Re: [Air-L] Anyone researching post-Sandy use of online groups and social media?
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@ibs-b.hu +36 30 4377807
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Message: 2 Date: Wed, 14 Nov 2012 23:07:41 -0600 From: Steven Clift <slc@publicus.net> To: "Air-L@listserv.aoir.org" <air-l@listserv.aoir.org>, ciresearchers@vancouvercommunity.net Cc: Steven Clift <clift@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@mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
This mother lode of mostly Facebook groups and pages may be of interest:
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@e-democracy.org
Thanks, Steven Clift http://stevenclift.com
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Balazs Lengyel