Difference between revisions of "5 February 2014"

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''Work Experience''
 
''Work Experience''
  
* Jan 2011 - to date: Doctoral Researcher, Dimensions for Security Department & Hamburg University
+
* 2011 ->: Doctoral Researcher, Dimensions for Security Department & Hamburg University
* Jan 2010 - Dec 2010: (Guest) Researcher, Security Programme
+
* 2010: (Guest) Researcher, Security Programme
* Jan 2007 - Dec 2009: Project Management/Project Leader at step21 - Initiative for Tolerance and Responsibility
+
* 2007 - 2009: Project Management/Project Leader at step21 - Initiative for Tolerance and Responsibility
* Oct 2008 - Feb 2009: Assistant Teacher in Criminology at Hamburg University
+
* 2008 - 2009: Assistant Teacher in Criminology at Hamburg University
June/July 2005: Project Management Summer University at the European University Frankfurt/O.
+
* 2005: Project Management Summer University at the European University Frankfurt/O.
* Oct 2004 - Feb 2005: 1st Year Teachings at the European University Frankfurt/O.
+
* 2004 - 2005: 1st Year Teachings at the European University Frankfurt/O.
  
  

Revision as of 11:44, 17 January 2014

AFSecurity Seminar:

Digitization of Resilience

Date: 5 February 2014.

Location: Meeting Room Awk (room 3118), Ole-Johan Dahls hus (IfI).

Agenda

14:00h Welcome at IfI

14:15h Invited talk

SPEAKER: Mareile Kaufmann, PRIO (Peace Research Institute of Oslo)

TITLE: Digitization of Resilience

ABSTRACT: Resilience places the responsibility to overcome disruption and shock within the local population. The current “digitization of everything” contributes to this development in its own way as local populations increasingly generate data about the course of events during crises. During the Haiti Earthquake in 2010, Hurricane Sandy in 2012 and the Typhoon Yolanda on the Philippines in 2013 “disaster populations” increasingly used websites and social media to share information about dangerous areas, missing persons, as well as access to food, water, and critical infrastructure. Public and private efforts are currently undertaken to harvest the potential of digitally shared information about crises in order to enhance disaster resilience. This presentation provides an overview of what exactly social media have been used for in the aftermath of the 22nd of July attacks in Norway and the effects this had on resilience. It also touches on emerging governmental practices of collecting, synthesizing and analyzing data in order to remote-control, define and measure resilience through big data.

SPEAKER BIO:

Research interest

  • Risk, resilience and crisis management
  • Security, technology & complexity
  • Societal dimensions of security

Work Experience

  • 2011 ->: Doctoral Researcher, Dimensions for Security Department & Hamburg University
  • 2010: (Guest) Researcher, Security Programme
  • 2007 - 2009: Project Management/Project Leader at step21 - Initiative for Tolerance and Responsibility
  • 2008 - 2009: Assistant Teacher in Criminology at Hamburg University
  • 2005: Project Management Summer University at the European University Frankfurt/O.
  • 2004 - 2005: 1st Year Teachings at the European University Frankfurt/O.


Education

  • Oct 2006 - Sep 2008: MA International Criminology at Hamburg University
  • Oct 2005 - Mar 2006: Sociology and Criminology at the University of Essex
  • Sep 2003 - Sep 2006: BA Cultural Sciences at the European University Frankfurt/O.


15:00h Discussion