Supported by NTT DATA   Earth
Topics: Think the Earth
thinkFace
thinkEye

考える、それは力になる

contents

icon

お探しのページは見つかりません。

変更もしくは削除された可能性があります。

 
Home News Report Emergency Board About Think Daily Japanese
 

Earth News Today
News from reporters worldwide


Australian town bans sales of drinking water in plastic bottles
2009/10/01 06:03 25 (GMT)
Junji Hashimoto@Gunma, Japan


Nature from the Ant's Perspective Wins the Environmental Photography Prize
2009/09/15 10:51 09 (GMT)
Nakagawa Makoto@Manila, Philippines


Three sites in Japan have global geological value - they are to be listed for the first time as glob
2009/08/31 22:35 42 (GMT)
Yumi Yamada@Kanagawa, Japan


Mobile tags reveal the journey our trash takes
2009/07/18 11:19 35 (GMT)
Nakagawa Makoto@Manila, Philippines


The population of wild animals in the Masai Mara National Reserve has dramatically decreased
2009/07/08 23:29 37 (GMT)
Miracle Lilio@Kigali, Rwanda


Cleaning rivers by using carbon fiber woven using nishijin brocade technology
2009/07/06 04:29 36 (GMT)
Junji Hashimoto@Gunma, Japan


"bicing" - Drop-off public bicycle system
2009/06/08 13:12 00 (GMT)
Toru Morimoto@Barcelona, Spain


Donsol, a town brought to life by whale sharks
2009/05/23 05:06 53 (GMT)
Nakagawa Makoto@Manila, Philippines


The "movement to donate food" spreads across Berlin
2009/05/20 00:20 39 (GMT)
Hideko Kawachi@Berlin, Germany


Japan's energy independence to come from "small-scale hydroelectric power generation"
2009/05/11 21:45 18 (GMT)
Junji Hashimoto@Gunma, Japan


Nike, Gap, and other U.S businesses establish partnership of CO2 emission cut initiative
2009/04/14 04:51 58 (GMT)
Angie Amasawa@Seattle, USA


Let's ask cherry trees about climate change
2009/03/31 09:40 25 (GMT)
Yumi Yamada@Kanagawa, Japan


Jakarta - in danger of sinking under water in 3 years from excessive groundwater use?!
2009/03/25 09:22 16 (GMT)
Junji Hashimoto@Gunma, Japan


Celebrate Easter with colorful organic eggs!
2009/03/12 08:55 37 (GMT)
Hideko Kawachi@Berlin, Germany


GM crops - expected to double by 2015
2009/03/07 11:43 36 (GMT)
Think the Earth Project Staff@Tokyo, Japan


The Koshien Stadium has become an eco stadium
2009/03/03 23:47 05 (GMT)
Junji Hashimoto@Gunma, Japan


In Korea 30% of tap water is going to waste as a result of leaky pipes
2009/02/14 07:07 10 (GMT)
Junji Hashimoto@Gunma, Japan


Transferring money from your cell phone; a new service spreads across Kenya
2009/02/12 23:50 33 (GMT)
africanwhale@Tokyo,Japan


Small wind turbine challenge Google contest
2009/02/10 03:49 41 (GMT)
Angie Amasawa@Seattle, USA


"IBUKI", a satellite that will observe the Earth's breathing, reaches space safely
2009/01/30 19:58 24 (GMT)
Yumi Yamada@Kanagawa, Japan


Organic farmland on the outskirts of Berlin are now the largest in Germany!
2009/01/14 23:47 27 (GMT)
Hideko Kawachi@Berlin, Germany


Very influential German Magazine "Test" uncovers pitfalls of organic products
2008/12/27 11:42 46 (GMT)
Hideko Kawachi@Berlin, Germany


Marine organisms - You can learn all about them in the "Census of Marine Life"
2008/11/23 08:44 54 (GMT)
Hisayo Takada@Auckland, New Zealand


Digital TV in Hawaii :starting early for conservation of birds
2008/11/19 12:39 16 (GMT)
Angie Amasawa@Seattle, USA


Learning about what's going on inside the star from its "music"
2008/11/01 11:04 29 (GMT)
Hisayo Takada@Auckland, New Zealand


Korea and Japan make joint proposal for protecting paddy fields at the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands
2008/10/30 12:10 47 (GMT)
Yumi Yamada@Kanagawa, Japan


Nurturing healthy forests with ideas for wood use
2008/10/08 10:05 46 (GMT)
Think the Earth Project Staff@Tokyo, Japan


The Red Cross aims to augment public awareness for victims of war through a clue-hunting game!
2008/10/02 18:42 02 (GMT)
africanwhale@Tokyo,Japan


Airships take you to a low-carbon future
2008/09/17 05:14 53 (GMT)
Nakagawa Makoto@Manila, Philippines


No borders for natural disasters
2008/08/31 10:10 25 (GMT)
Think the Earth Project Staff@Tokyo, Japan






news

A 10-year approach to connect regions and to revitalize settlements
2008/05/13 09:25 18 (GMT)
Yumi Yamada??Kanagawa, Japan

It has been 10 years since Iinan-cho in Shimane Prefecture established the "Shimane Prefecture Mountainous Region Research Center". Its research results are now well known to the entire nation because it went onsite and listened to the voices of its people , and diligently continued its activities in the face of shrinking population in settlements in the mountainous districts.

Although people may tend to become pessimistic when it comes to depopulation issues, this approach attempts to give it a positive spin, by reenergizing the region through reexamination of regional resources such as the abundant biomass and directly managed local stores for selling agricultural produce.

The center has been summarizing information covering a wide range of genres such as citizens' regional activities, forest information, wildlife measures, water environment, and traffic, onto a map since 2002; the information is also available on the website. Everyone can share the information and if you register, you can even post messages on the map. If you look at the map, you'll realize that resources in the region will become vibrant and energized more so if these become connected to one another, and this is also true for regions as well. In the 2 settlements that are on the verge of becoming non existent, exchange with metropolises have been actively promoted since the last fiscal year, so that the settlements may be reenergized. Here, the "people" play an important role. Some people from NPOs, etc., have gone to the region to attempt to act as a bridge between the settlements and the outside world, to perform a "cohesive function." And to promote human resource development, a collaborative structure will be set up between the University of Shimane and partner graduate schools.

This center is the only one of its kind in the whole nation that researches and attempts to manage depopulation. I hope that the deep-rooted activities undertaken by this unique municipality will continue to help to revitalize the rural areas in Japan.


Related URL/media
http://www.chugoku-np.co.jp/Syasetu/Sh200805050385.html





Earth News Correspondent

Yumi Yamada
Kanagawa, Japan
My research in GIS (Geographic Information System) stems from my interest in the conservation of tropical forests. Various issues hard to discern from statistics and reports become more clear and understandable if you explanate them. I work as an assistant to the university while creating map graphics for the media, writing articles for magazines, and conducting research.
Personal website: http://web.sfc.keio.ac.jp/???yumi/