Difference between revisions of "Social Media in Emergencies: UNICEF Guidelines for Communication and Public Advocacy"
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|Language=English | |Language=English | ||
|Year Published=2012 | |Year Published=2012 | ||
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|Status=Published | |Status=Published | ||
|Disaster Management Phase=Response, Recovery | |Disaster Management Phase=Response, Recovery | ||
+ | |Is Archived=Yes | ||
+ | |Primary Target Group=Practitioners | ||
|Covers Usage Of=Social Media | |Covers Usage Of=Social Media | ||
|Covers Disaster Community Technologies=Yes | |Covers Disaster Community Technologies=Yes | ||
|Disaster Community Technologies Elaboration=Also includes guidelines on social media monitoring tools like Hootsuite. | |Disaster Community Technologies Elaboration=Also includes guidelines on social media monitoring tools like Hootsuite. | ||
− | |||
}} | }} | ||
The guidelines concentrate on the use of social media to communicate with the general public and the media. They do not cover use of social media for gathering data on evolving crises, ‘crisis mapping’ or needs assessment. | The guidelines concentrate on the use of social media to communicate with the general public and the media. They do not cover use of social media for gathering data on evolving crises, ‘crisis mapping’ or needs assessment. |
Revision as of 11:11, 14 February 2022
Created: 1 February 2022
Last edited: 31 January 2023
Last edited: 31 January 2023
Quick Facts
Publishing Organisation:
UNICEFYear:
2012Languages:
EnglishStatus:
PublishedCovers Thematic
Target audience
Audience experience level
Disaster Management Phase
Synopsis
No synopsis provided.
Linked to
- Technologies
- Use Cases
-
None. See all Technologies.
- None. See all Use Cases.
The guidelines concentrate on the use of social media to communicate with the general public and the media. They do not cover use of social media for gathering data on evolving crises, ‘crisis mapping’ or needs assessment.