Skip to main content
PreventionWeb
Menu
Author(s) Shuji Seto Junko Okuyama Toshiki Iwasaki et al.

Linking affected community and academic knowledge: a community-based participatory research framework based on a Shichigahama project

Source
Nature Scientific Reports

This paper introduces a community-based participatory research program implemented through cooperation between universities and local communities after the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake. In this project, the university and the town of Shichigahama, one of the affected areas, collaborated to hold annual workshops in the target area, which evolved into a climate monitoring survey. Even in Japan, where disaster prevention planning is widespread, various problems arise in the process of emergency response, recovery and reconstruction, and building back better when disasters occur.

As is difficult for residents and local governments to solve these problems alone, it is helpful when experts participate in the response process. In this study, we interviewed town hall and university officials as representatives of local residents regarding this project and discussed their mutual concerns. The community-based participatory research framework developed in the Shichigahama project could be used in the recovery from the Noto Peninsula Earthquake as well as in future reconstruction and disaster management projects.

Download

Access Linking affected community and academic knowledge: a community-based participatory research framework based on a Shichigahama project
Download a backup copy hosted by this site PDF, 1.5 MB English

We keep a copy of many documents to improve long-term access. Use this if the publisher’s site is slow or unavailable. Problems? Contact us.

Last checked: 28 August 2024

Editors' recommendations

  • Lessons from Mabi: Five years of recovery from the 2018 Western Japan flood
  • Recovery curves for housing reconstruction from the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and comparison with other post-disaster recovery processes
  • Efforts toward recovery and reconstruction from the Great East Japan Earthquake
  • Handbook on recovery institutions: a guidebook for recovery practitioners

Explore further

Hazards Earthquake
Themes Community-based DRR Recovery
Country and region Japan
Cover
ISBN/ISSN/DOI
10.1038/s41598-024-70813-9 (DOI)
Number of pages
10 p.
Publication year
2024

Also featured on

PreventionWeb

Is this page useful?

Yes No
Report an issue on this page

Thank you. If you have 2 minutes, we would benefit from additional feedback (link opens in a new window).

The International Recovery Platform (IRP) is a global partnership working to strengthen knowledge, and share experiences and lessons on building back better in recovery, rehabilitation, and reconstruction.

Latest IRP videos and photos: YouTube Flickr Contact IRP

Loading