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Regionally divergent roles of the South Korean state in adopting improved crop varieties and commercializing agriculture (1960–1980): a case study of areas in Jeju and Jeollanamdo

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Abstract

The South Korean government’s historical efforts to introduce improved crop varieties have been ambiguously successful. State-bred rice varieties helped achieve national food production goals during the Green Revolution of the 1970s, but these varieties were highly unpopular and were abandoned soon, as the government stopped promoting them. This paper contrasts that experience with the simultaneous successful introduction of an improved variety of tangerine (Citrus unshiu) as a cash crop in Jeju Province. Smallholders of Jeju found space for the high-return fruit in the existing land use system, including the partial conservation of agrobiodiversity without critically risking their subsistence-based food security. Citrus in general was a spatially less-demanding crop that farmers could partly co-cultivate with subsistence crops, while state-bred rice varieties occupied farmland exclusive of other varieties and rice’s double crops. Additionally, by employing political ecology, this paper asserts that the different roles of the state in introducing the two crops and the different regions were other factors behind such divergent adoption outcomes. Considering rice, the state was highly interventionist, because the government depended on rice-producing regions to “feed the nation”; with regard to non-staple-crop production in low-productivity, hard-to-develop regions like Jeju, in contrast, the government gave farmers more autonomy, thus allowing farmers to determine their own space and pace for citrus adoption. The study critically investigates the variable of spatial compatibility between a crop and the land system and sheds light on the current development mission to harmonize the cultivation of food and cash crops.

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Fig. 1

Modified from Hooniyooni (2018), c Modified from Asfreeas (2011)

Fig. 2

source: Statistics Korea (1965, 1975b, 1980, 1990, 2000, 2010, 2016). Data note: Naked barley data (Jeju) between 1965 and 1980 was missing from the archive

Fig. 3

source: Statistics Korea (1970a). (Color figure online)

Fig. 4

source: Daum Roadview online street image service; http://local.daum.net

Fig. 5

source: Ministry of Home Affairs (1981)

Fig. 6

source: Ministry of Home Affairs (1982)

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Notes

  1. Landraces or farmer varieties are defined as crop varieties that have been cultivated in the farming system for a relatively long period (e.g., more than one generation) and that are farmer-selected and often adapted to the local environment (Harlan 1975; Zeven 1998; Cleveland et al. 2000; Villa et al. 2005; Zimmerer 2010; Calvet-Mir et al. 2011).

Abbreviations

NVM:

New village movement

GDP:

Gross domestic product

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Acknowledgements

I thank my doctoral adviser Karl Zimmerer and the two anonymous reviewers of this journal for their comments. I am also grateful to the local people of Jeju who generously gave time, care, and food to a stranger. The fieldwork for this research has been supported by the Department of Geography and College of Earth and Mineral Sciences at the Pennsylvania State University and Korea-America Association for Geospatial and Environmental Sciences. The English editing was sponsored by the National Institute of Ecology of Republic of Korea (Project No. NIE-수탁연구-2020-09).

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Correspondence to Yooinn Hong.

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Hong, Y. Regionally divergent roles of the South Korean state in adopting improved crop varieties and commercializing agriculture (1960–1980): a case study of areas in Jeju and Jeollanamdo. Agric Hum Values 38, 1161–1179 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10460-021-10232-y

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