How Ushahidi is Using Crowdsourcing to Help Community Disaster Response and Recovery
Description
In this episode, I chat with Angela Oduor Lungati, the CEO of Ushahidi. Ushahdi is a mobile platform dubbed “Africa’s Gift to Silicon Valley” by the New York Times. Born out of a crisis, the open-source software enables virtually anyone with a cellphone or internet connection to efficiently crowd-source information, map it and share it with those the most in need and guide those who can provide aid. Ushahidi is a powerful planning and decision-making tool for communities and cities in the midst of an emergency and has been used by groups worldwide to track everything from COVID-19 recovery to police brutality and everything in between.
In this episode, you'll learn about:
- how Ushahidi has been leveraged by communities and governments worldwide,
- how to keep communities at the center of innovation,
- and much more!
Guest: Angela Oduor Lungati, CEO of Ushahidi
- Website: www.ushahidi.com
- Twitter: @AngieNicoleOD | @Ushahidi
- Instagram: @Ushahidi
- Donate: give.ushahidi.com
Acknowledgements:
This episode is co-sponsored by the University of Toronto School of Cities and the Department of Geography and Planning.
About Urban Limitrophe:
Please visit www.urbanlimitrophe.com for all episode show notes and references and guest details.
Instagram & Twitter: @urbanlimitrophe
Please address any related communication to hello[at]urbanlimitrophe.com
Credits:
Music and editing by Imany Lambropoulos
Podcast concept, development, and design by Alexandra Lambropoulos
What makes a city truly smart? Or just? The answer lies with the people.
In this episode, we explore the human-centric side of Smart Cities with our guest Titus Kaloki from the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung Kenya office. Through their Just Cities Project, Titus is on a mission to make cities both...
Published 10/24/24
What if the true architects of our cities are not the government officials or urban planners, but the communities who live in them? In this episode, we dive deep into a provocative question: When governments fail to provide essential services like water and electricity, and communities step up to...
Published 09/16/24