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I.

INTRODUCTION

Both Tokyo and Dubai are huge cities which have a unique charm and vibrancy. It can be
challenging to picture them side by side, with some striking similarities and sharp contrasts. Tokyo
is the capital of Japan and the world's most populous metropolis. Tokyo provides what seems like
countless options for food, shopping, entertainment, and culture. The city's inhabitants also adore
Tokyo's abundance of lovely green places. Dubai is a newer city in comparison. With its
beginnings as a pearl-mining location and a stop on the commerce route from India, it has grown
in a way that defies explanation over the past 30 years. They are remarkably dissimilar. Dubai has
evolved into a melting pot of several cultures thanks to its Arabic roots and foreign influences.
They are vastly different. Dubai, with the Arabic foundation and the expat influences, has become
a melting pot of different opportunities and adventures. With an apparent focus on monetary
wealth and material possessions, it is very much a city strewn with status symbols. When you dig
a bit deeper, you find firmly held beliefs that value family, tradition and religion near to the heart.

II. CONTENT
II. DISCUSSION

Dubai experiences two distinct summer and winter seasons, with year-round warm temperatures.
The summer months (between June and August) have average temperatures of over 300C, with
January having the lowest average temperature of roughly 200C. Since Dubai experiences warm
to hot weather all year round and receives 8 to 10 hours of sunlight on average every day, water
parks are always a fun alternative for families. Weather-wise, December to March is often the
greatest season to visit Dubai, and it also pairs well with pleasant conditions in places like the
Maldives for multi-centre vacations that include a stop in Dubai. If you're traveling in the desert, it's
advisable to have lightweight, comfortable clothing to keep cool. Japan has four distinct seasons
with a climate ranging from subarctic in the north to subtropical in the south. Conditions are
different between the Pacific side and the Sea of Japan side.

III. CONCLUSION

Resilience is the capacity of a system, community, or society to withstand, absorb, accommodate,


transform, and recover from the effects of a hazard in a timely and effective manner, including
through the preservation and restoration of its fundamental basic structures and functions through
risk management. Climate change, globalization, urbanization, technological advancement, and
demographic trends are the key trans-formative factors at work in today's world. A resilient society
acknowledges these forces and creates solutions to confront systemic difficulties and turn them
into opportunities. Thus, developing resilience is a complex challenge. Focusing on the economic,
social, and environmental aspects of sustainable development in an integrated manner is
essential to eradicating poverty, promoting shared prosperity, and leaving no one behind. The
economic, social, political, environmental, geographic, and institutional vulnerabilities of a country
are exposed by abrupt, disruptive events brought on by internal or external sources. Economic
crises, natural disasters, and other environmental (or climate-related), health-related, and human-
made (including technological1) risks are examples of these shocks. Individuals, population
groupings, or regions within nations may be more vulnerable than others. When shocks occur, the
severity of their impact on individuals, society and the environment depend on the level of
vulnerability and exposure, preparedness, and recovery capacities. This cuts across multiple
areas, including urban planning and infrastructure, food security, economic structures, insurance
mechanisms, social protection systems and public institutions that are key to recovery.
V. REFERENCES

Environmental issues in the United Arab Emirates. (2016, September 7). Wikipedia, the free
encyclopedia. Retrieved August 26, 2022, from
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_issues_in_the_United_Arab_Emirates

How the climate crisis impacts Japan. (n.d.). Climate Reality Project.
https://www.climaterealityproject.org/blog/how-climate-crisis-impacts-japan

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