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Journal Article

Citation

Cho A. Disasters 2014; 38(Suppl 2): s157-s178.

Affiliation

HK Research Professor, Institute for Japanese Studies, Seoul National University, South Korea.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/disa.12068

PMID

24905813

Abstract

Post-disaster governance is a popular discussion topic in disaster research, but in practice understanding of the issue is limited. This paper discusses recovery governance since the 2011 Japanese earthquake and tsunami, focusing on two dimensions: decentralisation and citizen participation in local governance. Regional Japan's socio-spatial vitality has been shrinking and weakening under the developmental state system. The 2011 disaster exposed vulnerabilities in the socio-political system. For a short time it appeared that local political space had been opened for alternative governance systems; however, only limited improvements have occurred in decentralisation reform and civic participation systems. Tsunami recovery was constrained and delayed by predisaster trajectories, although socio-spatial inequalities increased. The paper suggests the implications of this for the developmental state and argues that drastic action should be taken to rectify the faults of the socio-political system, to stop the disaster-affected area's decline, and to promote regional and community recovery.


Language: en

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