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I don’t see a very clear structure in your json in a sense that it is not explicitly defined anywhere which field should go into which model and how everything is related. So I would recommend just to make an import script in which it manually goes through all of the json and creates the proper model instances.
A good example in my opinion of well structured json is the output of the Django serialization. You can take a look at it here.
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Well for data in json
to be populated to the database:
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You need to map the data fields from json to the database.
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The best and the preferred (or rather the designed) way of doing this is to use fixtures.
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For mapping Django Serialization is the way to GO.
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Django has evolved a lot since this question was asked. Under Django 2.x, probably the best way with the least number of introduced dependencies is to use Django’s built-in serializers (as mentioned by @miki725) and data migrations. This will allow your data to get loaded whenever you run migrations (including when migrations are run before running unit tests).