Geographic Information and Covid-19 Outbreak Does the spatial dimension matter?
Título
Geographic Information and Covid-19 Outbreak Does the spatial dimension matter?
Autor
Michele Campagna
Descripción
The Covid-19 pandemic in Europe started its outbreak in Italy in January 2020, and since early March 2020, it rapidly spread in most European Countries with growing diffusion rates. EU Countries applied lock-down measures accordingly. While Government across Europe relied in experts’ advice, scientific advisory teams were often lead by virologists and epidemiologists, and no evidence is easily found about the involvement of experts in spatial planning and design in emergency response. Often in the uncertainty of a new hazard emergency response, lock-down measures were based on national or regional scale planning, applying to large administrative units boundaries with little or no local differentiations. This paper argues that a large-scale approach may be more effective in emergency response planning and management as it may better take into account local variations. This approach might be an important and still missing step for balancing the conflict between the two most urgent goals in the current emergency response: public health and safety vs economy re-start after the emergency lock-down.
Fecha
2020
Materia
Emergency Response, Geodesign, geographic information, Planning Support Systems (PSS), COVID-19
Identificador
DOI: 10.6092/1970-9870/6850
Fuente
TeMA: Journal of Land Use, Mobility and Environment
Editor
Università di Napoli Federico II
Cobertura
Transportation engineering, Urbanization. City and country
Colección
Citación
Michele Campagna, “Geographic Information and Covid-19 Outbreak Does the spatial dimension matter?,” SOCICT Open, consulta 18 de abril de 2026, https://www.socictopen.socict.org/items/show/4022.
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