hidden
Image Database Export Citations

Menu:

Paddy and Dry Fields as Common Property: The Warichi System in Japan

Show full item record

Type: Conference Paper
Author: Brown, Philip C.
Conference: Common Property in Ecosystems Under Stress, the Fourth Annual Conference of the International Association for the Study of Common Property
Location: Manila, Philippines
Conf. Date: June 18, 1993
Date: 1993
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10535/1328
Sector: Social Organization
Agriculture
Region: East Asia
Subject(s): land tenure and use
agriculture
common pool resources
village organization
IASC
Abstract: "Although common management of water resources, swidden cultivation, and 'common' lands (iriaichi) are well known and studied in the case of Japan, few people recognize the important role that corporate management of long-standing arable land played in many Japanese communities throughout the early modern era and into the twentieth century. This practice, commonly known by a variant of the term warichi (lit. 'dividing the land'), continued to be practiced in rare instances until about a decade ago. While there was much variation in local practice, all of the villages which practiced warichi periodically reassigned lands to participating cultivators. Many of the mechanisms employed in the management of common lands to assure unbiased and random access to benefits were employed in warichi as well. "Unlike standard images of redistributional systems warichi was usually not designed to reallocate landed wealth on some per capita basis. This paper will explore some of the alternative social functions performed by redistribution, e.g., controlling risk, providing incentives to more villagers to participate in other corporate projects, and so forth. These property arrangements seem to have worked most effectively where they were locally implemented rather than when domain (han) administrators attempted to force them on a community."

Files in this item

Files Size Format View
Paddy_and_Dry_F ... arichi_System_in_Japan.pdf 544.6Kb PDF View/Open

This item appears in the following document type(s)

Show full item record