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The alternative food movement in Japan: Challenges, limits, and resilience of the teikei system

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Abstract

The teikei movement is a Japanese version of the alternative food movement, which emerged around the late 1960s and early 1970s. Similar to now well-known Community Supported Agriculture, it is a farmer-consumer partnership that involves direct exchanges of organic foods. It also aims to build a community that coexists with the natural environment through mutually supportive relationships between farmers and consumers. This article examined the history of the teikei movement. The movement began as a reaction to negative impacts of mechanized and chemically intensive agriculture promoted by the Japanese government. The movement experienced a rapid expansion in the early 1980s, and then gradually declined thereafter. The organic market expansion and certification system intersected with both cultural and gender role changes, impacting the teikei movement negatively. Consequently, the membership of teikei consumer groups has shrunk. Furthermore, the March 2011 Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant accident caused unprece dented damage to organic farmers in the affected regions. Despite the scientific uncertain about the safety level of radiation exposure, the organic farmers and the teikei consumer groups managed the situation and found a way to inspect radiation contamination. They did so with the support by networking with other teikei-related actors. This response to the nuclear power plant accident suggests that although the level of embeddedness presumably varies among teikei actors, ethics guided by the teikei principles are effective in forging a resilient partnership between farmers and consumers and in keeping the teikei system alive as an agent for social change.

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Notes

  1. Both integrated livestock agriculture and tree farming later influenced sustainable agriculture such as agroforestry and permaculture.

  2. Matsukata (2008) identified three typologies based on whether the consumer or farmer initiated the partnership. In order to classify the nature of the partnerships themselves, I rearranged her typologies into five.

  3. Food co-op memberships increased greatly in the 1980s. In 1982, there were 7,820,000 members nationwide, a 7.7 % increase from the previous year (Okabe 1988: 28).

  4. During this period, three sales avenues were available to co-ops: group deliveries, store sales, or a combination of these two (Okabe 1988: 31).

  5. Parcel delivery services first emerged in Japan in 1971 and grew rapidly throughout the 1980s.

  6. According to a survey conducted in 1981 by ATTT, 73 % of their members were housewives without jobs. At the same time, 20 % of members had experience as management committee members, and 25 % had experience in farm work on partner farms (ATTT 2005: 181).

  7. As of May 2013, 150,000 residents were still evacuated from the accident, and nearby communities were shuttered out due to radioactive contamination.

  8. The Becquerel or Bq is a unit of radioactive decay equal to one disintegration per second that is used in the International System of Units. (See Health Physics Society at http://hps.org/publicinformation/radterms/radfact35.html.).

  9. The Sievert or Sv is a unit that measures the effects of ionizing radiation on humans, that is used in the International System of Units. 1 Sv = 1,000 mSv (See Health Physics Society’s webpage at http://hps.org/publicinformation/radterms/).

Abbreviations

ATTT:

Anzenna Tabemono-wo Tsukutte Taberu-kai

JOAA:

Japan Organic Agriculture Association

MAFF:

Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries of Japan

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Acknowledgments

This work was supported by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, KAKENHI Grant Number 23580313. I would like to thank Jean Lagane, the guest editor, and two anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments.

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Correspondence to Kazumi Kondoh.

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Kondoh, K. The alternative food movement in Japan: Challenges, limits, and resilience of the teikei system. Agric Hum Values 32, 143–153 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10460-014-9539-x

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