects of the life of a family that suffered the traditional discriminatory practice of murahachibu (exclusion from hamlet affairs) in the childhood of a man now in his late 80s. This man was also widowed at an early age. However, he and his extended family have lived fulfilling lives and generally exude well-being, even during several other times of sadness and disaster, so I would like to present the social and community contexts that have made that possible and look likely to continue for generations into the future.

  • Profile:

    Joy Hendry is Emeritus Professor of Social and Cultural Anthropology at Oxford Brookes University and a Senior Member of St Antony's College, University of Oxford, UK. She is author or editor of over a dozen books, including the seminal textbook An Introduction to Social Anthropology: Sharing Our Worlds (1999, 2008) and the edited volume Understanding Japan (six editions). She has done extensive fieldwork in Japan, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom.

  • Affiliation: Oxford Brookes University, Great Britain.
  • Title: Stumbling upon furry friends in Aso: Transitioning to studying Japan’s urban-rural divide through the lens of pets
  • Abstract:

    Shifting from an initial exploration of parental well-being to delving into the intricacies of well-being in rural Japan during the Aso project, my research trajectory has since evolved to spotlight the significance of pets. Rooted in an intensive study conducted in the Aso region, where encounters with furry companions were frequent – but initially disregarded, I found myself compelled to redirect my sociological focus from human-to-human interactions, organizations, and structures to the realm of human-non-human interactions. I realized the need to comprehend the involvement of non-human actors in rural Japanese life, thereby acknowledging their profound impact on well-being. In this presentation, I revisit visual and interview data from Aso (jointly conducted with W. Manzenreiter) and illustrate how the project has branched out from there. The exploration now extends to questions of ownership, community dynamics, and consumption patterns of pets, as well as the nuanced understanding of animal welfare, both in rural and urban Japan. This journey has not only unearthed urban-rural disparities in the importance attributed to pets but has also uncovered their pivotal role in disaster prevention and management.

  • Profile:

    Barbara Holthus holds two Ph.D. degrees, in Japanese Studies from the University of Trier, Germany, 2006, and in Sociology from the University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2010. Before taking up the position of deputy director at the German Institute for Japanese Studies Tokyo in April 2018, she was assistant professor at the Department of East Asian Studies / Japanese Studies at the University of Vienna. Her research is on marriage and the family, child care, happiness and well-being, volunteering, media, gender, rural Japan, as well as demographic and social change. She was principal investigator of a German Science Foundation (DFG) funded research project on comparing parental well-being in Germany and Japan (2014-2017). Her most recent publications are Japan through the lens of the Tokyo Olympics (2020; co-editors I. Gagne, W. Manzenreiter, F. Waldenberger), Parental well-being: Satisfaction with work, family life, and family policy in Germany and Japan (2018; co-editor H. Bertram), Life course, happiness and well-being in Japan (2017; co-editor W. Manzenreiter), and Happiness and the good life in Japan (2017; co-editor W. Manzenreiter).

  • Affiliation: German Institute for Japanese Studies Tokyo, Japan.
  • Title: Social capital and subjective well-being in rural Japan
  • Abstract:

    Despite well-known shortcomings in infrastructure and lower income compared to urban areas, rural Japan consistently shows similar levels of subjective well-being. This paper argues that one of the main factors in explaining these similar levels of well-being is social capital. Furthermore, it strives to differentiate between different dimension of social capital, namely community social capital, access to social support and the “dark side” of social capital.
    By comparing the association of social capital and subjective well-being in rural and urban samples, the predictive properties of different types of social capital for subjective well-being will be determined and urban-rural differences will be highlighted.
    Although the results show only minor urban-rural differences, indications of a rural trade-off between material depletion and social amenities can be established. Specifically, the negative effect of lower income in rural areas can be offset by higher levels of social capital.

  • Profile:

    Stefan Hundsdorfer graduated with a Master in Sociology in 2016 at the University of Vienna. He was participant of the interdisciplinary research project at the Japanese Studies unit of the Department of East Asian Studies, University of Vienna, funded by the DOC-team grant of the Austrian Academy of Sciences. His research interests include network analysis, social capital and family sociology, a topic he has been frequently teaching on at the Department of Sociology of the Johannes Kepler University in Mainz.

