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Articles | Volume XL-8
https://doi.org/10.5194/isprsarchives-XL-8-1249-2014
https://doi.org/10.5194/isprsarchives-XL-8-1249-2014
28 Nov 2014
 | 28 Nov 2014

Capacity Building for collecting primary data through Crowdsourcing - An Example of Disaster affected Uttarakhand State (India)

Y. V. N. Krishna Murthy, P. L. N. Raju, S. K. Srivastav, P. Kumar, D. Mitra, H. Karnatak, S. Saran, K. Pandey, K. Oberai, K. Shiva Reddy, K. Gupta, M. Swamy, A. Deshmukh, V. K. Dadhwal, V. Bothale, P. G. Diwakar, M. V. Ravikumar, A. Leisely, M. Arulraj, S. Kumar, S. S. Rao, R. Singh Rawat, D. M. Pathak, V. Dutt, D. Negi, J. Singh, K. K. Shukla, A. Tomar, N. Ahmed, B. Singh, A. K. Singh, and R. Shiva Kumar

Keywords: Crowdsourcing, Capacity Building, Disaster Management, MANU, Mobile Application, Uttarakhand

Abstract. Uttarakhand State of India suffered a widespread devastation in June 2013 due to floods caused by excessive rain in the upper reaches of the Himalaya, glacial lake outburst flood (GLOF) and landslides. Restoration process in this mountainous State calls for scientifically sound planning so that the vulnerabilities and risks to such natural hazards are minimised and developmental processes are sustainable in long run. Towards this, an understanding of the patterns and major controls of damage of the recent disaster is a key requirement which can be achieved only if the primary data on locations and types of damage along with other local site conditions are available. Considering widespread damage, tough nature of terrain and the need for collecting the primary data on damage in shortest possible time, crowdsourcing approach was considered to be the most viable solution. Accordingly, a multiinstitutional initiative called "Map the Neighbourhood in Uttarakhand" (MANU) was conceptualised with the main objective of collecting primary data on damage through participation of local people (mainly students) using state-of-art tools and technologies of data collection and a mechanism to integrate the same with Bhuvan geo-portal (www.bhuvan.nrsc.gov.in) in near real-time. Geospatial analysis of crowd-sourced points with different themes has been carried out subsequently for providing inputs to restoration planning and for future developmental activities. The present paper highlights the capacity building aspect in enabling the data collection process using crowdsourcing technology.