External impacts on traditional commons and present-day changes: a case study of iriai forests in Yamaguni district, Kyoto, Japan

Japanese' iriai' forests have been regarded as a model of institutions for collective action in the sustainable use of resources in studies on commons, as pointed out by Ostrom (1990) and McKean (1996). However, present-day' iriai' forests that have survived decades of legal and...

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Main Author: Daisaku Shimada
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Utrecht University Library Open Access Journals (Publishing Services) 2014-03-01
Series:International Journal of the Commons
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.thecommonsjournal.org/articles/348
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spelling doaj-cea7acedbb1142df89bf9ef82742cc602020-11-25T02:10:00ZengUtrecht University Library Open Access Journals (Publishing Services)International Journal of the Commons1875-02812014-03-018120723510.18352/ijc.348210External impacts on traditional commons and present-day changes: a case study of iriai forests in Yamaguni district, Kyoto, JapanDaisaku Shimada0Fukuoka Women's UniversityJapanese' iriai' forests have been regarded as a model of institutions for collective action in the sustainable use of resources in studies on commons, as pointed out by Ostrom (1990) and McKean (1996). However, present-day' iriai' forests that have survived decades of legal and even greater economic and social challenges have undergone significant alteration. While we know that external conditions such as foreign competition from low-cost timber have depressed the Japanese forestry industry and thus reduced the health of Japanese forests as a whole, we do not know about the current state of the 'iriai' forests in particular. Adaptation to external impacts is crucial for the survival of the commons in a modern industrialized society. This study examines external impacts on traditional commons and the resultant institutional changes in current Japan. We cannot easily track the changes in traditional commons without deep understanding of many cases, because the factors affecting their functioning are complex and diverse. Therefore, we opted to use the case study method to improve the empirical foundations for analyzing these complex phenomena. Our goal was to examine the institutional changes resulting from one source of pressure found in many commons near urbanizing areas in postwar Japan – an increase in newcomers – as well as from the pressure of foreign competition in forest products. We chose eleven villages in the Yamaguni district in Kyoto city that manage their own common forests and studied the documented rules in these communities. We used participant observation and also conducted interviews with villagers to obtain their sense of change over time, the impact of globalization, and the current status of the commons. This paper derived the following conclusions. First, the village community can adapt its institutions to external influences by supporting continuous institutional change. Second, although village communities can overcome most external impacts themselves, there is one impact, low-priced competition due to free trade in forest products which they cannot cope with independently. Third, regenerating local Japanese commons requires multi-level governance based on the principle of subsidiarity.https://www.thecommonsjournal.org/articles/348external impactfree tradeinstitutional changeiriaiprinciple of subsidiarity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daisaku Shimada
spellingShingle Daisaku Shimada
External impacts on traditional commons and present-day changes: a case study of iriai forests in Yamaguni district, Kyoto, Japan
International Journal of the Commons
external impact
free trade
institutional change
iriai
principle of subsidiarity
author_facet Daisaku Shimada
author_sort Daisaku Shimada
title External impacts on traditional commons and present-day changes: a case study of iriai forests in Yamaguni district, Kyoto, Japan
title_short External impacts on traditional commons and present-day changes: a case study of iriai forests in Yamaguni district, Kyoto, Japan
title_full External impacts on traditional commons and present-day changes: a case study of iriai forests in Yamaguni district, Kyoto, Japan
title_fullStr External impacts on traditional commons and present-day changes: a case study of iriai forests in Yamaguni district, Kyoto, Japan
title_full_unstemmed External impacts on traditional commons and present-day changes: a case study of iriai forests in Yamaguni district, Kyoto, Japan
title_sort external impacts on traditional commons and present-day changes: a case study of iriai forests in yamaguni district, kyoto, japan
publisher Utrecht University Library Open Access Journals (Publishing Services)
series International Journal of the Commons
issn 1875-0281
publishDate 2014-03-01
description Japanese' iriai' forests have been regarded as a model of institutions for collective action in the sustainable use of resources in studies on commons, as pointed out by Ostrom (1990) and McKean (1996). However, present-day' iriai' forests that have survived decades of legal and even greater economic and social challenges have undergone significant alteration. While we know that external conditions such as foreign competition from low-cost timber have depressed the Japanese forestry industry and thus reduced the health of Japanese forests as a whole, we do not know about the current state of the 'iriai' forests in particular. Adaptation to external impacts is crucial for the survival of the commons in a modern industrialized society. This study examines external impacts on traditional commons and the resultant institutional changes in current Japan. We cannot easily track the changes in traditional commons without deep understanding of many cases, because the factors affecting their functioning are complex and diverse. Therefore, we opted to use the case study method to improve the empirical foundations for analyzing these complex phenomena. Our goal was to examine the institutional changes resulting from one source of pressure found in many commons near urbanizing areas in postwar Japan – an increase in newcomers – as well as from the pressure of foreign competition in forest products. We chose eleven villages in the Yamaguni district in Kyoto city that manage their own common forests and studied the documented rules in these communities. We used participant observation and also conducted interviews with villagers to obtain their sense of change over time, the impact of globalization, and the current status of the commons. This paper derived the following conclusions. First, the village community can adapt its institutions to external influences by supporting continuous institutional change. Second, although village communities can overcome most external impacts themselves, there is one impact, low-priced competition due to free trade in forest products which they cannot cope with independently. Third, regenerating local Japanese commons requires multi-level governance based on the principle of subsidiarity.
topic external impact
free trade
institutional change
iriai
principle of subsidiarity
url https://www.thecommonsjournal.org/articles/348
work_keys_str_mv AT daisakushimada externalimpactsontraditionalcommonsandpresentdaychangesacasestudyofiriaiforestsinyamagunidistrictkyotojapan
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