  • Affiliation: University of Vienna, Austria.
  • Title: Sustaining the Aso region: Challenges and strategies in the circular and ecological sphere
  • Abstract:

    I researched the Aso region to clarify the multilayered area of the regional circular and ecological sphere and the method for its construction. The largest area is the basin of six class A rivers flowing down from the Aso region as a regional circular and ecological sphere. Approximately two million people live in this basin, and 2.3 million people in the Fukuoka metropolitan area also use its water resources. It is estimated that the population in the Aso area will be reduced by half by 2050. In the Aso area, there are more than 20,000 hectares of semi-natural grasslands, which play a significant role as a groundwater recharge area. The area of the grasslands is decreasing year by year due to the aging of the people involved in maintaining and managing them, and it is predicted that more than half of the grasslands will be lost by 2050 compared to 2003. To halt the decline in grassland areas, it is necessary to reduce the amount of labor required for burning at the end of winter.

  • Profile:

    Tomohiro Ichinose is professor at the Faculty of Environment and Information Studies at Keio University. His research is concerned with issues of environmental science, agricultural science, horticultural science, rural environmental engineering and planning. His most recent works include Tokushū gekijinka suru shizen saigai to shinrin kankyō [Intensifying natural disaster and the forest environment] (Contributor, 2023), Shakai inobēshon no hōhō to jissen [Methods and practices of social innovation] (Contributor, 2023) and Research on the actual status of Intercultural Garden initiatives in Japan (2024).

  • Affiliation: Keio University, Japan.
  • Title: Governing in-migration: Regional management organizations as gatekeepers and agents of integration for urban-rural migrants
  • Abstract:

    This paper addresses urban-rural migration in Japan as a problem for sub-municipal local self-governance. The sustainability of many rural communities in Japan is threatened by long-term outmigration and rapid aging. Urban-rural migration is commonly seen as a lifeline for these areas and has been promoted actively by all levels of government. The literature on urban-rural migration and the related policies and concepts has been growing rapidly. Yet, the focus of this literature tends to be on the experiences and aspirations of urban-rural migrants themselves, the impact of increased mobility on rural areas, and the obstacles urban “lifestyle migrants” may face in their new environment. Rarely is urban-rural migration analyzed from the perspective of the “receiving” community, let alone as a problem for sub-municipal local self-governance. Based on evidence from field research on so called regional management organizations, an emerging form of civic self-governance promoted by the central government since 2015, this paper analyzes how these organizations attempt to govern in-migration at the sub-municipal level. Their efforts reflect and in some ways reproduce conservative local social structures, but also help to alleviate some of the tensions surrounding urban-rural migration. Moreover, they point to a growing gap between national and municipal programs to encourage urban-rural migration and the needs and demands of rapidly aging rural communities.

  • Profile:

    Hanno Jentzsch is a political scientist specializing in Japanese politics. He currently holds a tenure track position as assistant professor for Politics of Japan at the Department of East Asian Studies at University of Vienna. His research interests include social and regional inequalities, the political economy of rural revitalization, social welfare, decentralization, and local governance. After publishing his monograph Harvesting State Support (University of Toronto Press, 2021) that analyses institutional change and local agency in Japan’s agricultural sector, he started to research changing state-society relations in Japan’s depopulating rural areas.

  • Affiliation: University of Vienna, Austria.
  • Title: Natural disasters and regional revival in Aso
  • Abstract:

    This presentation explores the recovery of Aso Shrine and regional revitalization, focusing on Aso's disaster history and recovery support. The Aso region, prone to natural disasters like floods and ash falls, has faced multiple recoveries. Post-1950s floods, large-scale river improvements stabilized agriculture. Around the same time, Aso Shrine's festivals were designated a National Important Intangible Folk Cultural Property, enhancing its reputation as a symbol of faith in nature's fertility. The 2012 Northern Kyushu floods and the 2016 Kumamoto Earthquake inflicted severe damage, making the restoration of Aso Shrine’s collapsed tower gate a recovery symbol in the media. With external support offers and local government’s push for UNESCO World Cultural Heritage status, Aso Shrine is increasingly seen as a symbol of reverence for nature, especially volcanoes, and a focus on disaster prevention.

