[Air-L] Anyone researching post-Sandy use of online groups and social media?
Balazs Lengyel
blengyel at gmail.com
Fri Nov 16 03:52:50 PST 2012
Hi Steven,
Thanks for your summary. I have found this twitter dataset at 140kit.org:
http://140kit.com/datasets/1028
Best,
Balazs
Balázs Lengyel
research fellow
International Business School Budapest
Tárogató út 2-4, Budapest
blengyel at ibs-b.hu
+36 30 4377807
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 2
> Date: Wed, 14 Nov 2012 23:07:41 -0600
> From: Steven Clift <slc at publicus.net>
> To: "Air-L at listserv.aoir.org" <air-l at listserv.aoir.org>,
> ciresearchers at vancouvercommunity.net
> Cc: Steven Clift <clift at e-democracy.org>
> Subject: [Air-L] Anyone researching post-Sandy use of online groups
> and social media?
> Message-ID:
> <CALAwQWrj1=
> v_2J+8fu0iwaPTARVjisO+C-u2q_u93ztCv9XJNg at mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
>
> This mother lode of mostly Facebook groups and pages may be of interest:
>
> http://bitly.com/sandygroups
>
> I'd be interested in what lessons can be pulled out overtime around
> which ones are most effective and what they really did on the ground
> in terms of impact.
>
> Groups go far beyond the limited impact of "Like" IMHO, but something
> deeper research wise would contribute a lot.
>
> On a related note here are some lessons I shared:
> http://bitly.com/localrecovery
>
> It is hard from a distance to determine what "dark social" nearest
> neighbor networking is happening online say along a destroyed stretch
> of beach. It would be fascinating to learn about any long-term
> e-networks created in urban buildings still uninhabitable and then
> what happens when folks return. I would guess that there are some
> online groups created for residents of specific buildings, but I
> haven't located any yet.
>
> If you reply, please cc: clift at e-democracy.org
>
> Thanks,
> Steven Clift
> http://stevenclift.com
>
>
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