Chōnaikai

A chōnaikai (町内会) is a Japanese local community of citizens or a form of neighbourhood association.

History

Before the Meiji Restoration, more than 70,000 municipalities in Japan were small entities. The new centralized government viewed them as potential areas of unrest. Two waves of municipal mergers intended to weaken those entities. This resulted in chōnaikai, informal associations taking the place of former village or neighbourhood communities.

During World War II, these associations were involved in many points:

During the Occupation of Japan, the American provisional government forbade them. They were allowed only after the Treaty of San Francisco in 1951.

Nowadays, the chōnaikai are put forward again and are gathered in a nationwide chōnaikai federation (町内会連合会 chōnaikai rengōkai).

Characteristics

A chōnaikai deals with five criteria:

Territory

The local government generally covers the same area. According to the evolution of the population, the chōnaikai may be divided.

Membership

The household is the basic member. Some sections may exist for women, children or elderly, taking part in the proper activities. Sometimes, a corporate membership is also be allowed for financial issues.

Automatic membership

For a new household, membership is not mandatory, but gives access to a lot of facilities. Non-member households are somewhat ostracized from the community and are treated as strangers . People in rented rooms, typically students or young salary men, are said to be member of the household of the landowner. Because apartment tenants reside in the community temporarily, and the associations are geared toward homeowners and families, they are under no social pressure to join.

Activities

They attend a wide range:

Institutional part

Based in the same general area, the chōnaikai improves the municipality. It subsidizes modes of communication and can encourage local participation. But it can also exert influence in political issues, mobilizing the neighbourhood with petitions or demonstrations.

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/17/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.