  • Profile:

    Kyosuke Kashiwagi is an associate professor at the Department of Shinto Culture at Kokugakuin University, Tokyo. His research focuses on Cultural Anthropology and Folklore Studies. His most recent works are Saigai fukkō to chiiki shinkō no naka no jinja — Aso no shizen saigai o jirei ni [Shrines in disaster reconstruction and regional development: A case study of natural disasters in Aso] (2022), Shinshū monto no shisha kuyō ni miru minzokuteki shini — Ehime-ken Imabari-shi Omishima-chō Nonoe no ihai o seou bon-odori [Folk sentiments in Shinshū monk’s memorial services: The Bon-dance of Nonoe, Omoshima, Imabari City, Ehime Prefecture, carrying Ihai on their backs] (2022) and Sengo shintō kenkyū ni okeru minzokugaku no ichi — Minzokugakuteki shintō kenkyū no tenbō [The place of folklore in post-war Shintō-research: Prospects for folkloristic Shintō-research] (2022).

  • Affiliation: Kokugakuin University, Japan.
  • Title: Relational rural well-being and diversity in contemporary Japan: Hypermobility and translocality in foreign and nomad lifestyle migrants
  • Abstract:

    Rural Japan is generally associated with tightly knit homogeneous communities rather than with diversity. Yet, there are multiple signs pointing to ongoing diversification: There is a growing number of foreign lifestyle migrants and rural municipalities across Japan have increasingly started organizing events targeting non-Japanese as well as single urbanites potentially interested in rural relocation. Traditionally, the most desirable newcomers were young married couples, preferably with offspring and those migrants who promised to “bury their bones” in their newly chosen community. Now, catchphrases such as “log house living” (koyakurashi), “solo camp” and “single migration” (soro ijuu) have emerged. The aim of permanent settlement has gradually been replaced with multi-local living. Drawing on extensive fieldwork across rural Japan, this paper examines multilayered understandings of subjective well-being and diversity in the narratives and practices of foreign as well as nomad lifestyle migrants and their strategies in creating meaningful relationships in and beyond their chosen places of residence.

  • Profile:

    Susanne Klien holds a PhD from the University of Vienna. She is Professor at the Modern Japanese Studies Program at Hokkaido University. Her main research interests include transnational lifestyle migration, intangible cultural heritage, regional revitalization and emerging forms of tourism, demographic change and alternative forms of living and working in post-growth Japan. Her monograph Urban Migrants in Rural Japan: Between Agency and Anomie in a Post-growth Society (State University of New York Press 2020) was awarded the 2020 Choice Outstanding Academic Title. She also is co-editor of Asian Anthropology.

  • Affiliation: Hokkaido University, Japan.
  • Title: Complementing rural field work by using secondary statistics: Potentials and limitations in the Aso context
  • Abstract:

    To conduct a scientific study of rural communities, it is crucial to gather both qualitative and quantitative data on-site. This presentation will explain the extent to which secondary statistics analysis can also provide valuable insights. At times, secondary statistical analyses are conducted as a replacement for primary research when the area under investigation is inaccessible for any reason. Alternatively, they may be used to gather background information to better prepare for subsequent field research. This presentation aims to highlight a third function: embedding the study area in a broader regional context.
    Firstly, this presentation gives a very brief overview of the most important secondary statistics available for rural areas in Japan at a small-scale level. It then illustrates the usefulness of secondary statistical analyses by examining municipal-level census data on internal migration, using the example of the Aso region and Kumamoto Prefecture. Finally, the limitations of this approach are discussed.

