Engage and Mobilize! Understanding Evolving Patterns of Social Media Usage in Emergency Management
Hemant Purohit, Cody Buntain, Amanda Lee Hughes, Steve Peterson,, Valerio Lorini, and Carlos Castillo

TL;DR
This study analyzes how emergency management agencies in the U.S. and Europe utilize social media across different phases of disaster management, highlighting its integral role in situational awareness and public communication.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive mixed-method analysis of actual social media practices among EM agencies, filling a gap in understanding their operational use across regions and disaster phases.
Findings
Social media use is now standard in EM decision-making.
Local agencies highly value social media for situational awareness.
Practitioners see potential for AI in future social media analytics.
Abstract
The work of Emergency Management (EM) agencies requires timely collection of relevant data to inform decision-making for operations and public communication before, during, and after a disaster. However, the limited human resources available to deploy for field data collection is a persistent problem for EM agencies. Thus, many of these agencies have started leveraging social media as a supplemental data source and a new venue to engage with the public. While prior research has analyzed the potential benefits and attitudes of practitioners and the public when leveraging social media during disasters, a gap exists in the critical analysis of the actual practices and uses of social media among EM agencies, across both geographical regions and phases of the EM lifecycle - typically mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery. In this paper, we conduct a mixed-method analysis to update…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPublic Relations and Crisis Communication
