Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team
Juan Domingo Arellano Valdivia is a seasoned communications and community specialist currently working with the Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team since February 2022. As a co-founder of Casa Digital Org since February 2019, Juan facilitates workshops focusing on digital citizenship, marketing, internet security, organizational strengthening, and gender equality advocacy. Previously, Juan served as an external consultant for The Engine Room, an independent consultant for the Tactical Technology Collective, and an editor at Global Voices Online, where oversight of a large volunteer translator community was a key responsibility. Additionally, Juan has experience as a blogger for FutureChallenges and Open Society Foundations, a consultant for Women's eNews, an analyst for ONPE, and collections manager for the Municipalidad Provincial de Maynas. Juan holds degrees in English Language and Literature from Instituto Metropolitano and Asociacion Cultural Peruano Britanica.
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Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team
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Free, collaboratively generated maps are uniquely valuable to humanitarian work and economic development, especially in places where base map data is often missing, out of date, or rapidly changing. OpenStreetMap is an open data project founded to create a free and open map of the world, built primarily by volunteers surveying with pencil and paper, GPS units or by digitizing aerial imagery and finding and liberating existing public sources of geographic data. Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team [HOT], a US 501(c)(3) charitable organization, was launched in 2010 to promote and support the thousands of volunteers and dozens of local groups around the world that work to build OpenStreetMap, with an emphasis on humanitarian mapping to aid disaster relief, preparedness and economic development. In its role organizing crisis response mapping, HOT acts as a bridge between the OpenStreetMap community and traditional humanitarian responders like MSF, the Red Cross, UNOCHA as well as local groups and governments. To further the mission of OpenStreetMap, HOT sponsors and coordinates the development and hosting of several open source software tools specifically for the OpenStreetMap community. We also fund field training and data collection for existing and new OpenStreetMap groups, produce learning and training materials for people doing OpenStreetMap mapping and train skilled mapping coordinators to organize volunteer mappers' efforts in emergency response to crises and disasters. HOT sponsored teams work in countries around the world helping collect geographic data and training and learning from local communities to map information in OpenStreetMap that is important to them. Our goal is to help build self sustaining local groups of motivated and skilled mappers. We are dedicated to applying the principles of open source software and open data sharing towards humanitarian response and economic development and inclusiveness in all of our endeavors.