Difference between revisions of "Digital response ecosystem map"

From Digital Response
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
Line 11: Line 11:
  
 
==Current status and how to get involved==
 
==Current status and how to get involved==
The map draft is currently available to be viewed [https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Pt3hQpz0tXz0ROF5s39TzqoI1UzAFO4Tg1qpyMYgEsU/edit#gid=2130673778 here]. We welcome your feedback and contributions!
+
'''[https://docs.google.com/document/d/1PL3SAvdPg7XzpG5kfVW3hvEfD1hE6Kx95oAMwJENRdY/edit?usp=sharing North Star]''' : our in-process guiding document (or "concept note").
 +
 
 +
'''[https://airtable.com/shrN8OGsjYjCjjmR6/tblhLsKuNHNRo1PDz/viwZXkcUR6S0Uciis Backend]''' : where our collaboratively-held data lives.
  
 
We're hosting calls with allies in the digital response space to explore what components need to be present for a useful (but not overwhelming) ecosystem map. We recently explored and expanded the ecosystem map
 
We're hosting calls with allies in the digital response space to explore what components need to be present for a useful (but not overwhelming) ecosystem map. We recently explored and expanded the ecosystem map

Latest revision as of 23:03, 24 October 2016

Projects listed on this wiki are held by the wider community, and are listed here only for reference. Our goal is that they be worked on and owned in a distributed and communal way, and are thus Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike. All projects should be seen as open to feedback and as continual works in progress. Questions, comments, suggestions, etc can be sent to digitalresponse@aspirationtech.org.

Is there a digital response ecosystem?

The digital response to humanitarian and disaster events is chaotic. Official and specialized actors such as United Nations Office of Coordinated Humantiarian Affairs and Red Cross Red Crescent benefit from the new skills of digital tools and the processes they enable when they are able to fold these new tools into their existing structures. Frontline populations in affected regions continue to use digital tools like Signal and Facebook to organize themselves and coordinate response. Ad hoc community groups such as churches and schools are more and more often using their existing technical infrastructure and social media options to organize larger local relief efforts. And digital responders help to clean, structure, and utilize the massive amounts of information generated in times of crisis so those in the chaos can have more visibility to the requests, offers, and other factors in play around them.

The problem

While some official organizations have name-brand recognition, there is little understanding of local, emerging, and digital sectors. Flows of information, communication, and other aspects of coordination are poorly understood, even by those within the ecosystem.

Benefit of an Ecosystem Map

While a living thing, a snapshot of the digital response ecosystem could provide a shared view of the current actors and flows of data and communication. Our hope is that this shared view might provide better grounding for refining information flow, possibilities for collaboration, and shared infrastructure. We could thus begin to think more holistically about response, provide insights on how to make response infrastructure and mechanism more sustainable and scalable, and be able to easily share an overview to newcomers or other interested parties.

Current status and how to get involved

North Star : our in-process guiding document (or "concept note").

Backend : where our collaboratively-held data lives.

We're hosting calls with allies in the digital response space to explore what components need to be present for a useful (but not overwhelming) ecosystem map. We recently explored and expanded the ecosystem map

If you have thoughts on what aspects of organizations, patterns of crisis response, or what sorts of data are useful in disaster and humanitarian response, please let us know! You can also receive ongoing updates by following the digital response topic on our blog, subscribing to this page's RSS, or subscribing to the digital response mailing list.