Japanese Journal of Human Geography
Online ISSN : 1883-4086
Print ISSN : 0018-7216
ISSN-L : 0018-7216
Volume 21, Issue 6
Displaying 1-8 of 8 articles from this issue
  • Seizi HASHIMOTO
    1969 Volume 21 Issue 6 Pages 547-574
    Published: December 28, 1969
    Released on J-STAGE: April 28, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The author took up the old Takanosu village in Toyama Prefecture as a typical example of dispersed settlement. The purpose of this article is to explain the social structure and characteristics of dispersed village from a spacial view point. The author first surveyed the process of social formation, and analyzed the relations between main factors-the irrigation system, the distribution of kinship and the system of farm mangement-and the social structure. The second proposition was the effects of the territorial characteristics, especially of the characteristics as a dispersed village, to the spacial formation and the social structure. The results were the followings:
    (A) As the characteristics of spacial structure with the rural community, we can make mention of the followings. (1) The second area, “mura” community, is the most essential and complete area in the rural community. It originally regulates the conditions of the first area (lower unit). (2) The latter acguires an autonomy in the process that it performs the role to facilitate and strengthen the former's social unity, especially it promotes the tendency that this village is large. But the boundary of the it's area is fluid. (3) The constitution of social area is loose and divisible. (4) It issues from the territorial heterogeneity of the area to divide the “mura” into two parts, eastern and western. At the same time, it is a system to strengthen the unit of “mura” community.
    (B) As the social characteristics, we can make mention of the followings. (1) The disunionism or anti-centralism is remarkable. (2) The social relations by neighbourhood are excellent, consequently the social combination and unity are feeble and fluid. (3) The system concentrating their arable land about their houses did not refuse the existence of “mura community(_??__??__??__??__??_)”, butit's unity is feeble on account of the preceding reasons. (4) A characteristic in this region, a fixed right of tenant farmer, results that the ruling class'es force is relatively weak.
    (C) The preceding social characteristics are founded on the disunionism that originally is rooted to their settlement system, the dispersion of the houses, of which the excellent trait is the solid relation between house and arable land. At the same time, we can't deny that the regonal characteristics are reflected on the preceding factors. They are that this village is irrigated by a big river which is constructed by the technics in modern age and possess'es large territory.
    Consequently, it may be permitted to say that the core of social system in this dispersed village is the disunionism or anti-centralism, in the conception of which the preceding factors are involved.
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  • Toshio MATSUYAMA
    1969 Volume 21 Issue 6 Pages 575-600
    Published: December 28, 1969
    Released on J-STAGE: April 28, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    This paper had been studied on three districts: Tsuka, Tokuyama-Mura, Gifu Prefecture; Shiramine and Kuwashima, Ishikawa Prefecture; Seto, Imajo-Cho, Fukui Prefecture. In these parts, the swidden cultivation and the afforestation are prevalent as the land use in the Chubu mountainous area.
    This study has the following three points.
    1) The transition of the land use on the mountain slopes.
    2) The system of the land use regulations in the mountainous areas.
    3) A rural community structure and the effects of the land use regulations.
    On survey, the mountain slpoes in these parts (except Tsuka) mainly had been used of the swidden cultivation, the silk culture and the charcoal-making. But these land use have been replaced by the afforestation after World War II. Such tendency is remarkable at Shiramine and Kuwashima.
    The land use regulations in the mountainous areas are strougly in evidence at Tsuka (2500ha) and Kuwashima (600ha) where are the common land. For instance, “Kabudai” (a common land use fee) is a principal regulation at Tsuka and “Issakuoroshi” (a common land on lease) at Kuwashima. The subject matter takes some different regulations in the land use types. After World War II, the afforestation was popular rapidly, and then the afforestation areas were made at Kuwashima. In the other hand, “Oyyasama” (a land-owing class) has restricted the land use as there is not the common land at Shiramine.
    Tsuka village community has non-hierarchical structure, Shiramine and Kuwashima have a hierarchical structure and also Kuwashima has kept a traditional community structure through the common land use.
    In this paper, it is suggested that.
    1) Tsuka The regulation of the forest land use are communal because of a large cmmon land and non-hierarchical village structure.
    2) Kuwashima Though it has the hierarchical rural structure, the common land use is based on the communal system.
    3) Shiramine The rural structure has an extream class system and a few landowners hold almost the forest land of the village and restrict those land use.
    4) Seto It is situated between Kuwashima's type and Shiramine's type as the above-mentioned.
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  • T. NAKANO, H. KADOMURA, I. MATSUDA
    1969 Volume 21 Issue 6 Pages 601-616
    Published: December 28, 1969
    Released on J-STAGE: April 28, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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  • Hiroki NISHIDA
    1969 Volume 21 Issue 6 Pages 617-637
    Published: December 28, 1969
    Released on J-STAGE: April 28, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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  • Hidetsugu INOUE
    1969 Volume 21 Issue 6 Pages 637-646
    Published: December 28, 1969
    Released on J-STAGE: April 28, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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  • 1969 Volume 21 Issue 6 Pages 646-650
    Published: December 28, 1969
    Released on J-STAGE: April 28, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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  • [in Japanese]
    1969 Volume 21 Issue 6 Pages 650-651
    Published: December 28, 1969
    Released on J-STAGE: April 28, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Download PDF (190K)
  • [in Japanese]
    1969 Volume 21 Issue 6 Pages 652-653
    Published: December 28, 1969
    Released on J-STAGE: April 28, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Download PDF (193K)
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