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Great East Japan Earthquake Disaster and Population Change: SpringerBriefs in Population Studies

Autor Takashi Abe
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 oct 2024
The book aims to clarify from a demographic and geographical perspective how population trends of the Tohoku Region were changed as a result of the GEJED. The author shows how different the 2011 GEJED was from past disasters in this region with regard to the impacts on population change in the Tohoku Region. He explains how the recent disaster is different from past disasters, based on the theories of the first and second demographic transitions. He also clarifies the causality between the extent of housing damage and mortality through geographical analysis. Furthermore, this book shows how migration patterns were changed before and after the GEJED, and it identifies the differences between the areas affected by the tsunami and by the nuclear power plant accident.



Investigating the GEJED as a case study, the book presents a method to analyze the relationship between natural disasters and population change. This book is especially useful for researchers inthe fields of disaster, environment, and population to better understand the relationship between the environment and population.


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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789819720415
ISBN-10: 9819720419
Pagini: 76
Ilustrații: X, 120 p. 50 illus., 20 illus. in color.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Ediția:1st ed. 2024
Editura: Springer Nature Singapore
Colecția Springer
Seriile SpringerBriefs in Population Studies, Population Studies of Japan

Locul publicării:Singapore, Singapore

Cuprins

Introduction: Demography of Natural Disasters.- Population Changes and Natural Disasters in the Tohoku Region since the Latter Half of the 19th Century.- Demographic Changes in the Tohoku Region due to the Great East Japan Earthquake Disaster.- Changes in Migration Patterns in the Tohoku Region due to the Great East Japan Earthquake Disaster.- Changes in Population Trends in the Tohoku Region due to the Great East Japan Earthquake Disaster.- Epilogue.



Notă biografică

Takashi Abe was born in 1947, Akita, Japan. Takashi Abe did B.A. (Geography) at Faculty of Science, Tohoku University (1969), Master of Science (Geography) at Graduate School of Science, Tohoku University (1971). Takashi Abe is Lecturer, Associate Professor, and Professor at Miyagi Gakuin Women’s College and Miyagi Gakuin Women’s University, Sendai, Japan (1975–2002).
Takashi Abe is Professor Emeritus at Miyagi Gakuin Women’s University (2002), Professor at Japan Women’s University, Faculty of Integrated Arts and Sciences, Kawasaki, Japan (2002–2015), Professor Emeritus at Japan Women’s University (2015), and Doctor of Science at Tohoku University (2022).

Textul de pe ultima copertă

The book aims to clarify from a demographic and geographical perspective how population trends of the Tohoku Region were changed as a result of the GEJED. The author shows how different the 2011 GEJED was from past disasters in this region with regard to the impacts on population change in the Tohoku Region. He explains how the recent disaster is different from past disasters, based on the theories of the first and second demographic transitions. He also clarifies the causality between the extent of housing damage and mortality through geographical analysis. Furthermore, this book shows how migration patterns were changed before and after the GEJED, and it identifies the differences between the areas affected by the tsunami and by the nuclear power plant accident.

Investigating the GEJED as a case study, the book presents a method to analyze the relationship between natural disasters and population change. This book is especially useful for researchers in the fields of disaster, environment, and population to better understand the relationship between the environment and population.

Caracteristici

Shows that the impact of natural disasters on the population varies with the stage of demographic transition Analyzes demographically and geographically the relationship between damage and suffering caused by natural disasters Clarifies the specific impact of nuclear power plant accidents on the local population