The potential for damage resulting from the Nankai
Trough earthquake has been discussed since even
before 2011. Many local governments, related organizations,
and residents have invested great energy into
disaster mitigation measures, such as the construction
of hard facilities and the implementation of soft strategies,
all of which were based on community-level
conditions. However, the huge impact of the Great
East Japan Earthquake has forced a reevaluation of
the likely effectiveness of these approaches. Specific
areas for reevaluation include individual-level topics,
government reappraisals of tsunami estimation, and
low tsunami evacuation rates despite evacuation orders
issued at the time of the Great East Japan Earthquake.
This paper discusses each of these problems in
detail.
The potential for damage resulting from the Nankai
Trough earthquake has been discussed since even
before 2011. Many local governments, related organizations,
and residents have invested great energy into
disaster mitigation measures, such as the construction
of hard facilities and the implementation of soft strategies,
all of which were based on community-level
conditions. However, the huge impact of the Great
East Japan Earthquake has forced a reevaluation of
the likely effectiveness of these approaches. Specific
areas for reevaluation include individual-level topics,
government reappraisals of tsunami estimation, and
low tsunami evacuation rates despite evacuation orders
issued at the time of the Great East Japan Earthquake.
This paper discusses each of these problems in
detail.
การแปล กรุณารอสักครู่..