Tzavella, Katerina; Skopeliti, Andriani; Fekete, Alexander:
Volunteered Geographic Information Use in Crisis, Emergency and Disaster Management: A Scoping Review and a Web Atlas
In: Geo-Spatial Information Science (2022-11-11)
2022-11-11Essay / Article in JournalOA Gold
Faculty of Process Engineering, Energy and Mechanical Systems » Institute of Rescue Engineering and Civil Protection
Related: 1 publication(s)
Title in English:
Volunteered Geographic Information Use in Crisis, Emergency and Disaster Management: A Scoping Review and a Web Atlas
Author:
Tzavella, KaterinaTH Köln
DHSB-ID
THK0002625
ORCID
0000-0002-3345-3757ORCID iD
SCOPUS
56056310000
Other
person connected with TH Köln
;
Skopeliti, Andriani
SCOPUS
15045975000
;
Fekete, AlexanderTH Köln
DHSB-ID
THK0002192
ORCID
0000-0002-8029-6774ORCID iD
SCOPUS
33867547100
SCOPUS
57902805100
Other
person connected with TH Köln
Date published:
2022-11-11
„Publication Channel“:
OA Gold
Scopus ID
Language of text:
English
Keyword, Topic:
crisis management ; disaster management ; emergency management ; scoping review ; social media ; spatial bibliography ; Volunteered geographic information (VGI) ; web atlas
Type of resource:
Text
Access Rights:
open access
Peer Reviewed:
Peer Reviewed
Practice Partner:
No
Category:
Research
Part of statistic:
Part of statistic

Abstract in English:

Nowadays, an increasing number of crises worldwide, triggered by climate extremes, natural and human-made hazards, the coronavirus pandemic, and more, pose a high pressure on crisis, emergency, and disaster management. Spatial data and Volunteered Geographic Information (VGI) are key issues in the successful and immediate response to crises. This paper aims to explore the use of VGI in crisis management, including emergency and disaster management, based on a scoping review of existing literature in English for five years (2016–2020). Specifically, the research intends to answer Scoping Review Questions (SRQ) regarding the use of VGI in crisis, emergency, and disaster management, and the verified cases’ spatial distribution, the VGI sources utilized (e.g. OpenStreetMap–OSM, Crowdsourcing, Twitter), the types of hazards (e.g. natural and human-made hazards, pandemic), the specific tasks in crisis, emergency or disaster management and VGI use in the management of actual crisis events, e.g. COVID-19 pandemic, Hurricane Katrina, etc. Eligible papers on VGI use in crisis, emergency, and disaster management are geolocated based on first-author affiliation, and as a result, a spatial bibliography is provided. Thus, the term Spatial Scoping Review is introduced. Scoping Review Questions are answered, and the results are analyzed and discussed. Finally, implementing the “VGICED Atlas”, a web atlas, permits the publication of the research results to a broad audience and the visualization of the analysis with several interactive maps.