研究者業績

Taiyo YAGASAKI

  (矢ケ﨑 太洋)

Profile Information

Affiliation
Senior Lecturer, Graduate School of Regional Resource Management, University of Hyogo
Degree
Bachelor of Arts in Environment and Information Studies(Mar, 2013, Keio University)
Master of Philosophy in Science(Mar, 2015, University of Tsukuba)
Doctor of Philosophy in Science(Mar, 2018, University of Tsukuba)

J-GLOBAL ID
201601001956258065
researchmap Member ID
B000265865

Committee Memberships

 4

Awards

 2

Major Papers

 26
  • Taiyo Yagasaki
    Japanese Journal of Human Geography, 73(4) 467-484, Dec, 2021  Peer-reviewedLead authorCorresponding author
  • YAGASAKI Taiyo, UEHARA Akira
    Geographical Space, 12(3) 263-276, Dec, 2019  Peer-reviewedLead author
    Darkness in the night brings about the feeling of fear and a sense of liberation for human. Japanese ghosts called yokai and yurei were the creation of fear of darkness, while the fear continues to exist today being manifested as urban legends and the occult. Urban legends and the occult are consumed as a result of human curiosity in the form of ghost tours. This study attempts to examine the relationship between the human feeling of fear and the feared places in Japan. Haunted places and ghost tours are thus studied, by analyzing human fear of darkness in the night and ghost tourism based on the curiosity of fear. Reflecting the local characteristics of places, haunted places vary in terms of the source of fear, and many types of ghost stories are told. Ghost tours operated by a company examined in this study are not for the purpose of profit but for the means of advertisement, thus ghost tours are ethically considered. The routes of ghost tours, visiting haunted places in the suburbs, do not reflect the overall distribution pattern of hauted places.
  • YAGASAKI Taiyo
    Japanese Journal of Hunman Geography (Jimbun Chiri), 71(4) 371-392, Dec, 2019  Peer-reviewedLead author
  • YAGASAKI Taiyo
    Journal of Geography(Chigaku Zasshi), 126(5) 533-556, 2017  Peer-reviewed
    <p> A tsunami caused by the Great East Japan Earthquake on March 11, 2011, devastated coastal areas of Sanriku in northeastern Japan. Because Sanriku had been damaged repeatedly by tsunamis in the past, local governments and residents attempted to protect coastal communities by building large tide embankments, raising the ground, and relocating houses to higher ground. Geographical studies on the disaster mainly focus on the vulnerability of regional communities to disasters and on measures taken to reduce hazard risks. Recently, geographers have begun to use the concept of resilience to examine the process of reconstruction. This study examines factors that contribute to the high level of resilience of a local community impacted by the Great East Japan Earthquake in March 2011 by presenting the case of the Moune district of Kesennuma City, Miyagi Prefecture. An adaptation process model of local communities is proposed to examine a local community impacted by a disaster. Three time-series phases consider the pre-disaster period, evacuation and refugee period directly after the disaster, and the planning period of the group relocation project. Resilience in the context of geography is an adaptation process in which a local community is reconstructed after a disaster to achieve a new phase of low vulnerability. The Moune district is examined from interviews and document surveys carried out from 2012 through 2016. It is suggested that resilience functioned successfully: people in the local community quickly agreed to resettle to a new residential quarter on higher ground and the resettlement project was completed successfully. The social capital formed in the context of local history and community based on the traditional culture and the economy contributed to forming a high level of resilience to the tsunami disaster. Geographical studies on resilience may facilitate an accurate understanding of tsunami-prone areas.</p>
  • YAGASAKI Taiyo, YOSHITSUGU Tsubasa
    Geographical Space, 7(2) 221-232, 2014  Peer-reviewed
  • YAGASAKI Taiyo, ICHINOSE Tomohiro
    JOURNAL OF RURAL PLANNING ASSOCIATION, 32(Special Issue) 209-215, Nov, 2013  Peer-reviewed
    This study attempts to find out the regional memory and image shared by residents before the Great East Japan Earthquake of March 11, 2011. Oral histories were obtained by conducting interviews in a small community of Moune in Kesennuma City, Miyagi Prefecture from March through December, 2012. Two analyses, the correspondence analysis based on text mining and the spatial analysis using GIS, were applied to the oral histories of seventeen residents. The regional image and memory before the earthquake were thus extracted, which help local residents to plan and implement community-based reconstruction.

Misc.

 8

Books and Other Publications

 3

Presentations

 49

Teaching Experience

 16

Research Projects

 1