History Lessons from the Late Joseon Dynasty Period of Korea: Human Technology (<i>Ondol</i>), Its Impacts on Forests and People, and the Role of the Government

Historical analogies can help us contextualize new technical developments with social, cultural, and political forces at work. The late Joseon Dynasty period of Korea (1639–1910), a closed economy with detailed written records, provides a rare opportunity to examine a social-ecological system (SES)...

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Main Authors: Jae Soo Bae, Yeon-Su Kim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-12-01
Series:Forests
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/11/12/1314
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spelling doaj-6701a6f8a7d94ff1ae2d32be835456822020-12-11T00:01:17ZengMDPI AGForests1999-49072020-12-01111314131410.3390/f11121314History Lessons from the Late Joseon Dynasty Period of Korea: Human Technology (<i>Ondol</i>), Its Impacts on Forests and People, and the Role of the GovernmentJae Soo Bae0Yeon-Su Kim1Division of Forest Industry Research, National Institute of Forest Science, 57 Hoegi-ro, Cheongnyangri-dong, Dongdaemun-gu, Seoul 02455, KoreaSchool of Forestry, Northern Arizona University, P.O. Box 15018, Flagstaff, AZ 86011, USAHistorical analogies can help us contextualize new technical developments with social, cultural, and political forces at work. The late Joseon Dynasty period of Korea (1639–1910), a closed economy with detailed written records, provides a rare opportunity to examine a social-ecological system (SES) responding to drivers of change over a long period of time. Based on historical records and reconstructed data, we aim to: (1) characterize how the expansion of human technology, <i>Ondol</i> (traditional underfloor heating system), affected different subsystems and their interactions within the SES over time, (2) examine the role of the government in promoting the technology and regulating its impacts, and (3) summarize the pertinent lessons learned from old Korea for governing a modern-day bioeconomy. <i>Ondol</i> allows various forest biomass to be utilized as household fuel, including fuelwood, forest litter, and grass scraped from forest floor. Continuous biomass harvesting over 250 years to feed <i>Ondol</i> contributed to forest degradation and the forest ecosystem condition trapped in the early successional stage in the Korean Peninsula. The ecological changes were exacerbated by the Pine Policy with a singular focus on reserving Korean red pine (<i>Pinus densiflora</i> Siebold and Zucc.) for government uses. The policy failed to recognize basic needs of the public while countenancing an expansion of <i>Ondol</i> and a cultural preference for heated floors that propagated an increased use of biomass fuel. This case illustrates the importance of recognizing potential technology traps where a human innovation opened opportunities for more resource use. The lessons learned from old Korea show that bioeconomy transitions would require multifaceted governance responses while being cautious about being too closely tied to the dominant national agenda. Environmental history has much to offer for understanding the social and ecological systemic risks of the current technical developments. We call for more historical analogs from different parts of the world to “move forward by looking back”.https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/11/12/1314bioeconomyforest historyJoseon DynastyKorea<i>Ondol</i>social-ecological system
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jae Soo Bae
Yeon-Su Kim
spellingShingle Jae Soo Bae
Yeon-Su Kim
History Lessons from the Late Joseon Dynasty Period of Korea: Human Technology (<i>Ondol</i>), Its Impacts on Forests and People, and the Role of the Government
Forests
bioeconomy
forest history
Joseon Dynasty
Korea
<i>Ondol</i>
social-ecological system
author_facet Jae Soo Bae
Yeon-Su Kim
author_sort Jae Soo Bae
title History Lessons from the Late Joseon Dynasty Period of Korea: Human Technology (<i>Ondol</i>), Its Impacts on Forests and People, and the Role of the Government
title_short History Lessons from the Late Joseon Dynasty Period of Korea: Human Technology (<i>Ondol</i>), Its Impacts on Forests and People, and the Role of the Government
title_full History Lessons from the Late Joseon Dynasty Period of Korea: Human Technology (<i>Ondol</i>), Its Impacts on Forests and People, and the Role of the Government
title_fullStr History Lessons from the Late Joseon Dynasty Period of Korea: Human Technology (<i>Ondol</i>), Its Impacts on Forests and People, and the Role of the Government
title_full_unstemmed History Lessons from the Late Joseon Dynasty Period of Korea: Human Technology (<i>Ondol</i>), Its Impacts on Forests and People, and the Role of the Government
title_sort history lessons from the late joseon dynasty period of korea: human technology (<i>ondol</i>), its impacts on forests and people, and the role of the government
publisher MDPI AG
series Forests
issn 1999-4907
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Historical analogies can help us contextualize new technical developments with social, cultural, and political forces at work. The late Joseon Dynasty period of Korea (1639–1910), a closed economy with detailed written records, provides a rare opportunity to examine a social-ecological system (SES) responding to drivers of change over a long period of time. Based on historical records and reconstructed data, we aim to: (1) characterize how the expansion of human technology, <i>Ondol</i> (traditional underfloor heating system), affected different subsystems and their interactions within the SES over time, (2) examine the role of the government in promoting the technology and regulating its impacts, and (3) summarize the pertinent lessons learned from old Korea for governing a modern-day bioeconomy. <i>Ondol</i> allows various forest biomass to be utilized as household fuel, including fuelwood, forest litter, and grass scraped from forest floor. Continuous biomass harvesting over 250 years to feed <i>Ondol</i> contributed to forest degradation and the forest ecosystem condition trapped in the early successional stage in the Korean Peninsula. The ecological changes were exacerbated by the Pine Policy with a singular focus on reserving Korean red pine (<i>Pinus densiflora</i> Siebold and Zucc.) for government uses. The policy failed to recognize basic needs of the public while countenancing an expansion of <i>Ondol</i> and a cultural preference for heated floors that propagated an increased use of biomass fuel. This case illustrates the importance of recognizing potential technology traps where a human innovation opened opportunities for more resource use. The lessons learned from old Korea show that bioeconomy transitions would require multifaceted governance responses while being cautious about being too closely tied to the dominant national agenda. Environmental history has much to offer for understanding the social and ecological systemic risks of the current technical developments. We call for more historical analogs from different parts of the world to “move forward by looking back”.
topic bioeconomy
forest history
Joseon Dynasty
Korea
<i>Ondol</i>
social-ecological system
url https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/11/12/1314
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