000 02029cam a2200229 4500500
005 20250119091437.0
041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aSantoni, Victor
_eauthor
245 0 0 _a2.0 Territory and Involuntary Geographic Information: Crisis management and social media
260 _c2022.
500 _a18
520 _aThe French public national alert system app (SAIP) took more than 2 hours to reach citizens’phones during the 14th of July Nice’s attack. On social medias, the first official communication was posted one hour after the beginning of the event. Expectations around the use of Social Media in Emergency Management are high because social medias have become an essential channel for communication from public institutions to citizens. On the one hand, the use of social medias is growing within public institutions. On the other hand, states face the problem of regulating the activities of GAFAM + (Google, Amazon, Facebook, Apple and Microsoft + Twitter) within their own territories. What does crisis management reveal about the interactions between information flows and territory? The first part of this article shows how geographic information flows have diversified following the evolution of practices on the Internet. The second part analyses how this information is mobilized in the field of territorialized crisis management. The third part explores the issues related to the use of social medias by the actors of territorial management. The Author proposes to organize these issues and their different approaches in an analysis framework: Territory 2.0.
690 _ainvoluntary geographic information
690 _acrisis management
690 _asocial media
690 _ainvoluntary geographic information
690 _acrisis management
690 _asocial media
786 0 _nAnnales de géographie | o 743 | 1 | 2022-02-02 | p. 72-94 | 0003-4010
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-annales-de-geographie-2022-1-page-72?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c406381
_d406381