Through the Human Geography Lens WWHGD Support
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- Science
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A podcast by the World Wide Human Geography Data Working Group.
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Data for Global Food Security Insights with Dr. Michael Humber, University of Maryland
On this episode of Through the Human Geography Lens, hosts Terri Ryan and Gwyneth Holt talk with Dr. Michael Humber, Associate Research Professor at the University of Maryland’s Department of Geographical Sciences, about his role as data lead within NASA’s Harvest Portal.
00:55 What is NASA’s HARVEST Portal?
- https://harvestportal.org/
02:20 What is GEOGLAM? Is it related to the NASA HARVEST Portal?
- G20 https://www.g20.org/en/about-g20/#members
- Group on Earth Observations https://www.earthobservations.org/index.php
- GEOGLAM https://earthobservations.org/geoglam.php
- Food price spike in 2008 https://www.oaklandinstitute.org/high-food-price-crisis
- And in 2011 https://www.ers.usda.gov/amber-waves/2011/september/commodity-price-spike/
- Agricultural Market Information System (AMIS) https://www.amis-outlook.org//
- AMIS Market Monitor http://www.amis-outlook.org/amis-monitoring#.Y93Rl-zMJfE
- Crop Monitor https://cropmonitor.org/
- FEWSNet https://fews.net/
06:50 Any recent insights, especially around Ukraine?
- Potash https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potash
- Potash market spike after the start of the Ukraine war https://ycharts.com/indicators/potassium_chloride_muriate_of_potash_spot_price
11:00 Any surprises in the agricultural patterns you’re following?
- Current material sanctions list https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/sanctions-programs-and-country-information/ukraine-russia-related-sanctions
13:00 Assessing downstream aspects of the war in Ukraine, coupled with climate change and COVID
- Macroeconomics https://www.khanacademy.org/economics-finance-domain/macroeconomics
16:45 What are the biggest data gaps you’re seeing now?
(1) Field data measurements
- Global map and indicators of food system sustainability https://www.nature.com/articles/s41597-019-0301-5
(2) Data from the grain trade – the transport and storage of grain https://cee.illinois.edu/news/first-map-americas-food-supply-chain-mind-boggling and https://www.ams.usda.gov/services/transportation-analysis/gtr-datasets 1
9:45 New data resources you’re excited about?
- MODIS https://modis.gsfc.nasa.gov/data/
- LANDSAT https://landsat.gsfc.nasa.gov/
- Wildfire imagery https://firms.modaps.eosdis.nasa.gov/map/#d:24hrs;@0.0,0.0,3z
- LIDAR https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iuTm1jJy2XY
- Global Ecosystem Dynamics Investigation (global biomass) https://gedi.umd.edu/
- Google Earth Engine https://earthengine.google.com/
- Natural Language Processing Workflow in Geospatial Sciences https://www.researchgate.net/publication/356010869_Natural_Language_Processing_in_GIScience_Applications
- Crop Explorers USDA/FAS https://ipad.fas.usda.gov/cropexplorer/
- Hunger Map Live (WFP) https://hungermap.wfp.org/
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Environmental migration in Bangladesh and agent-based modeling developed by Dr. Kelsea Best
On this episode of Through the Human Geography Lens, hosts Terri Ryan and Gwyneth Holt talk with Dr. Kelsea Best, a post-doctoral researcher in Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of Maryland.
01:10 An overview of her research on environmental migration in Bangladesh.
02:30 A description of her agent-based modeling tool and its utility in her research.
An overview of agent-based modeling: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agent-based_model
04:50 What was the academic path that led to this focus? (from chemical engineering to addressing climate justice through data analysis)
07:20 Out of 2,000 variables in your dataset, how did Machine Learning help you gain insight?
An overview of machine learning: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Machine_learning
09:50 Did anything surprise you in your analysis?
12:05 Is the enormous dataset you're describing publicly available? (Not yet. But the Adams dataset, similarly valuable and also about Bangladesh, is available.)
