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Using sustainability science to analyse social–ecological restoration in NE Japan after the great earthquake and tsunami of 2011

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors argue that building resilience in the affected area requires a transformation to sustainable agriculture, forestry and fisheries and describe how the links between satoyama and satoumi, traditional rural territorial and coastal landscapes in Japan, can contribute to this revitalization and to strengthening the relationship between local residents and the landscape of the affected communities.
Abstract
In the wake of the catastrophic earthquake and tsunami that devastated part of northeastern Japan in March 2011, proposals for reconstruction and rehabilitation are still subjects of debate. The claim by many climate scientists that large-scale extreme events can be expected in the future, with similar catastrophic effects in coastal areas, suggests the need for long-term planning that aims at building resilience, the ability for socio-ecological systems to withstand and recover quickly from natural disasters, and continue to develop. We hypothesize that ecosystems and socio-economic resilience will provide affected communities with flexible barriers against future disasters and greater protection in the long run than will hard/engineering solutions such as high seawalls aimed at ensuring only physical security. Building social/ecological resilience in the Tohoku region will increase general security and is anticipated also to contribute to an enhanced quality of life now and for generations to come. This paper argues that building resilience in the affected area requires a transformation to sustainable agriculture, forestry and fisheries and we describe how the links between satoyama and satoumi, traditional rural territorial and coastal landscapes in Japan, can contribute to this revitalization and to strengthening the relationship between local residents and the landscape in the affected communities. Decision makers at local, regional and national levels need to take a holistic approach based on sustainability science to understand the inter-relationships between these landscapes and ecosystems to develop a robust rebuilding plan for the affected communities. Moreover, this paper suggests that building resilient communities in Japan that demonstrate the strategic benefits of satoyama and satoumi linkages can be a model for building resilient rural and urban communities throughout the world.

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Social-ecological resilience and biosphere-based sustainability science

TL;DR: Folke et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed a social-ecological resilience and biosphere-based sustainability science model for sustainable living in ecology and society, 21(3):41, doi:10.5751/ES-08748-210341.
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Satoyama landscape as social–ecological system: historical changes and future perspective

TL;DR: The authors explored future perspectives on the satoyama landscape (traditional Japanese rural landscape) as a social-ecological system through an overview of its transformation, showing that before the fossil fuel revolution of the late 1950s, people maintained a direct relationship with nature, and the landscape was integrally managed through community cooperation to avoid overuse.
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Enhancing post-disaster resilience by ‘building back greener’:: Evaluating the contribution of nature-based solutions to recovery planning in Futaba County, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluate the contribution of nature-based solutions to urban resilience in post-disaster situations, and show that cultural ecosystem services feature especially strongly within the plans, and that these cultural services are critical to recovering sense of identity and pride postdisaster.
Journal ArticleDOI

The emergence of the social-ecological restoration concept

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the special case of the restoration of SoES that they call social-ecological restoration (SoER), which is characterized as a restoration process that cannot avoid simultaneously dealing with ecological and social issues.
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Managing wetlands for disaster risk reduction: A case study of the eastern Free State, South Africa.

TL;DR: The study showed that communal wetlands were more degraded, while wetlands in protected areas and in private commercial farms were in a good ecological state, which indicates that healthy wetlands could be good instruments to mitigate recurrent natural hazards in the agriculturally dominated eastern Free State in South Africa.
References
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Book

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