• News
  • The 103rd WIAPS Seminar (Feb. 9th)

The 103rd WIAPS Seminar (Feb. 9th)

The 103rd WIAPS Seminar (Feb. 9th)

0209

MON 2026
Place
ZOOM Webinar
Time
12:25-13:00
Posted
Thu, 29 Jan 2026

Date & Time

Feb. 9, 2026 (Monday) 12:25-13:00

Venue

ZOOM Webinar

Intended Audience

WIAPS Full-time Faculty/Research Associates, WIAPS Exchange Researchers/Visiting Scholars/Visiting Researchers, GSAPS MA/Ph.D. Students

Presentation

Presenter

NGULUBE, Nombulelo Kitsepile (Assistant Professor [non-tenure-track], WIAPS)

Presentation Theme

From Frequent Shocks to Future Catastrophe: Public Risk Perception of the Nankai Trough Earthquake

(Conducted in English)

Abstract

Japan’s contemporary risk environment is marked by recurrent seismic activity and enduring expectations of a catastrophic Nankai Trough megathrust earthquake. Although Japan possesses advanced disaster risk reduction systems and extensive scientific knowledge of seismic hazards, individual-level preparedness remains uneven and unstable. This paradox highlights the central role of how individuals perceive and interpret risk. Risk perception refers to individuals’ subjective assessments of the likelihood, severity, and personal relevance of a hazard and is widely recognized as a key driver of preparedness behaviour. Yet, despite its theoretical importance, individual risk perception has been insufficiently examined in relation to recurrent earthquake exposure.

Existing research has largely focused on major disaster events or aggregate-level analyses, overlooking how frequent earthquakes shape individuals’ perceptions of vulnerability, urgency, and agency in everyday contexts. This study addresses this gap by conceptualizing earthquake risk perception as an individual-level psychological process and by proposing a theory-driven framework to examine how recent seismic activity influences preparedness for the anticipated Nankai Trough earthquake. Drawing on Protection Motivation Theory and the Social Amplification of Risk Framework. By foregrounding how individuals perceive and respond to earthquake risk, this research advances understanding of preparedness dynamics in high-hazard societies and offers timely insights for designing disaster risk reduction strategies that align with how people actually experience risk.