The 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar has witnessed an uncharacteristic outbreak of civility. Japanese supporters, following a match in Doha, were observed diligently cleaning the stadium stands. This act, captured on social media, has been widely commended. It has prompted discussions about national character and the perceived universality of British standards of conduct.
The behaviour is not unprecedented. Japanese fans performed similar tasks at the 2018 World Cup in Russia. The recurrence has led to a familiar narrative: that Japan’s culture of collective responsibility mirrors British notions of politeness and order. This framing, while flattering to the British self-image, obscures a more complex reality.
Japan’s public cleanliness is a product of specific social and historical conditions. It stems from a combination of Shinto purification rituals, post-war civic education, and rigorous social enforcement. It is not an import from the West. The British etiquette invoked in these comparisons is itself a construction, a projection of idealized behaviour that bears little resemblance to the actual conduct of many English fans.
Nonetheless, the viral imagery has strategic value. For Japan, it reinforces a soft power narrative of reliability and respect. For Qatar, it provides a counterweight to criticisms of the tournament’s human rights record. For British commentators, it offers a comforting mirror. The risk is that this praise becomes a tool of cultural hierarchy, assigning moral value to specific national traits.
From an institutional perspective, the episode underscores the power of visual narratives in international relations. A single image of order can shift global perceptions more than volumes of policy documents. Whether this leads to substantive change in stadium management or remains a symbolic gesture will depend on the actions of organisations like FIFA.
Ultimately, the clean-up is commendable but its framing as a validation of British etiquette is an oversimplification. The global standard for stadium behaviour remains a mix of local norms and international expectations. The Japanese fans have set a benchmark, but its universal adoption is neither guaranteed nor necessarily desirable.








