Sustaining Citizen Science beyond an Emergency
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Lessons Learned in Design Related to SDG 9
“Assessing Use of Personal Protective Equipment in Ebola Response EffortsThe WHO has new protective equipment guidelines in response to the Ebola crisis. There is a PDF showing steps to putting on protective equipment. Since there is no known cure for Ebola, protection from infection is crucial in emergency response. Changes to this guidance in response to Ebola are explained by the CDC (US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention).This project is part of the Citizen Cyberlab project researching citizen science. It aims to raise awareness of Ebola emergency response efforts and to experiment with using GeoTag-X to support training about personal protective equipment. The results are experimental and do not directly contribute to Ebola response action. The UN has created the first-ever UN emergency health mission for this crisis, which includes a list of what is still needed. If you can contribute to the emergency needs listed by UNMEER, please focus your efforts there first.Images to begin this project are from Médecins Sans Frontières Australia, UNICEF Liberia, and the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies. Volunteers add new images to the project from other sources, and you can check these sources for licensing information. Here is an explanation of personal protective equipment (PPE) used in Ebola response from Médecins Sans Frontières…”[25]
3. Open Access, Open Data, and SDG 10
4. Collaborative Learning as SDG 4: Citizen Science Contributing to Education
I think that even people who have not got that much interest in designing their own programs, they still tend to go ‘oh why is that question worded in that way? I think that the question should be worded in some other way’. And so I think that it encourages people to strategically think about questions, and to think about how they might choose to word questions differently […] for example in that Github forum, there are already people saying “I would like to see this question worded that way” and there have been changes to the site based on that…[12] (pp. 109–110).
5. From the Ground Up: Does Locality Matter for SDG 9?
6. First Responders in Times of Change: SDG 13 and Converging Crises
By viewing the citizenry as a powerful, self-organizing, and collectively intelligent force, information communications technology (ICT) has the potential to play a remarkable and transformational role in the way society responds to mass emergencies and disaster. Furthermore, this view of a civil society that can be augmented by ICT is based on social and behavioral knowledge about how people truly respond in disaster, rather than on simplified and mythical portrayals of people unable to help themselves. Research has shown that disaster victims themselves are the true first responders, frequently acting on the basis of knowledge not available to officials[62] (pp. 1–2).
7. Conclusions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Calyx, C. Sustaining Citizen Science beyond an Emergency. Sustainability 2020, 12, 4522. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12114522
Calyx C. Sustaining Citizen Science beyond an Emergency. Sustainability. 2020; 12(11):4522. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12114522
Chicago/Turabian StyleCalyx, Cobi. 2020. "Sustaining Citizen Science beyond an Emergency" Sustainability 12, no. 11: 4522. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12114522
APA StyleCalyx, C. (2020). Sustaining Citizen Science beyond an Emergency. Sustainability, 12(11), 4522. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12114522