JOURNAL OF RURAL PLANNING ASSOCIATION
Online ISSN : 1881-2309
Print ISSN : 0912-9731
ISSN-L : 0912-9731
Volume 32, Issue 1
Displaying 1-14 of 14 articles from this issue
Theme Issue: Interaction of Local Forestry Management and Rural Planning
Studies
Special Feature: Recovery from the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami, No.9 Planning and Problems on Recovery Processes
Articles
  • Daisuke NAKAMURA, Yutaka YOSHIDA, Yasuo MATSUMOTO
    Article type: Article
    2013 Volume 32 Issue 1 Pages 65-71
    Published: June 30, 2013
    Released on J-STAGE: June 30, 2014
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The issues of human-wildlife conflict have been nationwide expanding because distribution and population of pest species has been increased. Recently, Wildlife Damage has become a serious human-wildlife issues not only in rural area but also in suburban area. In this paper, we examine public attitude corresponded to damage risk by Japanese macaques in suburban area, Fujiyoshida city and Fujikawaguchiko town, Yamanashi prefecture. In the investigation area, wildlife damage caused by wild macaques of the Yoshida troop is very serious. We conducted 1) damage risk estimation and 2) questionnaire survey to evaluate public attitude toward damage perception, method to prevent damage and concerning to conduct countermeasures, then compared public attitude among damage risk stages. The questionnaire survey was conducted 1,549 residents located within 300m from forest edge (valid response: 643). As a result, damage perception showed similar trend to damage risk, so approximately 70 percent of residents into high risk area was thought damage by macaques has been more serious. Spatial distribution of crop damage was more expanded than that of household damage. Positive and negative attitude toward method to prevent damage by monkeys was coexisted in same area, excluded high risk region. Therefore, we conclude that residents' cooperation and active action to prevent damage is difficult because of their variance attitude and coexisted variance cultivation scale, so we propose that participation of education department are needed to introduce the public the realities of damage prevention.
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  • A Case Study of the Approach to Public Hospital Reform in the Oguni-Town, Yamagata Prefecture
    Shiori NIINUMA
    Article type: Article
    2013 Volume 32 Issue 1 Pages 72-81
    Published: June 30, 2013
    Released on J-STAGE: June 30, 2014
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    In recent years, public hospitals in Japan's rural areas, which are the main providers of medical care in rural areas, have been experiencing worsening financial conditions. In response, in 2007, the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications issued public hospital reform guidelines to local municipalities, requesting that they improve public hospital management as quickly as possible. Because the worsening fi nancial position of public hospitals is linked to their special organizational structure of strong ties with local governments, the guidelines urged making hospitals managerially independent from municipalities. However, in rural areas that would be especially strongly affected by the guidelines, the issue of medical care is an administrative issue of high public interest, and public hospitals and municipalities are linked inseparably. Consequently, whether the independence of public hospitals from municipalities as proposed by the guidelines is suitable for rural areas persists as an important research subject.
    This study, which was conducted to clarify management improvement measures for public hospitals in rural areas and benefi cial governance structures necessary to enable such measures, examined Oguni-Town in Yamagata Prefecture, which improved management of public hospitals without making them independent from municipalities. Measures adopted and implemented by the Oguni public hospital during 2008.2011, including the implementation of a change in the classification of hospital beds, promotion of medical examinations, and introduction of generic drugs, raised medical practice income and contributed to the improvement of management. These measures were developed through cooperation and the exchange of ideas among medical personnel of various specialties and local government officials. Such collaboration is a method that has been emphasized by Oguni-Town throughout its town planning activities. Through the use of common methods, administrative support for public hospital reform was obtained readily. Because the protection of medical care in rural areas is an important part of community building, it can be argued that maintaining a close relation between medical care providers and the community is important.
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