Japan in the Post–3/11 Era: The Road to Rebirth

Crisis Management in the Aftermath of 3/11

Politics Society

Ōmori Yoshio [Profile]

Kobe 1995 and Tōhoku 2011 were both earthquake disasters, but the first saw most deaths from fires and collapsed homes, while the second was a complex disaster involving a tsunami and nuclear power plant meltdowns. Former director of the Cabinet Intelligence and Research Office Ōmori Yoshio considers Japan’s crisis management in the light of these two events.

Convenience Stores at the Center of Daily Life


Convenience store operators began sales from mobile truck-based shops in mid-April. (Photo: Kuyama Shiromasa.)


The trucks were fully stocked with food, drink, and other necessities for daily life. (Photo: Kuyama Shiromasa.)

The growing importance of convenience stores in people’s daily lives was already attracting attention as a social phenomenon around the time of the 1995 Hanshin earthquake. Ideally located at the heart of daily life and providing immediate necessities such as food, drink, information (via radios and computers), and public lavatories, convenience stores have replaced citizens’ centers and community police boxes as places of refuge in times of disaster for millions of people in contemporary Japan.

The nationwide chains demonstrated their formidable organizational strengths in the days after the disaster, mobilizing national networks to send urgently needed supplies of food and other necessities to the disaster areas around the clock. Even more impressive were the dedication and hard work shown by store managers and employees (including part-time staff) in places where store premises had been destroyed and stock either destroyed or thrown into disarray. Amid the chaos, employees set up temporary retail spaces from which to provide customers with the supplies they needed, despite the losses that many managers and employees had suffered at home. The same remarkable levels of service were seen right across the board, and were not restricted to any particular chain or any individual area. No doubt these impressive results are testimony to the effectiveness of the each company’s ongoing training and employee education programs—but they would not have been possible without the efforts and performance of people on the ground, from the store managers on down. This pattern—of people coming together to produce results under a local leader—is one that is seen throughout Japanese history. Tsuchiya Motohiro, a professor at Keiō University, has compared this sociological phenomenon to the biological concept of emergence, in which ants and termites work together to construct remarkably complex nests by performing a sequence of simple actions without any obvious overall guidance from a strong leader. In the past, conventional crisis management was premised on the American model, which sought to consolidate the necessary information together in one place before implementing a response under strong executive leadership. But the judgment and sense of responsibility of each individual is one of the strengths of Japanese society. In this sense, giving initiative and responsibility to workers on the ground is an effective approach in times of emergency. It represents a division of labor in which the central headquarters takes charge of overall strategy and education while teams of workers on the scene contribute greater local focus.

The Growing Internationalization of Life in Japan

Another thing the recent disaster made abundantly clear was the extent to which daily life in Japan has become internationalized since the Hanshin earthquake 16 years ago.

For many years now, Japan has been a major donor of aid in the aftermath of natural disasters around the world, but this time the aid was flowing in the opposite direction. Since March 11, as many as 150 countries have offered assistance, and rescue teams from around the world began to arrive in Japan within days of the disaster. On the other hand, many foreign businesspeople, trainees, and workers flew home after March 11, leaving the streets looking emptier than normal and having a significant impact on business and manufacturing.

Several foreigners lost their lives or were badly injured in the disaster. More than ever, we were made painfully aware of the ongoing need to provide information for foreign nationals who might be particularly vulnerable in the event of disasters and to provide evacuation instructions in foreign languages.

Another thing that has become clear is the need for a change in the way the government and important bodies like TEPCO make information available to the public. In the past, announcements and press conferences have been based on question-and-answer sessions in Japanese for Japanese journalists. This is no longer good enough. Joint statements based on studies carried out with the cooperation of international bodies such as the International Atomic Energy Agency are essential for ensuring that the international community has an accurate understanding of the situation. We need to reflect seriously on where we have gone wrong in this respect. A total rethinking is required of our frameworks for communicating information to people in Japan who do not speak Japanese, as well as the rest of the world.

The reality of Japan’s position as a member of the international community was brought home to people in their daily lives following the recent disaster. Mineral water was shipped in from Korea to boost dwindling supplies, and alkaline batteries were rushed in from Southeast Asia. At the same time, the impact of the disaster on the numerous sub-suppliers and component manufacturers in the Tōhoku region paralyzed the international supply chain. The impact of the disaster spread far and wide with remarkable speed, and auto factories around the world ground to a halt.

The disaster was a rude reminder of how vital reliable communications and shipping channels are in today’s “just-in-time” world, in which production has been streamlined on a global scale.

next: The Lack of an Emergency Act

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Ōmori YoshioView article list

Born in Tokyo in 1939. Graduated from the University of Tokyo, where he majored in law. Joined the National Police Agency. Served as chief of Tottori Prefectural Police Headquarters, president of the National Police Academy, and director of the Cabinet Intelligence and Research Office. Author of “Kiki kanri tojōkoku” Nippon (Japan the “Developing Country” in Crisis Management), Nippon no interijensu kikan (Intelligence Agencies in Japan), and other works.

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