The Adams dataset from Bangladesh - https://reshare.ukdataservice.ac.uk/852356/
13:30 Discussing why people do or do not want to migrate, and the many pressures around either choice.
16:00 Developing a board game to explore migration decisions, and the scientific creativity appearing as we try to understand these complex issues.
16:30 Discovering the importance of migration narratives, and deciding to collect and incorporate migration stories to enrich the meaning of survey data.
StoryMap with Bangladeshi migrant stories- https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/fd168c7804ae489b99c7311a4c805b31
21:15 Where can our listeners take a close look at your agent-based modeling code?
Dr. Best's agent-based model code- https://zenodo.org/record/4526330#.Y7cNMXbMKUc
22:35 The WWHGD Human Geography Library resources on environmental migration.
WWHGD.org
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Opinions expressed on this podcast do not necessarily reflect the views of the WWHGD sponsors and should not be construed as an endorsement.
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WWHGD Event: Climate, Migration, and Human Security Symposium
Join us next week for our in person event:
Climate, Migration, and Human Security Symposium
15 November 2022
National Museum of American Diplomacy, U.S. Department of State
Washington, D.C.
If you can't join us in person we will be broadcasting the event via webinar, we look forward to seeing many of you there!
Register Here: https://www.wwhgd.org/events-1/climate-migration-and-human-security-2/form
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Nexus between human migration, climate change, and conflict with Dr. Chelsea Cervantes De Blois
On this episode of Through the Human Geography Lens, hosts Terri Ryan and Gwyneth Holt talk with Dr. Chelsea Cervantes De Blois, lead climate security expert at the US Department of State.
00:55 Defining Human-Environmental Systems
Coupled Human-Environment Systems
Modelling Climate and Conflict
Tracking climate migration patterns at ClimateMigration.org
Report on internal displacement in a changing climate here.
02:20 Migration drivers: Social, political, economic, cultural, demographic, ecological, and sometimes infrastructure.
02:45 Research on ethnic conflict in Kyrgyzstan and the associated "system" relationships
The 2021 PhD dissertation on Kyrgyzstan by our guest, Dr. Cervantes De Blois, is here.
05:05 Understanding the data you have, and whether it's the data you need.
06:15 A major problem in assessing climate migration data: a lack of standardization for describing a climate refugee.
A discussion of the definition of "climate refugee"
08:15 A lack of comprehensive datasets requires creative thinking.
09:50 People may not realize that they're in the middle of a climate-driven migration
Award-winning July 2020 New York Times Magazine long-form interactive article on Climate Migration
10:35 Counting the "invisibles"
Risks of missing the invisibles in environmental migration research (2021 Nature article, open-access)
11:55 Recognizing a "mental migration" in reporting, and standardizing tools and terms for climate migration across shared disciplines.
A seminal discussion of Migration Psychology
13:30 Why is this topic, climate migration, important across so many disciplines?
14:35 Why not just devise better tools and methods? Why is standardization difficult?
COP 27 in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, 06-18 November 2022
What, really, is a PhD Dissertation? Useful description from Purdue University.
"The more you learn, the less you actually know"
17:20 "Mixed Methodist" as a human geographer. Extracting definitions
18:40 Climate-Migration nexus framework
Exploring the Climate Change, Migration, and Conflict Nexus
21:25 Hopes for the Climate and Migration event at State on 15 November.
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Disclaimer:
Opinions expressed on this podcast do not necessarily reflect the views of the WWHGD sponsors and should not be construed as an endorsement.
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YouthMappers for global good with Dr. Patricia Solis
On this episode of Through the Human Geography Lens, hosts Terri Ryan and Eric Rasmussen talk with Dr. Patricia Solis, Associate Research Professor at the School for Geographical Sciences and Urban Planning at Arizona State University, and the Director and Co-Founder of YouthMappers.
00:50 The mission of Youth Mappers
Youth Mappers
01:50 Where did this idea come from?
USAID
GeoCenter at USAID
2015 Kathmandu Earthquake
Humanitarian Open Street Map Team
Kathmandu Living Labs
05:20 Can a student start a chapter of YouthMappers at their school?
