USE OF ICT4D IN PARTECIPATORY INFORMATION MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS ICT4D and CROWDSOURCING Anahi Ayala Iacucci - anahi @crisismappers. net SIPA, Columbia University January 2011
USE OF ICT4D IN PARTECIPATORY INFORMATION MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
ICT4D and CROWDSOURCING
Anahi Ayala Iacucci - [email protected]
SIPA, Columbia UniversityJanuary 2011
Information and Communication Technologies for Development (ICT4Dev) is a general term referring to the application of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) within the fields of socioeconomic development, international development and human rights.
What is ICT4 D?
CROWDSOURCING: The act of outsourcing tasks, traditionally performed by an employee to a large group of people or community (a crowd), through an open call for action. Jeff Howe coined the term in June 2006 explaining that because technological advances have allowed for cheap consumer electronics, the gap between professionals and amateurs has been diminished.
What is CROWDSOURCING?
Information in development related projects is as important as food and water
Local communities know what is going on on the ground in real time *and* before professional responders
The ability to collect information is limited by the availability of sources of information: more sources, more information
Affected population get engaged in the process because they have an interest in the outcome
Crowdsourcing is relatively cheaper than the use of selected monitoring teams
Crowdsourcing allow for triangulation of information permitting verification and accountability
ADVANTAGES OF USING CROWDSOURCING
Unbounded crowd-sourcing: potentially all the people can report. This system allows for an unlimited number of information to come in, but lack in reliability of information.
Bounded crowd-sourcing: the reporting is done by a specific trusted group. This system allows for verified information to come in but is subjected to the limitation of the limited source.
Combined bounded and unbounded crowd-sourcing: information are collected by a specific group of people, but also by the crowd. Reliable sources and unreliable sources are combines. This system allows for:
I. increase in overall reportingII. Increase in the ability to validate reports from unknown sources
TYPOLOGIES OF CROWDSOURCING METHODS
COMPONENTS OF A CROWDSOURCING PROJECT
ISSUE
CROWD
TOOLS
ANALYSIS
ACTION
MONITORING & EVALUATION
Ankit Sharma from the London School of Economics (LSE) author of “Crowdsourcing Critical Success Factor Model”
CROWDFEEDING: the need for the crowd to share information with the crowd, ie, not top-down, or bottom-up, but information from the crowd, for the crowd; horizontal communication. The act of sharing information out to a large group of people or community, through an open sharing system. In the same time for the international community it means to share all available information with all stakeholders to allow better decisions to be taken and better actions to be implemented.
CROWDFEEDING
Local populations are the first responders on the ground so the more they know, the better they respond
Information increase resilience and is the base for preparedness
The Crowd is always there
Information sharing is the base for a coordinated meaningful response
Local population normally knows what to do and has local copying mechanisms
WHY CROWDFEEDING?
HOW TO USE CROWDSOURCING AND WHAT TO BE AWARE OF
CROWDSOURCING IS NOT PERFECT METHODOLOGY AND IT IS NOT ALWAYS NECESSARY
CROWDSOURCING AND CROWDFEEDING PROJECTS NEED TO TAKE INTO CONSIDERATION THE IMPORTANCE OF INFORMATION
IT IS ALWAYS BETTER TO START WITH A SMALL PROJECT AND THEN SCALE UP THAN THE CONTRARY
NEVER CHOOSE A TOOL AND THEN DECIDE WHAT TO USE IT FOR
CROWDSOURCING CAN BE COMBINED WITH OTHER METHODOLOGIES
VERIFICATION
STRUCTURE
IMPACT
SUSTAINABILITY
RISK AND PROBLEMES OF CROWDSOURCING SYSTEMS
EXAMPLES OF ICT4D AND CROWDSOURCING PROJECT
Kenya: The TextHealth Project
U-Shahid Deployment
On the 2nd of Feb., in response to the continued blackout of the Internet in Egypt, Google and Twitter announced that they had set up phone numbers in Egypt for protesters to call into, that would then automatically be turned into voicemail messages, that would then be tweeted out on the account @Speak2Tweet. The immediate point of this system is not to help organize within Egypt, but hopefully to offer a way for Egyptians to literally speak to the rest of the world.
To further this aim, a number of volunteers outside of Egypt have decided to collaborate online to get those voicemails – which are mainly in Arabic – translated into English.
Egypt: Speak2Tweet
Zambia: climate change and resilience
Sudan: crisis mapping in repressive regimes
THANK YOU!
Anahi Ayala [email protected]