  • Profile:

    Ralph Lützeler is a lecturer at the Department of Japanese Studies at the University of Bonn. His research interests lie in the fields of urban geography and population geography of Japan. Until 2020 he was a lecturer at the University of Vienna. He was a founding and core participant of the Aso-Project 2.0. Among his many publications on socio-spatial aspects of Japan, two volumes are dealing with the Aso area, e.g., Aso: Vergangenheit, Gegenwart und Zukunft eines Wiener Forschungsprojekts zum ländlichen Japan (Aso: Past, oresent and future of a Vienna research project on rural Japan, co-editor W. Manzenreiter, 2016) and Rural areas between decline and resurgence: Lessons from Japan and Austria (2018).

  • Affiliation: University of Bonn, Germany.
  • Title: “You‘ll never walk alone?“ The meaning of social relations and belonging for happiness in rural Japan
  • Abstract:

    For more than half a century, research on rural Japan has been casted by the doomsday discourse on the devastating regional effects of outmigration, infrastructure decay and population aging (kaso chiiki). The negative assessment has been aggravated by newer key notions of ‘marginal settlements’ (genkai shūraku) and the ‘extinction of communities’ (chiiki shōmetsu). Cities, by contrast, are said to be better prepared for the future due to the spatial concentration of institutions and resources that enable urban places to excel over the countryside in terms of labor and employment opportunities, social welfare, health care, education and entertainment. But there is no evidence that the general trend toward urbanization is paralleled by an overall increase in happiness: “There are many benefits of big-city living; high levels of happiness are not among them” (Berry and Okulicz-Kozaryn 2011: 872).
    My research on rural life in Japan challenges the master-narrative of rural decline by engaging in ethnographic fashion with local notions of happiness and the significance of social relatedness for making life worth-living to those who stayed (behind) or moved into the countryside. My approach is situated in the tradition of the Vienna School of Japanese Studies, evidently by revisiting the same research site in southwestern Japan that Josef Kreiner and other researchers from Vienna chose in the late 1960s for the first time-ever field research project in Japan by a European research team. Drawing back on lessons from the first and the current project, I adopt a long-term perspective to explore the notions of rural happiness in the light of changing family and social relations, new mobilities and shifting moralities.

  • Profile:

    Wolfram Manzenreiter is Professor of Japanese Studies at the Department of East Asian Studies at the University of Vienna and Head of the Japan research unit. His research is concerned with social and anthropological aspects of sports, emotions, work and migration in a globalising world. He is author of several books and numerous articles and book chapters on cultural globalization, body culture, transnationalism and well-being. His most recent publications include Japan through the lens of the Tokyo Olympics (2020; co-editors I. Gagne, B. Holthus, F. Waldenberger); Life course, happiness and well-being in Japan and Happiness and the good life in Japan (both 2017 and coedited with B. Holthus). Currently he is working on community happiness in Japan’s rural peripheries.

  • Affiliation: University of Vienna, Austria.
  • Title: Well-being amongst multiple responsibilities: Mothers of the Aso region
  • Abstract:

    Women carry multiple responsibilities. These include (amongst others) childcare, senior care, household duties and work, as well as others in their networks (as in, their friends, family and neighborhood). These responsibilities can be or become mental and physical burdens that negatively impact the health and life of women. This paper aims to further understanding of the influence of these responsibilities on the wellbeing of women by interviewing 21 women of the rural Aso region of the Kumamoto prefecture.
    First results include: Senior care is often seen by the women, of whom many are in their thirties, as a concern of the future, as their parents (or their parents-in-law), who are in their seventies or eighties, are still active. Many women describe their children as a majorly positive aspect of their lives, even though worries about their future are also present.

  • Profile:

    Johanna Mayr is a graduate student of Japanese Studies at the University of Japan. Currently she is working on her master thesis that discusses the happiness of young mothers living in the Aso basin.

