50 research outputs found
An offline–online Web-GIS Android application for fast data acquisition of landslide hazard and risk
Regional landslide assessments and mapping have been
effectively pursued by research institutions, national and local
governments, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and different stakeholders for some time, and a wide range
of methodologies and technologies have consequently been proposed. Land-use
mapping and hazard event inventories are mostly created by remote-sensing
data, subject to difficulties, such as accessibility and terrain, which need
to be overcome. Likewise, landslide data acquisition for the field
navigation can magnify the accuracy of databases and analysis. Open-source
Web and mobile GIS tools can be used for improved ground-truthing of
critical areas to improve the analysis of hazard patterns and triggering
factors. This paper reviews the implementation and selected results of a
secure mobile-map application called ROOMA (Rapid Offline–Online Mapping
Application) for the rapid data collection of landslide hazard and risk.
This prototype assists the quick creation of landslide inventory maps (LIMs)
by collecting information on the type, feature, volume, date, and patterns of
landslides using open-source Web-GIS technologies such as Leaflet maps,
Cordova, GeoServer, PostgreSQL as the real DBMS (database management system),
and PostGIS as its plug-in for spatial database management. This application
comprises Leaflet maps coupled with satellite images as a base layer, drawing
tools, geolocation (using GPS and the Internet), photo mapping, and event
clustering. All the features and information are recorded into a
GeoJSON text file in an offline version (Android) and subsequently uploaded
to the online mode (using all browsers) with the availability of Internet.
Finally, the events can be accessed and edited after approval by an
administrator and then be visualized by the general public
Opportunities for considering green infrastructure and ecosystems in the Sendai Framework Monitor
Ecosystem-based disaster risk reduction has gained attention to complement or replace grey infrastructure. The paper explores ways in which ecosystems and green infrastructure (GI) are critical infrastructure in the context of disaster risk reduction to report respective losses in the Sendai Framework Monitor (SFM). We argue that reporting on GI under indicators D-4 and C-5 in the SFM represent an opportunity for tracking losses, yet do not provide direct information on progress made in reducing risk. Custom targets and indicators according to countries' needs within the SFM might be a more practical opportunity to report on both losses and progress
Invited perspectives: Mountain roads in Nepal at a new crossroads
In Nepal and many developing countries around the world, roads are vehicles
for development for communities in rural areas. By reducing travel time on
foot, opportunities are opened for quicker transportation of goods and better
access to employment, education, health care and markets. Roads
also fuel migration and numerous social changes, both positive and negative.
Poorly constructed roads in mountainous areas of Nepal have increased erosion
and landslide risk as they often cut through fragile geology, destabilizing
slopes and altering local hydrological conditions, with costs to lives and
livelihoods. The convergence of the newly constituted decentralized Nepali
government with China's Belt and Road Initiative is likely to bring more
roads to rural communities. The new provincial government administrations now
have the opportunity to develop policies and practices, which can realign the
current trend of poorly engineered, inefficient and hazardous road
construction toward a more sustainable trajectory. This commentary provides
an overview of some of the obstacles along the way for a more sustainable
road network in Nepal and illustrates how good governance, development and
landslide risk are intertwined. The opinion presented in this brief
commentary lends little hope that Nepal's current pathway of unsustainable
road construction will provide the country with the much-needed sustainable
road network, unless checks and balances are put in place to curb
noncompliance with existing laws and policies.</p
Pacific island regional preparedness for El Niño
The El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) cycle is often blamed for disasters in Pacific island communities. From a disaster risk reduction (DRR) perspective, the challenges with the El Niño part of the ENSO cycle, in particular, are more related to inadequate vulnerability reduction within development than to ENSO-induced hazard influences. This paper analyses this situation, filling in a conceptual and geographic gap in El Niño-related research, by reviewing El Niño-related preparedness (the conceptual gap) for Pacific islands (the geographic gap). Through exploring El Niño impacts on Pacific island communities alongside their vulnerabilities, resiliences, and preparedness with respect to El Niño, El Niño is seen as a constructed discourse rather than as a damaging phenomenon, leading to suggestions for El Niño preparedness as DRR as part of development. Yet the attention which El Niño garners might bring resources to the Pacific region and its development needs, albeit in the short term while El Niño lasts. Conversely, the attention given to El Niño could shift blame from underlying causes of vulnerability to a hazard-centric viewpoint. Instead of focusing on one hazard-influencing phenomenon, opportunities should be created for the Pacific region to tackle wider DRR and development concerns