Talk:Global Disaster Alert and Coordination System

Latest comment: 12 years ago by Guillaume2303 in topic References

I suggest to update the text to the following. The reason is that the current text is not complete, not accurate and only describing a small part of the GDACS system. As one of the developers of this system, I want to make sure all aspects of GDACS are well described. Unfortunately, all my edits are refused since I have a conflict of interest. Please review the text below to see if it is neutral enough to be accepted as an alternative. Degroeve (talk) 13:05, 27 April 2012 (UTC)Reply

Proposed article text

Global Disaster Alert and Coordination System[1] edit

The Global Disaster Alert and Coordination System (GDACS) is a cooperation framework under the United Nations umbrella. It includes disaster managers and disaster information systems worldwide and aims at filling the information and coordination gap in the first phase after major disasters. GDACS provides real-time access to web‐based disaster information systems and related coordination tools.

GDACS is managed by a Steering Committee, currently chaired by the European Commission Monitoring and Information Centre in DG Humanitarian Aid & Civil Protection. Annual GDACS stakeholders meetings are attended by disaster managers, scientists, map experts, webmasters and other professionals, to define standards for information exchange and a strategy for further development of its tools and services. The Emergency Relief Coordination Centre (ERCC) in the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in Geneva acts as GDACS Secretariat.

GDACS services edit

GDACS provides alerts and impact estimations after major disasters through a multi-hazard disaster impact assessment service managed by the European Commission Joint Research Centre (JRC). To this end, JRC establishes scientific partnerships with global hazard monitoring organisations. Flood disasters are provided by the Dartmouth Flood Observatory. Relevant data is integrated automatically into GDACS alerts and impact estimations.[2]

GDACS develops standards and guidelines for international information exchange in disasters.

GDACS provides the real-time coordination platform “VirtualOSOCC” (http://vosocc.gdacs.org) to disaster managers worldwide.

GDACS coordinates the creation and dissemination of disaster maps and satellite images. This service is facilitated by the UN Institute for Training and Research (UNITAR) Operational Satellite Applications Programme (UNOSAT). Relevant maps are integrated automatically in VirtualOSOCC disaster discussions.

Detailed weather forecast are provided rapidly on demand by SARWeather and integrated into VirtualOSOCC disaster discussions.

GDACS users edit

Many governments and disaster response organisations rely on GDACS alerts and automatic impact estimations to plan international assistance.

Some 18,000 disaster managers from governmental and non-governmental organisations have subscribed to the VirtualOSOCC and use the tool for information exchange and coordination in the first disaster phase.

Many governments and organisations have formalised the use of GDACS tools and services in their national disaster response plans, in particular its automatic alerts and impact estimations and the VirtualOSOCC.

GDACS information is openly accessible through the GDACS platform interfaces. It can be directly integrated into other web portals or websites through RSS feeds or other standard formats.

Role of GDACS in international emergency management edit

During the first days after major sudden-onset disasters, the affected country and a vast number of international actors collect and analyse information in order to plan their response. This activity is typically carried out simultaneously with varying speed, relevance and accuracy, using multiple information channels and applying different procedures.

During the initial planning phase, there is usually little or no information exchange between international responders. Decisions are often based on patchy information, inaccurate sources or assumptions. The planned or mobilised assistance of other organisations is rarely drawn into consideration. This often results in duplication, gaps, overlap or even inappropriate response, occasionally associated with high costs.

GDACS services aim at facilitating information exchange among all actors in support of decision-making and coordination. GDACS services build on the collective knowledge of disaster managers worldwide and the joint capacity of all relevant disaster information systems.

External links edit

References edit

  1. ^ http://portal.gdacs.org/about/AboutGDACS/tabid/137/Default.aspx
  2. ^ De Groeve, T. (2009). "Global Disaster Alert and Coordination System". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
As I explained to you on my talk page, your edits were not reverted because you have a COI but because they were not neutral. The same goes for your proposed text: it does not contain a single independent source, yet makes huge claims (like the 18,000 subscribers, for example). For all I know this is true (I have no reason to doubt it), but that is irrelevant: to make a claim such as that, you need a source that is independent of the organization. In addition, your proposed text is written like an advertisement for GDAC, it is not neutrally worded. --Guillaume2303 (talk) 10:29, 28 April 2012 (UTC)Reply