  • Affiliation: University of Vienna, Austria.
  • Title: Happiness as a by-product: The impact of civic engagement on women’s well-being in rural Japan
  • Abstract:

    While female civic engagement is an integral part of rural society, their involvement in their communities as well as the impact of their activities on themselves and their surroundings have only in recent years gained more scholarly attention. Based on field research in the Aso region in Kumamoto, this study explores the ways in which women who actively participate in their communities talk about their well-being and how they link it to their activities. We examine the types of activities at the local level that are closely linked to everyday life of the participants and that often occur on an informal basis, while also exploring how women tackle local issues and participate in local society. Our findings show that (a) making others happy, (b) acting for oneself, and (c) the process of acting with others all have a beneficial impact on subjective well-being.

  • Profile:

    Antonia Miserka graduated from the master program in Japanese Studies at the University of Vienna in 2018. She has been a member of the interdisciplinary DOC-team research group at the University of Vienna, funded by the Austrian Academy of Sciences. Most recently, she worked on Research into Japanese Society: Reflections from Three Projects Involving Students as Researchers During the COVID-19 Pandemic in 2023 as a co-editor.

  • Affiliation: University of Vienna, Austria.
  • Title: In the shadow of another volcano: Elderly women’s well-being in Sakurajima
  • Abstract:

    A variety of factors contribute to people´s well-being, which can change over the course of a lifetime. My research focused on identifying the various factors that influenced the well-being of a specific group of women over the age of 60 living in vicinity to the most active volcano in Japan. Despite the administrative merger with the prefectural capital of Kagoshima, Sakurajima retains its rural character that creates a unique dynamic. Field research conducted in September 2022 aimed to understand how these women perceive their current state of well-being and conditional influences. Interviews were conducted with the help of an innovative method (Holthus and Manzenreiter 2019), which enables structured data collection through structure-laying-technique of predefined tokens and reflective interviews. The results offer insights into the complex relationships between individual well-being, living environment and advanced age in the specific contextuality of Sakurajima.

  • Profile:

    Lenka Miyanohara is a graduate student of Japanese Studies at the University of Japan. Currently she is finalizing her master thesis on elderly women living on Sakurajima in Kagoshima and their sense of happiness. Her first publication introducing findings from her field research will be out in late 2024 as part of the Japan Yearbook edited by the German Association of Social Science Research on Japan.

  • Affiliation: University of Vienna, Austria.
  • Title: From well-being to spaces of resilience in the Aso region
  • Abstract:

    During the initial visit to the Aso-region as a PhD student and as part of an interdisciplinary research team on rural well-being in 2018, my respondents linked the good and bad things in their lives to the Kumamoto Earthquake of 2016 and its long-lasting effects on the region. Several months later, analysing my data and preparing for a fieldtrip in 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic made people in Aso – including researchers – adapt to the disaster, again shaping their views on well-being. It is not by chance that now, after having finished my thesis as part of the Aso research group, my current focus centres on how the resilience of rural communities in Japan can be provided despite demographic decline. This paper begins by reflecting on how resilience played a decisive role for understanding the well-being of my respondents during my research in Aso. Second, it outlines how this led to my current project on spaces of resilience in contemporary rural Japanese communities.

  • Profile:

    As a Japanologist and political scientist, Sebastian Polak-Rottmann focuses on the resilience of local communities in Japan. He received his PhD in 2022 (University of Vienna) on the well-being and political participation in the Aso region in Southern Japan. He was part of an interdisciplinary research project at the University of Vienna, funded by the DOC-team grant of the Austrian Academy of Sciences. He has taught classes on rural Japan and civil society, including a remote field trip to Kyūshū in 2022. At the DIJ, he primarily works on local care and well-being in rural Japan. His most recent publications include the monograph How political participation can provide happiness (iudicum 2024, in German).

  • Affiliation: German Institute for Japanese Studies Tokyo, Japan.
  • Title: Overcoming the concept of a closed rural society: Multiple mobilities of urban-rural migrants in Aso’s neighboring communities
  • Abstract:

    Rural communities and societies are often portrayed as closed, static and traditional. However, rural residents are mobile in their everyday lives to shop, commute to work, further their education and organize their leisure time. Urban-rural migrants who have moved to Kyūshū since 2011 are even more mobile. Some have more than one residence, others stay only for short periods, and still others have a history of transnational mobility and travel extensively. Drawing on the experiences of migrants in Taketa, the neighboring municipality of Aso in Ōita Prefecture, I will examine the mobilities of urban-rural migrants and analyze how they create their own networks that extend beyond Taketa into the Aso region. I will discuss how they cross social, geographical and administrative boundaries through their mobility and what this means for the social structure of rural communities.

