Natural disasters are often multifaceted and cause severe
damage. Disasters initiated locally can become national and even
global crises. Today s world urgently needs a new body of knowledge
and techniques for the mitigation of and response to disaster.
Central to such a body of knowledge are disaster preparedness,
emergency and crisis management systems of government, of which
capacity building is becoming an increasingly important element in
public administration, management and governance. Today, disasters
are to be managed by sound local, national, and global governance,
through all the phases of preparedness, prevention, mitigation and
then to relief, recovery and re-construction. During all these
phases, government plays the most important role.
This book provides a case of the disaster governance of Japan,
by presenting information and analyses on what happened in the
Magnitude 9 Great East Japan Earthquake that caused the huge
tsunami and the INES Level 7 Fukushima nuclear power plants
accidents on March 11, 2011. In examining this Japanese case study,
this book illustrates the socio-economic damage of the stricken
areas together with the overall picture of the disasters. It
examines Japan s capacity for disaster governance and it s crisis
management system in response to the most devastating disaster that
the country has ever encountered since the end of WWII. It also
offers preliminary findings learned from this experience in the
Japan s public administration and governance systems, challenged to
be more accountable and transparent during the recovery and
reconstruction efforts now in progress."
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