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No.210

  May 5, 2009
Message from a Remote Island - The Challenge of Sustainable Regional Revitalization
Michio Yamauchi
Mayor of Ama-cho, Oki-no-Kuni
Selected Papers No.12 pdf
The Japanese have Forgotten the Gratitude They Owe to the “Frontier Guards” of the Ocean
Misa Sakurabayashi
Journalist
Strengthening of Systems for Investigation of Marine Accidents: the Establishment of the Japan Transport Safety Board
Kouichi Yunoki
Director General, Japan Transport Safety Board

Message from a Remote Island - The Challenge of Sustainable Regional Revitalization

Michio Yamauchi
Mayor of Ama-cho, Oki-no-Kuni

Ama-cho in Oki County, Shimane Prefecture, is a remote oceanic island surrounded by the Sea of Japan. At one time, the island was on the verge of financial ruin. Then bold administrative and fiscal reforms were pushed through under the philosophy of "suffer now, enjoy later". A strategy that turned the island into its own "brand" was proposed; strenuous efforts have been made to create new merchandise, industries and employment, drawing on the local resources that exist on the island. In the process, perhaps, we have glimpsed the ideal lifestyle for a sustainable island nation that makes use of the oceans.

The Japanese have Forgotten the Gratitude They Owe to the “Frontier Guards” of the Ocean

Misa Sakurabayashi
Journalist

It cannot be said that the Japanese have a high level of interest in the sealanes. 
We do not think of the people who protect the ocean nor properly thank them. On the occasion of the dispatch of the Maritime Self Defense Force to waters off Somalia, we should reform our attitudes and do away with this neglect unworthy of an ocean state.

Strengthening of Systems for Investigation of Marine Accidents: the Establishment of the Japan Transport Safety Board

Kouichi Yunoki
Director General, Japan Transport Safety Board

The Japan Transport Safety Board (JTSB) was established by integrating the Japan Marine Accident Inquiry Agency (JMAIA) and the Aircraft and Railway Accidents Investigation Commission (ARAIC) on 1 October 2008, in order to enhance and combine investigation capacities for dealing with the causes of aircraft, marine and railway accidents/incidents and to prevent their recurrences. This integration resulted in the Japan Transport Safety Board carrying out investigations into the causes of air, marine and rail accidents and the Japan Marine Accident Tribunal taking disciplinary actions against licenses of seafarers. This article gives the background to the reorganization and overviews of the new entities.

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