  • Profile:

    Cornelia Reiher is professor of Japanese Studies at Freie Universität Berlin and vice director of the Graduate School of East Asian Studies. Her main research interests include rural Japan, food studies, globalization and science and technology studies. Her recent publications include a special issue on fieldwork in Japan (2018), book chapters on transnational protest movement(s) in Asia (2019), and urban-rural migration in Japan (2020) and the methods handbook Studying Japan: Handbook of research designs, fieldwork and methods (2020, co-edited with Nora Kottmann).

  • Affiliation: Freie Universität Berlin, Germany.
  • Title: Exploring the role perception of healthcare workers in rural Japan
  • Abstract:

    This study examines the professional identity of nurses (kaigoshi) in rural Japan using a qualitative approach. Through semi-structured interviews with nurses from the Aso Region, supported by the use of sensitizing-booklets, the professional self-image is explored in terms of the individual, social and collective identity domains. This work highlights the motivations, self-perceptions and daily experiences that shape the understanding of professional identity, as well as the challenges and dynamics of rural care. The findings reveal a strong sense of professional self-worth, extensive professional self-reflection and a strong identification with the local community and collective values. These results contribute to a nuanced understanding of the professional identity of rural nurses and reveal relevant starting points for addressing the existing and upcoming challenges and needs of this professional field.

  • Profile:

    Melanie Steinbrugger graduated from the program of Japanese Studies at the Department of East Asian Studies, University of Vienna. She successfully defended her thesis on professional care workers and their sense of identity in October 2024.

  • Affiliation: University of Vienna, Austria.
  • Title: Happiness of female lifestyle migrants to depopulated settlements: A case study from Shiga Prefecture
  • Abstract:

    The purpose of this paper is to discuss the well-being and difficulties Japanese female lifestyle migrants experience when living in rural settlements by analyzing what they want from life in their destination, how they make a living, and how they build relationships with residents and other migrants. In rural areas, women have fewer employment opportunities than in cities, and many residents take the gendered division of labor for granted. In this situation, migrant women are more likely to be recognized by the local population as someone's wife or daughter than as independent individuals. Studies of lifestyle migration in Japan have not adequately discussed the tactics women use to overcome such difficulties and live happily in their migrant community. This presentation will shed light on these issues through the cases of women who have migrated to Kinomoto-cho, Nagahama City, Shiga Perfecture.

  • Profile:

    Shunsuke Takeda is a professor of Social Sciences at Hōsei University, with a diverse range of research interests that encompass local communities, rural sociology, intangible cultural heritage, and folk performing arts. His recent publications include Difficulties and Resilience in Local Communities Revealed by COVID-19: A Case Study on the Cancellation and Resumption of Festivals in Local Towns (2024), Traditional Festivals in Small Cities and Fieldwork on Them during COVID-19: The Transformation of Social Relations Regarding Festivals and the Situation of Qualitative Research in Local Communities (2023), and Sociology of Community Life (Joint Editor, 2023).

  • Affiliation: Hōsei University, Japan.
  • Title: Conservation of the Aso grasslands: Assessing the feasibility of policies utilizing social capital
  • Abstract:

