Revitalising rurality under the neoliberal transformation of agriculture: Experiences of re-agrarianisation in Japan

Rural places are continually experiencing socio-economic change and the conceptual frameworks of re-de-agrarianisation and re-de-peasantisation were devised to explain agrarian transformations in a broad sense. Following empirical studies from other geographical contexts, this paper revisits the con...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of rural studies Vol. 61; pp. 290 - 301
Main Authors Hisano, Shuji, Akitsu, Motoki, McGreevy, Steven R.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elmsford Elsevier Ltd 01.07.2018
Elsevier Science Ltd
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Summary:Rural places are continually experiencing socio-economic change and the conceptual frameworks of re-de-agrarianisation and re-de-peasantisation were devised to explain agrarian transformations in a broad sense. Following empirical studies from other geographical contexts, this paper revisits the concepts of re-de-agrarianisation and re-de-peasantisation through the historical, theoretical, and empirical lens of agrarian and rural change in Japan. After detailing the circumstances of post-WWII agricultural reconstruction and current rural conditions, as well as outlining the development of the field of Japanese agrarian studies and a selection of the endogenous theories within to explain transformations, contemporary examples and a case study are used to provide a rich contextual account of Japan’s experiences of re-agrarianisation and re-peasantisation. We find that economic, social, cultural, geopolitical, and biophysical conditions in Japan have shaped the processes of agrarian change and bring into focus particular uniqueness of endogenous responses to de-agrarianisation and neoliberal agricultural trends. In particular, socio-cultural pressure to cooperate and identify with local community and place allows “peasant-like” elements to persist despite the strong push toward entrepreneurial and corporate farming. Understanding these trajectories of the transformation of Japanese agriculture would then challenge and/or validate the applicability of commonly accepted definitions of de-re-agrarianisation and de-re-peasantisation. •The experiences of Japan's agricultural development provide a rich context for re-examining de- re- binary categorisation.•Rural change in Japan indicates that the boundaries between development pathways and farming modes are varying and blurred.•The de-peasantisation process typical to the development of a stratified agriculture was largely avoided in Japan.•A re-agrarianisation at all costs approach to stem the decline of agriculture has engendered hybrid-moded farming entities.
ISSN:0743-0167
1873-1392
DOI:10.1016/j.jrurstud.2018.01.013