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Description: Japan for Sustainability (JFS), established in 2002, is a non-profit organization providing information on developments and activities in Japan that lead toward sustainability: "The mission of Japan for Sustainability is to make this world a more sustainable place for current and future generations, by delivering to the world useful ideas and information on the latest developments and activities in Japan that promote sustainability, and providing a communication platform and information to help people envision a sustainable future and to seek ideas that can fill the gaps between our current society and the sustainable future society we would like to live in."
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Subject: Sustainable development, Renewable Energy, Carbon Reduction, Nuclear fuel alternatives
Group: East Asia
Creator: Japan for Sustainability
Publisher: Japan for Sustainability
Language: English
Coverage: Japan
Tag: Environmental policy, Food supply , Research & technology, Water supply, Environmental media, Japan , Climate change mitigation, East Asia
Description: This website aims to introduce you to the Japanese “Slow Living Movement.” In July 1999, ten or so people got together in Tokyo and started the Sloth Club. It became a catalyst of the so-called “Slow Life” movement in Japan, whose creed is “slow is beautiful." Some ten years later, the Sloth Club still exists and the word “slow” has become widely recognized. Slow can be understood to mean alternative, sustainable, ecological, local, and happy. Slow means “to connect”," with other people, with nature, etc. In the last ten years, we have witnessed positive changes all over Japan. The concept of slow has made an impact on many aspects of the society. The movement, for example, encouraged people to start acknowledging the richness of rural life and communities. Many like-minded groups have also formed to address issues as diverse as nuclear disarmament, peace between Japan and Korea, decentralization, and pollution. The movement as a whole is creating a new sustainable and ecological culture.
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Subject: Rural, Sustainable living, Local food, Slow movement, Communities
Group: East Asia
Language: Japanese, English, Spanish
Coverage: Japan
Tag: Energy, Agriculture, Food supply , Environmental education, Japan , Energy conservation, Rural communities
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