Crisis mapping involves using real-time data and mapping technologies to support humanitarian response efforts during conflicts and disasters. It has grown from grassroots volunteer efforts into a more organized field. Crisis mapping allows anyone to contribute information and has supported responses like following the 2010 Haiti earthquake. The decentralized nature of crisis mapping makes it flexible and able to rapidly adapt to changing needs during crises.
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Crisis Mapping
1. Crisis Mapping By Tom Weinandy, Class of 2011 Conflict & Disaster Response in the Digital Age
2. What It Is According to a prominent blog about crisis mapping entitled iRevolution by Patrick Meier, it is where “scholars, practitioners,and communities alike are working together to create, analyze, visualize and use real-time data for humanitarian response and post-conflict reconstruction and development.” Crisis Map Japan
3. Hypothesis The decentralized structure of crisis mapping and its foundation in a community approach to information gathering and application allow it to rapidly change to the current needs of the people that utilize it. As technologies, methods, and data improve, crisis mapping will continue to modify how it is used in study and practice to understand past conflicts, present crises and future prevention.
6. Origins at John Carroll University The International Network of Crisis Mappers (CM*Net) was born from the 2009 conference at JCU. Three months later the network responded to the 2010 earthquake in Haiti.
7. Volunteer Network The success of Crisis Mapping has come from its decentralized structure. This was shown in Haiti when the largest response to the disaster came from volunteers spread out across the world. Map of CM*Net Members
8. Future Response “The Standby Task Force (SBTF) rises to the challenge of turning the adhoc groups of tech-savvy mapping volunteers that emerge around crises into a flexible, trained and prepared network ready to deploy.”
11. Works Cited "About." The Standby Task Force. Word Press. Web. 29 Mar. 2011. <http://blog.standbytaskforce.com/?page_id=2>. Meier, Patrick. "Proposing the Field of Crisis Mapping." Web log post. iRevolution. Word Press, 8 Aug. 2009. Web. 8 Dec. 2010.