Back to Search Start Over

School food, sustainability, and interdependence: learning from Japan’s <italic>Shokuiku?</italic>.

Authors :
Rappleye, Jeremy
Komatsu, Hikaru
Nishiyama, Suzuka
Source :
Oxford Review of Education. Jan2024, p1-19. 19p. 6 Illustrations.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

As the sustainability imperative looms, mainstream educational research in the English-speaking world continues a long tradition of failing to see food as integral to education. Japan’s tradition of &lt;italic&gt;Shokuiku&lt;/italic&gt; (food education) stands in stark contrast, providing an external reference point to direct critical attention on Anglo-American school food philosophies, policy, and practice. This article analyses &lt;italic&gt;Shokuiku&lt;/italic&gt;, tracing the genealogy of Japan’s 2005 Basic Law on &lt;italic&gt;Shokuiku&lt;/italic&gt;, a landmark education policy that shifted the 1954 School Lunch Act away from the scientific and nutritional discourses of the mid-20th century and back to Japan’s school food cultural traditions. While still teaching nutrition, Japan’s &lt;italic&gt;Shokuiku&lt;/italic&gt; emerges as distinctive in its broader goals of interdependence, gratitude towards nature, emphasis on culture, and awareness of relations between production, consumption, and sustainability. From a pragmatic perspective, &lt;italic&gt;Shokuiku&lt;/italic&gt; may offer new ways to combat rising obesity worldwide, lessen meat consumption, and reduce humanity’s unsustainable ecological footprint. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03054985
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Oxford Review of Education
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174989927
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/03054985.2023.2296097