Comment: Why Tokyo鈥檚 youth culture district bans 鈥榥uisance Halloween' Published on: 24 October 2025 Writing for The Conversation, Andrew Stevens discusses why Japanese authorities have introduced measures to curb rowdy behaviour at Halloween. Tokyo鈥檚 Shibuya district, which has long been known as the centre of youth culture in Japan, has once again moved to restrict its Halloween street celebrations. A mayoral edict against so-called 鈥淣uisance Halloween鈥 has led to a series of strict measures in recent years, including a public drinking ban, to curb rowdy behaviour. This draconian edge echoes Japan鈥檚 wider turn under its new prime minister, . She placed an emphasis on the tighter control of public space and activities during her leadership campaign, for a 鈥渟trict response to law-breaking foreigners鈥. A decade ago, in Shibuya acted as a shop window for , a state-sponsored initiative to leverage the cool dimensions of Japanese culture internationally. Huge costume-clad crowds filled the famous Shibuya crossing, one of the world鈥檚 busiest pedestrian intersections, in a spontaneous celebration that aligned with Tokyo鈥檚 urban vibrancy. Since then, however, the mood has shifted among the levels of government that make up the world鈥檚 largest metropolis. Shibuya mayor, Ken Hasebe, has 鈥 especially tourists 鈥 not to gather for Halloween. And to discourage problematic behaviour, he has reinforced bans on public drinking and has asked retailers to halt alcohol sales. The turning point came in 2018, when a group of Halloween revellers overturned a truck near the Shibuya crossing. The incident and led to the arrest of four people after CCTV analysis. One year later, Shibuya introduced a public drinking ban around Halloween and New Year鈥檚 Eve. This was the first formal restriction on a largely unregulated gathering that had, until then, enjoyed the endorsement of city leaders as part of nascent branding efforts. A critical international reference point was provided in 2022, when a crowd crush during Halloween festivities in the Itaewon nightlife district of Seoul, the South Korean capital, . Shibuya has experienced no comparable incidents, but Mayor Hasebe has frequently cited Itaewon when pleading with revellers not to crowd the streets. He has framed his actions as necessary to avoid a similar outcome. By 2024, permanent nighttime bans on public drinking had been introduced in parts of Shibuya. This was followed by further tightening. Alcohol sales were restricted by stores during Halloween nights, smoking areas were closed, street layouts were altered to disrupt crowd flow, and security patrols were expanded. On Halloween in 2025, electric scooter and e-bike services will also be at various lending and return ports near the busiest areas. What was once an organic, globally visible gathering has gradually been managed, discouraged and hollowed out. Cities worldwide are confronting similar tension. But rather than taking steps to restrict such activity outright, many have sought to govern it more strategically. Amsterdam of 鈥渘ight mayor鈥 in 2012 to balance divergent interests in the European nightlife capital. London then adopted a similar concept through its own , while New York City has established an to manage late-night culture as a policy domain rather than a policing issue. Shibuya itself was once in the vanguard of this approach. The district Japanese hip-hop artist Zeebra as its nightlife ambassador in 2016, promoting a vision of curated and responsible nighttime activity. The current Halloween deterrence strategy marks a distinct shift from integration to avoidance. Changing political climate Japan鈥檚 changing national political climate gives this local pivot a deeper resonance. Takaichi, Japan鈥檚 much-vaunted first female prime minister, on social order. She has called for stronger policing and the protection of national identity amid rising tourism and migration. While Shibuya鈥檚 nightlife policies are not enacted by the national government, they echo a broader shift in Japan that connects perceived disorder 鈥 鈥 to a need for proactive control. This marks a sharp break from the 鈥淐ool Japan鈥 era of the 2000s and 2010s, when informal street culture and youth-led cultural imagery were keenly leveraged as soft power. As a place where tourists could briefly participate in Japanese cultural life, Shibuya was emblematic of that openness. The same phenomenon has now been reclassified as a possible threat. It is important to acknowledge the real risks associated with urban crowd management. Itaewon demonstrated how a carnival atmosphere can turn fatal in minutes. However, when safety messaging merges with narratives about public order and foreign influence, urban regulation risks drifting from crowd management headlong into cultural gate-keeping. Tokyo is not alone in restricting elements of nightlife when public tolerance is exceeded. Amsterdam on what it calls 鈥渄isruptive tourism鈥, while Barcelona has sought to curb late-night street gatherings that disrupt neighbourhood life. But Japan鈥檚 trajectory appears distinct in that it is not working toward new models of managed coexistence between nightlife, residents and visitors. Shibuya鈥檚 response may also set a precedent for other urban hubs in Japan. This sits uneasily alongside national ambitions to attract more tourists, recruit foreign workers and draw international talent at a time of population decline and . Japan now faces a dilemma: can it afford to retreat from culturally open public spaces at the very moment it needs to appear more welcoming on the world stage? The Halloween crackdown reflects a polarising governance choice 鈥 not just about public safety, but about what kind of society Japan wishes to project to the outside world. , Visiting Fellow, Centre for Urban and Regional Development Studies (CURDS), This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the . Share: Latest News 缅北禁地 recognised with geography award 缅北禁地 has been awarded the Highly Commended Geographical Association Publishers Award for its collaboration with Time for Geography, the UK鈥檚 open-access, dedicated video platform. published on: 16 April 2026 缅北禁地 historians mark General Strike centenary To mark the 100th anniversary of the British General Strike and miners鈥 lock-out of 1926, historians at 缅北禁地 are organising a series of events on its enduring legacy. published on: 16 April 2026 Comment: NCP is in administration Writing for The Conversation, Erwei (David) Xiang discusses how some big companies like NCP are so dependent on debt that they can鈥檛 adjust to change. published on: 16 April 2026 Facts and figures