A project led by our Professor João Porto de Albuquerque  (Urban Studies) has won the prestigious Economic and Social Research Council (ERSC) Celebrating Impact Prize, in the Outstanding Societal Impact Category.

The 'Waterproofing Data' project, which was ESRC-funded through the Global challenges Research Fund, developed an innovative approach combining community-generated data and analytics to increase community resilience, and enhance the capacity of residents of flood-prone areas in Brazil to take protective action.

The international team of researchers with multiple disciplinary backgrounds worked with partners at Brazil’s National Center for Monitoring and Early Warning of Natural Disasters (CEMADEN), and Brazilian higher education institution Fundaçao Getulio Vargas to engage communities in the process of ‘data gardening’.

João Porto de Albuquerque is Professor in Urban Analytics, based at the ESRC-funded Urban Big Data Centre at the UofG. Collecting the award on behalf of the many collaborative partners, Professor João Porto de Albuquerque noted: "I'd particularly like to acknowledge the main protagonists of this impact, who are the volunteers and communities who took up our approach with enthusiasm. We're delighted to receive this recognition and would like to extend this impact to other communities around the world.

“There is a lack of information about how heavy rainfall impacts communities at a local level. Our goal was to not only generate and circulate more traditional meteorological data, such as rainfall measurements, but also rethink and broaden the types of data and ways it is gathered.

“Rather than just gathering data, we co-designed methods with the communities that incorporated their priorities about flooding and empowered them as knowledge co-producers. Engaging with the lived experiences of flooding - people’s memories of what happened and ways they coped - provided an opportunity to tackle the problem in different ways.

“While this research was conducted in Brazil, the lessons learned about engaging citizens in data gardening, a method where researchers and citizens collaborate at every stage of the data production and use, showed this approach could be applied to empower community-led climate action in other regions across the world, especially in areas with significant physical or social vulnerability in face of increasing risks of extreme weather events.”

The Waterproofing Data app has now been used by more than 410 ‘citizen scientist’ reporters spread across over 20 cities in Brazil’s continental territory. It sparked new projects championed by CEMADEN that will bring the Waterproofing Data approach to all school students living in flood-prone areas in Brazil, benefiting more than 8 million Brazilian citizens who are estimated to live in disaster-prone areas.

The Waterproofing Data project team are actively seeking funding to expand the use of the project's mobile app to other flood prone communities around the world. 

 


First published: 17 November 2023

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