利用社交媒体和数字人道主义者在加拿大建立抗灾能力

Kate Kaminska
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引用次数: 2

摘要

社交媒体提供了与公众联系的机会,提高了对形势的认识,并迅速向人们发出警报、警告和准备信息。然而,社交网络的日益普及也可能导致“信息过载”,这可能会阻止灾害管理组织有效地处理和使用社交媒体信息。这一限制可以通过与“数字人道主义者”的合作来克服。“数字人道主义者”是指精通技术的志愿者,他们在绘制危机地图和灾难信息众包方面处于领先地位。自2010年海地地震以来,他们的参与已成为国际社会应对重大灾害的重要组成部分。例如,联合国人道主义事务协调厅(UNOCHA)在2013年应对台风“海燕/约兰达”(Haiyan/Yolanda)期间启动了数字人道主义网络[1]。我们之前的研究表明,加拿大的灾害管理界尚未充分利用社交媒体提供的所有机会,包括与数字人道主义者合作的潜力[2]。这一发现导致了一项实验的发展,该实验旨在测试社交媒体辅助协作如何能够增强态势感知并改善恢复结果。该实验于2014年11月进行,是第三次加拿大-美国增强弹性实验(CAUSE III)的一部分,该实验系列侧重于通过态势感知互操作性增强弹性。本文描述了该实验的结果以及加拿大为促进灾害管理官员、数字人道主义者以及广大公众之间的有效信息交流所做的努力,从而提高社区和国家层面的态势感知和建立复原力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Tapping into social media and digital humanitarians for building disaster resilience in Canada
Social media offers the opportunity to connect with the public, improve situational awareness, and to reach people quickly with alerts, warnings and preparedness messages. However, the ever increasing popularity of social networking can also lead to `information overload' which can prevent disaster management organizations from processing and using social media information effectively. This limitation can be overcome through collaboration with `digital humanitarians' - tech savvy volunteers, who are leading the way in crisis-mapping and crowdsourcing of disaster information. Since the 2010 earthquake in Haiti, their involvement has become an integral part of the international community's response to major disasters. For example, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA) activated the Digital Humanitarian Network during the 2013 response to typhoon Haiyan/Yolanda [1]. Our previous research has shown that Canada's disaster management community has not yet fully taken advantage of all the opportunities that social media offers, including the potential of collaboration with digital humanitarians [2]. This finding has led to the development of an experiment designed to test how social media aided collaboration can enable enhanced situational awareness and improve recovery outcomes. The experiment took place in November 2014 as a part of the third Canada-US Enhanced Resiliency Experiment (CAUSE III), which is an experiment series that focuses on enhancing resilience through situational awareness interoperability. This paper describes the results of the experiment and Canadian efforts to facilitate effective information exchange between disaster management officials, digital humanitarians as well as the public at large, so as to improve situational awareness and build resilience, both at the community and the national level.
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