Abstract

Foreign residents in Japan are amongst the vulnerable groups at risk to disasters in the country. Improvement is crucial in meeting Japan’s vison of zero casualties in major disaster events. If the case of the 2005 Hurricane Katrina is to offer an insight into migrants’ characteristics in mega-disaster situations, then a broader analysis of vulnerabilities is needed to avoid mass casualties should the anticipated megathrust earthquake occur. Hence, this study analyzes the vulnerabilities of foreign residents by utilizing their spatial distribution attributes in the Tokyo metropolitan area. This study uses multiple approaches that combine geographic information systems to analyze secondary and primary datasets. The results reveal that foreign nationals are spatially clustered in some parts of the metropolis, especially within a 7 km radius of Minato city. The densities in these areas alter the earthquake community vulnerability levels from 1.23% to 2.8% and from 5.42% to 13.46%, respectively. Although only 11% of foreign residents are prepared for any disaster, there is a high sense of interaction amongst them and Japanese nationals, which almost eliminates isolation within communities. This study therefore proposes the utilization of some of these attributes in mobilizing specifically targeted evacuation procedures, management of evacuation centers, and disaster risk information dissemination.

Highlights

  • Foreign residents in Japan are amongst the vulnerable groups at risk to disasters in the country

  • I =1 where SW is the weighted sum, Wi is the assigned weight of the ith evaluating factor, Vi is the score of the ith evaluating factor, and n is the total number of evaluation factors

  • This study sought to analyze the vulnerability of foreign residents in the Tokyo metropolitan area and in Japan through the perspective of population distribution attributes

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Summary

Introduction

Foreign residents in Japan are amongst the vulnerable groups at risk to disasters in the country. This study analyzes the vulnerabilities of foreign residents by utilizing their spatial distribution attributes in the Tokyo metropolitan area. The results reveal that foreign nationals are spatially clustered in some parts of the metropolis, especially within a 7 km radius of Minato city. The densities in these areas alter the earthquake community vulnerability levels from 1.23% to 2.8% and from 5.42% to 13.46%, respectively. The dynamics of the world’s population continues to evolve, and as studies show, mortality, fertility, and migration rates are the key factors driving population change in the world [1].

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