
Ryo TSUCHIDA
Disaster and Public Anthropology
災害を契機に、私たちは生きる
How do we survive the aftermath?
学術系クラウドファンディングを
はじめます。
ご支援・応援よろしくお願いいたします(2024.09.03~)
Launching my academic crowdfunding (written in Japanese, but will prepare in English ver) for fieldwork and exhibition at the disaster affected/non-affected areas to relay the mode of disaster rehabilitation(from 3rd Sep. 2024).
Photo by NASA on Unsplash

土田亮です。
現地の対応能力を超えた自然災害を経験して、より多様な困難を抱えた人々の生活や災害復興における葛藤とそのケア、さらには不確実性を見据えた生き抜く術や思想を模索しています。
My name is Ryo TSUCHIDA.
I am very keen to do a deep dive into seeking better disaster rehabilitation, local lives, care, and ways towards a philosophy for survival and contribute to those exposed to a severe and overcapacity natural disaster at the site and faced with various difficulties.

About Disaster and Public Anthropology
In the last 30 years, a worldwide trend of increasing natural and cascading disasters has been caused by climate change, human activities, and geophysical effects. The impacts show a dramatic situation. The relationship among disasters, rehabilitation, and care remains a pivotal topic to investigate, primarily cultural, social, and livelihood aspects.
To inspect the context of two factors, some researchers attempt to formulate a framework of anthropology between disasters and rehabilitations from the viewpoint of anthropology using ethnography (disaster and public anthropology). Scientists can provide new insights into better rehabilitation by reading disaster ethnographies and collaborating with the government, academia, and the people.
To Summarize, disaster and public anthropology could provide various people’s points of view and lives and practical breakthroughs to create and care about resilient societies. Therefore, we need to tackle serious problems about disasters and resilient recovery in theory and practice.