    This study uses historical records, statistical data from national and prefectural levels, interview and survey data on local leaders, authorities, and residents to examine the effectiveness and limitations of traditional approaches to grassland conservation in the Aso region. Even though the economic value of grassland resources has disappeared in modern times, communities continue their efforts to prevent the transition from grassland vegetation to forest and thereby contribute to the preservation of landscapes, ecosystems, and water resources. Amidst declining management capacity, caused by depopulation and aging, and lack of administrative support, volunteer work has become a crucial supplement to traditional practices. Rural and environmental politics also aimed to strengthen community functions. A socio-engineering approach that strengthens social bonds and seeks the mobilization of human resources is an ideal concept for protecting commons, yet the sustainability of grassland conservation is becoming increasingly uncertain. While the management capabilities of rural communities in Aso have diversified, there is a general trend of decline, and predicting how long commons conservation activities can be continued at the community level is challenging. Although a socio-engineering approach that strengthens social bonds and seeks the mobilization of human resources is an ideal concept for protecting commons, it is impractical to assign the responsibility of conserving the vast grasslands throughout Aso solely to local residents. I propose that a new era has arrived to set the preservation of grasslands as a policy objective, which has been overlooked by public policies caught between agricultural, forestry, and environmental policies.

  • Profile:

    Shinya Ueno is a Professor Emeritus at Kumamoto University. His research interests encompass environmental policies, Minamata disease, governance, social networks, and social capital, all examined through the lenses of the humanities, social sciences, and politics. His most recent publications include Methyl-mercury Exposure Risk Analysis in Minamata and Adjacent Areas (2020), Developing Human Resources for Local Governance (2020), and a chapter in Japan’s New Ruralities: Coping with Decline in the Periphery (2020).

  • Affiliation: Kumamoto University, Japan.
  • Title: Future shock and the Aso region
  • Abstract:

    Alvin Toffler coined "... the distress, both physical and psychological, that arises from an overload of the human organism's physical adaptive systems and it's decision-making processes" during the shift from an industrial to a super-industrial society characterized by disconnectedness and distraction (or anomy) the "future shock". How about the preparedness of the Aso region? What have been the past experiences? Will the region have the ability to develop new strategies or adapt to new challenges? In analogy to past Aso projects, the contribution represents a longitudinal projection or outlook for a possible future Aso 3.0 project in light of the present situation and challenges. The speaker will attempt to outline possible answers based on field-observations.

  • Profile:

    Johannes Harumi Wilhelm is a bilingual ethnographer of rural Japan. His previous monograph discussed in detail the communal coastal resource management of fishery communities in North Eastern Japan. From 2014 until 2018 he was senior researcher at the Dept. of East Asian Studies at the University of Vienna. Johannes Wilhelm has been a founding and core member of the Aso 2.0 research initiative. After temporary assignments with Keio University and Kumamoto University, he is now working parttime at the municipal administration of Minamiaso and continues his longterm ethnographic research of rural traditions and communities. His most recent works include Why Culture Matters: Analysis and social meaning of a famed festival in Aso, Japan (2022) and Culture within SDGs: cases in Aso (2021).

  • Affiliation: MASO, Japan.

 List of Participants in Alphabetical Order

  • Dionyssios Askitis | University of Vienna
  • Stefan Böckl | University of Vienna
  • Andreas Eder-Ramsauer | University of Vienna
  • Signy Goto-Spletzer
  • Adam Greguš | University of Vienna
  • Naoki Haruta | Kumamoto University
  • Joy Hendry (Professor Emerita) | Oxford Brookes University
  • Barbara Holthus | German Institute for Japanese Studies Tokyo
  • Stefan Hundsdorfer | University of Vienna
  • Tomohiro Ichinose | Keio University
  • Hanno Jentzsch | University of Vienna
  • Kyosuke Kashiwagi | Kokugakuin University
  • Susanne Klien | Hokkaido University
  • Anna Linder | University of Vienna
  • Ralph Lützeler | University of Bonn
  • Wolfram Manzenreiter | University of Vienna
  • Johanna Mayr | University of Vienna
  • Antonia Miserka | University of Vienna
  • Lenka Miyanohara | University of Vienna
  • Sebastian Polak-Rottmann | German Institute for Japanese Studies Tokyo
  • Florian Purkarthofer | University of Vienna
  • Cornelia Reiher | Freie Universität Berlin
  • Melanie Steinbrugger | University of Vienna
  • Shunsuke Takeda | Hōsei University
  • Shinya Ueno | Kumamoto University
  • Johannes Wilhelm | MASO
  • Ralf Windhab | University of Vienna