Crisis information management : communication and technologies

Author(s)

    • Hagar, Christine

Bibliographic Information

Crisis information management : communication and technologies

edited by Christine Hagar

(Chandos information professional series)

Chandos, 2012

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book explores the management of information in crises, particularly the interconnectedness of information, people, and technologies during crises. Natural disasters, such as the Haiti earthquake and Hurricane Katrina, and 9/11 and human-made crises, such as the recent political disruption in North Africa and the Middle East, have demonstrated that there is a great need to understand how individuals, government, and non-government agencies create, access, organize, communicate, and disseminate information within communities during crisis situations. This edited book brings together papers written by researchers and practitioners from a variety of information perspectives in crisis preparedness, response and recovery.

Table of Contents

Dedication List of figures and tables Acknowledgments About the contributors Introduction Chapter 1: The effects of continual disruption: technological resources supporting resilience in regions of conflict Abstract: Introduction Technologies to aid resilient behavior Research setting Technological resources supporting resilience Concluding remarks Chapter 2: Law enforcement agency adoption and use of Twitter as a crisis communication tool Abstract: Introduction Background Research design Findings Discussion Conclusion Appendix: interview protocol Chapter 3: Promoting structured data in citizen communications during disaster response: an account of strategies for diffusion of the 'Tweak the Tweet' syntax Abstract: Introduction Social media and disaster: the emergence of the citizen reporter Twitter and its potential for citizen reporting during crises Tweak the Tweet: background and rationale TtT deployment for the Haiti earthquake: bootstrapping a nascent idea Chile earthquake: conceptualizing the deployment as a campaign Fourmile Canyon fire in Boulder, CO: unexpected local authority Other events Discussion: campaign to support diffusion of a socio-technical practice Conclusion Chapter 4: Heritage matters in crisis informatics: how information and communication technology can support legacies of crisis events Abstract: Introduction Disaster as a social process Living heritage and collective memory practices Overview of the research project Three crisis cases Discussion: a digital heritage agenda for the crisis domain Conclusion Acknowledgments Chapter 5: Information needs and seeking during the 2001 UK foot-and-mouth crisis Abstract: Introduction Findings Changes in information needs at different stages of the crisis Context in which information seeking took place Formal and informal channels of information seeking during the crisis Sense-making approach to information seeking during the crisis Overlap of information and emotional needs Trusted information sources Need for a mix of technologies Place and space and new venues and meeting places for communities in a crisis ICTs as a catalyst for innovation during the crisis Providing a local response to a national crisis Acknowledgments Chapter 6: The Ericsson Response - a ten-year perspective: in the light of experience Abstract: Key issues in emergency response phase 1: first response (days 1-14) Key issues in emergency response phase 2: establishment (days 15-30) Key issues in emergency response phase 3: consolidation (days 30 +) It's all about communication Opportunities for improvement Pushing the boundaries Potential for exploiting the leading edge Conclusion Chapter 7: Information systems in crisis Abstract: Introduction Exploring key information resources Fundamental components of an information environment Conclusions Chapter 8: Community media and civic action in response to volcanic hazards Abstract: Introduction Living with natural disasters Lintas Merapi: radio for people living in a high-risk area Living as refugees Social capital On the front line Conclusion Chapter 9: Public libraries and crisis management: roles of public libraries in hurricane/disaster preparedness and response Abstract: Introduction Background Project overview Public library hurricane service roles Joining the emergency response network The web portal: a technology for crisis management Next steps: public librarians as crisis managers Acknowledgments Chapter 10: Academic libraries in crisis situations: roles, responses, and lessons learned in providing crisis-related information and services Abstract: How academic libraries compare to public libraries in a crisis Further consideration of the specialized role of the academic library Case study: Louisiana State University The academic library as locus of disaster: response deterred and deferred Case study: Tulane University's Howard-Tilton Memorial Library Case study: University of Hawai'i at Manoa's Hamilton Library Academic libraries post-disaster: lessons learned and suggestions articulated Index

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Details

  • NCID
    BB07586686
  • ISBN
    • 9781843346470
  • Country Code
    uk
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Oxford
  • Pages/Volumes
    xxix, 197 p.
  • Size
    24 cm
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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