Hi Stefan,

Have a look at the Open DRI Field Guide by HOT member John Crowley: 
https://www.gfdrr.org/open-data-resilience-initiative-field-guide-0 
<https://www.gfdrr.org/open-data-resilience-initiative-field-guide-0>

Best,

Mark

> On 11 Jun 2016, at 11:44, Stefan Eikenbusch <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Thank you so much for all the papers and information both of you send me!
> 
> I think there is still a knowledge gap on using OSM/Open Data for that 
> purpose (DRR and/or Humanitarian Aid) and especially for smaller organization 
> it would be very usefull to have like a guide book on utilizing GIS for their 
> work.
> 
> Also the impact on the local communities would be very interesting to 
> research on and how osm projects have influence on the daily life after 
> finishing the mapping.
> 
> 
> 
> - Stefan
> 
>> Am 09.06.2016 um 17:09 schrieb Laura O'Grady <[email protected]>:
>> 
>> Hi Martin,
>> 
>> I've skimmed the PDF report at the link. I agree it is an evaluation, which 
>> is probably why it didn't come up in the literature searches for my paper. 
>> 
>> The purpose is to, "...examine whether the GIS officers’ missions to Guinea, 
>> Liberia and Sierra Leone have succeeded in supporting the emergency response 
>> and furthering the strategic goals defined in the GIS Strategy". The 
>> conclusions and recommendations on pages 45 and 49 demonstrate the outcomes. 
>> Looks like a very useful document. 
>> 
>> Thanks for your follow-up email to take a closer look.
>> 
>> Laura
>> 
>> Laura O'Grady
>> [email protected]
>> 
>>> On Jun 9, 2016, at 10:42 AM, Martin Dittus <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Have a look at the report by Timo Lüge I linked earlier, it may be exactly 
>>> what you’re asking for: a wide-ranging evaluation of the MSF Ebola 
>>> campaign, commissioned by the MSF, but published in a form that is useful 
>>> to other organisations.
>>> 
>>> The link again:
>>> http://reliefweb.int/report/liberia/gis-support-msf-ebola-response-liberia-guinea-and-sierra-leone-2015-case-study-2nd
>>> 
>>> m.
>>> 
>>> 
>>>> On 9 Jun 2016, at 13:45, Laura O'Grady <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>> 
>>>> Hi Stefan,
>>>> 
>>>> Based on my experience in order to measure this (in an outcome evaluation) 
>>>> you would have to build steps into the project before you start (determine 
>>>> the nature of the evaluation, establish which variables should be 
>>>> measured, how they should be operationalized, etc.). 
>>>> 
>>>> Does MSF or UNAID not conduct their own program evaluations? Do they not 
>>>> need such metrics for their own purposes (e.g. funding, accountability)? 
>>>> Perhaps they do but these documents are white papers and for internal use 
>>>> only.
>>>> 
>>>> Laura
>>>> 
>>>> Laura O'Grady
>>>> [email protected]
>>>> 
>>>>> On Jun 9, 2016, at 3:24 AM, [email protected] wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>> Hi John,
>>>>> 
>>>>> you're right, it's difficult to evaluate the impact since the data can be 
>>>>> used afterwards in so many different ways. But what I'm interested in is 
>>>>> the initial phase, like e.g. if MSF or USAID are implementing mapping 
>>>>> activities together with HOT, what is the outcome of these projects? For 
>>>>> what are they using the data excatly, how do they implement it in their 
>>>>> workflow and so on.
>>>>> 
>>>>> To evaluate the education side of the local contributers would be also 
>>>>> kinda interesting to see
>>>>> 
>>>>> Greetings,
>>>>> 
>>>>> Stefan (seike_)
>>>>> 
>>>>> Am 09.06.2016 00:00 schrieb john whelan:
>>>>>> I think part of the problem for this is the multiple uses made of OSM
>>>>>> maps. They might be mapped by one group but used by another and some
>>>>>> charities using them are very small and how would you measure this?
>>>>>> Including the education side of having locals contribute to the map?
>>>>>> Cheerio John
>>>>>>> On 8 Jun 2016 5:18 p.m., "Stefan Eikenbusch" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>>>>> Hello HOT-Community
>>>>>>> I’m wondering if there are any papers dealing with the evaluation
>>>>>>> of using Open Data (especially OSM) for humanitarian aid, DRR and/or
>>>>>>> economic development?
>>>>>>> Are there any plans to evaluate HOT-Activations like e.g. in Nepal,
>>>>>>> Ecuador, etc. and it’s impact on the local work for humanitarian
>>>>>>> aid workers? I think this could be kinda interesting also for new
>>>>>>> mappers to know how the data is being used.
>>>>>>> Greetings,
>>>>>>> Stefan (seike_)
>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>> HOT mailing list
>>>>>>> [email protected]
>>>>>>> https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/hot [1]
>>>>>> Links:
>>>>>> ------
>>>>>> [1] https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/hot
>>>>> 
>>>>> _______________________________________________
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>>>> 
>>>> 
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>>> 
>> 
> 
> 
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