In today's Japan, it is difficult for individual workers to find a way out when they are caught in a trap of outsourcing contracts from companies. Japan is a society where labor-related laws, which should also provide relief to workers other than regular employees, are dysfunctional.
In Japan, there are few ways for individual workers who have been trapped by malicious companies to escape on their own.
If an individual worker has a lot of money, he or she can hire a lawyer or go to court, but many of the individual workers are poor. Individual workers are not professionals and may be lured into a trap by companies by doing amateur side jobs.
In Japan, if it is a consumer issue, a shopper may be able to cancel a shopping contract with a company by using the "cooling-off system."
If you are not an employed worker but a contracted worker, your only recourse is to send a ``contract cancellation notice'' to the company by mail. The question of how effective this is is that if a malicious company ignores documents, the current situation in Japan is that labor laws protecting workers are unclear, as the decision may be up to the courts.
In most cases, the mail is sent by specially registered mail, with the legal basis for quitting the bound job and the number and arrangement of characters in the format of a legal document written as a "contract cancellation notice." The burden of stress and anxiety is a heavy burden on the poor.
Japan is a society where labor laws and labor consultation centers are not functioning, so I think international labor and human rights organizations should look into the current situation in Japan.
Even on the Internet alone, you can see many angry posts from workers who are in trouble because they are forced to belong to malicious companies through outsourcing contracts.
Public servants are good at pretending on the news that there are no labor issues related to outsourcing contracts in Japan. In Japan, there is a saying that stinky things are covered up and hidden, and we live in a society with a working environment in which public servants act as if nothing has happened and do not help the weak civilians.
Workers forced into outsourcing contracts do not have their human rights protected.