TY - JOUR
T1 - Support for housing recovery of home-based survivors
T2 - disaster case management after the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and tsunami
AU - Uto, Akihiro
AU - Maly, Elizabeth
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited.
PY - 2024/11/12
Y1 - 2024/11/12
N2 - Purpose: After the Great East Japan Earthquake (GEJE), the need for disaster case management (DCM) was highlighted through the efforts of the Sendai Bar Association, which investigated the situation of survivors. This paper provides an overview of DCM in Japan since the GEJE, including key findings from investigations and legal consultations conducted by the Sendai Bar Association and the first author, who took part in the surveys with survivors in Ishinomaki City, clarifying the large number of homebound survivors and their needs. Design/methodology/approach: In recent years there has been growing attention to the importance of DCM for supporting life and housing recovery of disaster survivors. Along with the expansion of DCM activities over several decades in Japan, the need for DCM was increasingly recognized after the 2011 GEJE and tsunami, especially for home-based survivors left out of government-provided disaster recovery support programs. As one-on-one advice to support individual recovery needs, the focus of DCM in Japan is legal advice to help survivors effectively navigate support policies. Findings: Since the GEJE, there has been growing support for DCM in Japan, including from practitioners, scholars, and regional and national governments. However, although DCM can be an effective way to support housing recovery, even 12 years after the GEJE, there are still survivors in need of additional support. Originality/value: Drawing on a detailed case study and action research of the first author, this paper contributes to the still limited international literature on DCM in Japan.
AB - Purpose: After the Great East Japan Earthquake (GEJE), the need for disaster case management (DCM) was highlighted through the efforts of the Sendai Bar Association, which investigated the situation of survivors. This paper provides an overview of DCM in Japan since the GEJE, including key findings from investigations and legal consultations conducted by the Sendai Bar Association and the first author, who took part in the surveys with survivors in Ishinomaki City, clarifying the large number of homebound survivors and their needs. Design/methodology/approach: In recent years there has been growing attention to the importance of DCM for supporting life and housing recovery of disaster survivors. Along with the expansion of DCM activities over several decades in Japan, the need for DCM was increasingly recognized after the 2011 GEJE and tsunami, especially for home-based survivors left out of government-provided disaster recovery support programs. As one-on-one advice to support individual recovery needs, the focus of DCM in Japan is legal advice to help survivors effectively navigate support policies. Findings: Since the GEJE, there has been growing support for DCM in Japan, including from practitioners, scholars, and regional and national governments. However, although DCM can be an effective way to support housing recovery, even 12 years after the GEJE, there are still survivors in need of additional support. Originality/value: Drawing on a detailed case study and action research of the first author, this paper contributes to the still limited international literature on DCM in Japan.
KW - Disaster case management
KW - Disaster policy
KW - Great East Japan Earthquake and tsunami
KW - Housing recovery
KW - Recovery support
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U2 - 10.1108/DPM-12-2023-0328
DO - 10.1108/DPM-12-2023-0328
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85198395145
SN - 0965-3562
VL - 33
SP - 515
EP - 523
JO - Disaster Prevention and Management
JF - Disaster Prevention and Management
IS - 5
ER -