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Open Data for Resilience John Crowley

Open Data for Resilience John Crowley. To use science , technology & innovation to inform decision making and reduce the vulnerability of the developing world to disasters in a changing climate. We empower decision makers in the countries where we work. Hazard .

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Open Data for Resilience John Crowley

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  1. Open Data for Resilience John Crowley

  2. To use science, technology& innovationto informdecisionmaking and reducethe vulnerabilityof the developing world to disastersin a changingclimate

  3. Weempowerdecisionmakers in the countrieswherewe work

  4. Hazard Exposure/Vulnerability x Risk

  5. Without high-resolutionexposure and vulnerability data, high-resolutionhazardmodelsare notasuseful x =

  6. OpenDRIconfronts a challenge: How to enableour clients to build the information theyneed to drive theirdecisionsaboutmanagingrisk

  7. Data mightnotexist

  8. Some data mayexistbutisinaccessible: not open, fragmented, or locked in proprietarysystems or files

  9. Or data mayexist and be accessible, butour clients lack the tools or capacity to use iteffectively

  10. Without open data, at-riskpopulationsstruggle to makeinformeddecisions

  11. Why Open Data for Resilience?

  12. Open data is the foundation of the scientific method. It has become the foundation of open government.

  13. The World Bank launched its open data initiative in 2011.

  14. Key Principles of Open Data Accessible at published address (URI) using open data standards allowing for the discovery of related data all under a license that allows for reuse

  15. Open Data for Resilience (OpenDRI) aims to reduce the impact of disasters by empowering decision makers with better information and tools to support their decisions.

  16. OpenDRIworks with partners to collect and curate high-resolutionexposure data using open technologies

  17. Wherecollectors and curators are the members of communitiesatrisk

  18. We help governments and partnersopen their data usingopen source tools and open standards

  19. Weempowerlocaldecisionmakers to use theirownlocal data to drive localdecisions

  20. In partnership with scientists, we combine hazardmodels with exposure data to create riskmodels

  21. and target investments in DRR activitiesthathave the greatestpotential impact Scenario analysis for emergency preparedness Visualization of hazard and risk Immediate damage assessment Territorial planning Analysis of financial exposure Infrastructure design Cost Benefit analysis for mitigation and prevention investments Climate Change

  22. OpenDRI: Nepal Open data and community engagement creates a more dynamic and engaged understanding of risk and resilience. UNDP Photo

  23. A Plan to Increase Resilience in Kathmandu Analyze the Seismic Hazard Map the Exposure and Vulnerability DevelopDetailed Seismic Risk Assessment Create a Portfolio of Activities to Increase Resilience Invest in retrofitting critical assets Re-think Urban Planning Consider Financial Protection Prepare for the worst

  24. A community of volunteers: making a difference, and learning about resilience through mapping their own city

  25. Building Women Mappers through tailored training and events

  26. Addition of exposure data intoOpenStreetMapis easy to train.

  27. RapidlyMapped City of Kathmandu

  28. RapidlyMapped City of Kathmandu

  29. RapidlyMapped City of Kathmandu

  30. RapidlyMapped City of Kathmandu

  31. Building capacity to undertake a comprehensive seismic risk assessment using open source techniques

  32. Partnering with sector experts and technologists to support the development of software applications

  33. Creating an ecosystem around open data between partners. Local curation of local data Work with existing systems Pull in dynamic data feeds from partners

  34. GeoNode allows partners to expose and share data stored on their own GeoNodes

  35. John Crowley Consultant Open Data for Resilience GFDRR Labs The World Bank Group jcrowley@worldbank.org

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