Citizen science initiatives in high-impact weather and disaster risk reduction
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Date
20/12/2021
DOI
Open Access Location
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Massey University
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Abstract
High-impact weather events cause considerable social
and economic harm, with these effects likely to increase
as climate change drives extremes and population
growth leads to commensurate growth in exposure.
As part of the World Meteorological Organization’s
World Weather Research Programme, the 10-year
High-Impact Weather (HIWeather) Project facilitates
global cooperation and collaboration to improve weather
prediction, forecasting, and warning. As part of this,
the HIWeather Citizen Science Project identifies and
promotes activities which involve citizens in the warning
value chain, from “sensors” where they passively provide
data, through to “collaborators” where they are involved
in designing, running, interpreting, and applying the
research. As well as benefitting global efforts to reduce
societal impacts of weather and other natural hazards,
citizen science also encourages hazard awareness and
scientific literacy and interest. This editorial introduces
the HIWeather Citizen Science Project special issue,
summarizing the three papers in this issue in the broader
context of high-impact weather and citizen science.
Description
Keywords
citizen science, high-impact weather, earthquakes, disaster risk reduction
Citation
Australasian Journal of Disaster and Trauma Studies, 2021, 25 (3), pp. 55 - 55 (60)