SumAll.org and Humanitarian Tracker teamed up with WIRED UK to visualize data about the killing of women and girls in Syria.
Image via WIRED UK
SumAll.org has been working with Humanitarian Tracker since early 2013 to analyze causes of death for civilians in the Syria crisis using crowdsourced and verified data. Our work was featured in the July 2014 issue of WIRED UK in an infographic titled War’s Wheel of Destruction, which illustrates the causes of death for women and girls. The infographic highlights specific types of killings, identifying them as targeted attacks, in pink, or collateral damage, in yellow.
War’s Wheel of Destruction from WIRED UK (July 2014).
Copy - Madhu Venkataramanan; Illustration - Signal Noise.
Crowdsourcing Crisis Data Collection
Crowdsourcing is all the rage. Yet while usually associated with funding creative projects or providing resources to students, crowdsourcing can also be leveraged as a critical tool in times of crisis. From the earthquake in Haiti to Hurricane Sandy, citizens and civic techies have joined together to use crowdsourcing as a way to quickly gather information in times of crisis. The data collected from these sources can send rapid alerts to humanitarian organizations, while also providing critical information for journalists, stakeholders and citizens.
SumAll.org’s partner Humanitarian Tracker is a crowdsourcing initiative developed by Syrian-Americans based in the United States. Syria Tracker, a project of Humanitarian Tracker, has been crowdsourcing information on casualties in Syria since April 2011; they rely primarily on existing networks and organizations in Syria that submit online reports to their website. They also carry out data-mining of social media and produce separate aggregate reports on deaths and other violations. Syria Tracker makes all of its aggregated and disaggregated data available on its website.
For more information on female, and other, killings in Syria, see our white paper: Rising Proportion of Female Deaths in Syria and our interactive dashboard. Additional information on this project is available on SumAll.org’s website.
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Scooped by
Beth Kanter
onto Visualization Techniques and Practice July 21, 2014 9:46 AM
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