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Comparing Japan and Haiti

Comparing Japan and Haiti. Japan Haiti. March 11, 2011 9.03 magnitude 6,023 injured tsunami resulted in over 340,000 displaced people eleven n uclear power reactors, were shut down. January 12 2012 7.0 magnitude 3,500,000 people affected 220,000 people estimated to have died

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Comparing Japan and Haiti

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  1. Comparing Japan and Haiti

  2. Japan Haiti • March 11, 2011 • 9.03 magnitude • 6,023 injured • tsunami resulted in over 340,000 displaced people • eleven nuclear power reactors, were shut down • January 12 2012 • 7.0 magnitude • 3,500,000 people affected • 220,000 people estimated to have died • 300,000+ people were injured • Over 188,383 houses were badly damaged and 105,000 were destroyed by the earthquake (293,383 in total), • 1.5m people became homeless

  3. Japan before and after • http://news.nationalpost.com/2012/02/09/see-how-japan-has-rebuilt-in-the-11-months-since-the-earthquake-and-tsunami/ • Haiti Documentary • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uS4EMk_H0lQ

  4. Haiti Before the Earthquake • Haiti was 145th of 169 countries in the UN Human Development Index, which is the lowest in the Western Hemisphere • 70% of people in Haiti were living on less than $US2 per day • 86% of people in Port au Prince were living in slum conditions - mostly tightly-packed, poorly-built, concrete buildings. • 80% of education in Haiti was provided in often poor-quality private schools, the state system generally provided better education but provided far too few places • Half of people in Port-au-Prince had no access to latrines and only one-third has access to tap water

  5. Japan Before the Earthquake • Modern MDC

  6. Which country recovered? • What issues should we consider

  7. NGOs • A non-governmental organization (NGO) is a citizen-based association that operates independently of government, usually to deliver resources or serve some social or political purpose. The World Bank classifies NGOs as either operational NGOs, which are primarily concerned with development projects, or advocacy NGOs, which are primarily concerned with promoting a cause. • Donations are an NGO's lifeline because they are independent organizations.

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