27 followers.
Cyclone Amphan made landfall in South Asia on May 20, 2020. It was the most damaging storm in the history of the Indian Ocean, rendering hundreds of thousands of people homeless, ravaging agricultural lands and causing billions of dollars in damage. How were people affected by the storm? What were the responses of individuals, governments, corporates and NGOs? How was it covered by local, national and international media, as opposed to individuals' accounts? Who has created the dominant narratives of Cyclone Amphan; and whose voices go unheard? We aim to use online data -- such as Twitter posts, news headlines and research publications -- to analyze people's experiences of Cyclone Amphan.
Short-term objectives: 1) Investigate the social, political and economic effects of Cyclone Amphan. 2) Test this new methodology of using online data to characterize people's experiences of extreme weather events. It will be a learning experience for us!
Longer-term objectives: 1) Better match the needs of people affected by extreme weather events with context-specific responses (e.g. humanitarian aid, funding, research) through a research tool that enables users to access more voices and perspectives on water-related issues. 2) Humanize the impacts of extreme weather events.
This project involves data collection, data analysis and data visualization.
We can scrape data from Twitter and Media Cloud using the search term "Cyclone Amphan." We could also include additional data sources, if time allows: - Social media: Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Reddit, YouTube - Impacts on tourism and/or small businesses: TripAdvisor, Google Reviews - News headlines: MIT's Media Cloud aggregates these - Research publications: Google Scholar, Scopus - Public interest/curiosity: Google Search history