06:55 What kind of projects can they work on, and do you help?
Youth Mappers Academy
Teach OSM
American Red Cross training center
Open Street Map - Puerto Rico
10:30 Efforts at regional capacity building, and encouraging international meetings
11:45 Leadership programs, Fellowship programs
Fellowship programs (closed for 2023)
2023 Leadership workshop in Jamaica (66 students selected, 27 countries) for climate mapping and more (closed for 2023)
14:00 Can students reach out and up to local governments? Yes!!!
16:30 Inspiring for young people, and all data is freely available on OSM
Open Street Map
Activity.YouthMappers.org
17:45 Youth Mappers have mapped at least 16 million buildings and 500,000 km of roads, and labeled more than 80,000 building tags.
18:20 Stories of the Mappers: Open source book by Springer-Verlag, voices of the students, Sustainable Development Goals series. (Spring 2023)
Open Mapping toward Sustainable Development Goals (Springer, ISBN: 978-3-031-05184-5) - not yet released as of 11 October 2022
The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
19: 20 Documentary on YouTube: Sierra Leone open mapping data Arizona State University and the Ministry of Energy in Sierra Leone.
Youth Mappers documentary on YouTube
Arizona State University YouthMappers home
"Be a good ancestor"
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Disclaimer:
Opinions expressed on this podcast do not necessarily reflect the views of the WWHGD sponsors and should not be construed as an endorsement.
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Frameworks for Community Resilience with Dr. John Hummel, Argonne National Laboratory
On this episode of Through the Human Geography Lens, hosts Gwyneth Holt and Eric Rasmussen talk with Dr. John Hummel, the program lead for Integrated Resilience Analysis in the Decision and Infrastructure Science Division at Argonne National Laboratory.
01:15 Dr. Hummel's role at Argonne.
Argonne National Laboratory
02:05 Integrated Resiliency Analysis
02:30 Defining "resilience"
United Nations definition of resilience
03:25 The ARISE Framework for assessing resilience - genesis and driving factors
ARISE Framework described on Dr. Hummel's bio. ARISE is free, and distributed through an email to him.
05:30 The ARISE Framework's design process and current implementation
08:15 Use of the Framework in Nepal - earthquake validation
2015 Nepal Earthquake
09:55 Assessing data sources - three tiers of trust
11:20 Level of Effort remotely and on the ground
12:35 Recent development in refining the ARISE Framework, and its availability
14:25 Reflecting nuance: Addressing gaps between written policy or law, and what's actually found on the ground.
Domestic abuse, in 2020, was the primary cause of injury to women in Nepal.
17:10 Discussing the purpose of National Laboratories
National Laboratories
Los Alamos National Lab
Enrico Fermi
19:50 Argonne efforts during the pandemic: Forming a National Virtual Biotechnology Laboratory
Johns Hopkins COVID Dashboard
National Virtual Biotechnology Laboratory
21:15 Agent-based modeling for the spread of COVID infections across the entire Chicago area. Two million agents, every 50 minutes, over 90 days.
Agent-based modeling
23:15 Assessing COVID workforce impact by county. Defining essential workers and their associated risk by US location.
Essential Workers
24:35 Distribution of COVID analyses internationally. Data risks.
Data collection in Fragile States - Innovations in Africa
26:00 National Laboratories as "cookie stores" - Argonne Fellowship selection choices are superb.
Argonne Fellowships
Disclaimer:
Opinions expressed on this podcast do not necessarily reflect the views of the WWHGD sponsors and should not be construed as an endorsement.
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Customer Reviews
Seattle Global Health
I’ve known of this group for years and attended a number of their events. They choose experts to discuss useful topics and these first podcasts have already taught me something I didn’t know about the war in Ukraine (did YOU know about the ancient street-side water spouts dispensing clean drinking water 24/7 all over Kharkiv?). These podcasts are interesting even for a non-expert, well-produced, and timely.
WWHGD feeding my thirst for objective HG information
This is so needed in the HG space. Really hope they keep publishing these on a regular basis!