![]() ![]() What insights would help governments and citizens prepare for and respond to these hazards? How can these insights help people understand risk? Identify other datasets that you need in order to visualize and communicate insights about disaster risk. Download and explore the recommended datasets for your selected location.Learn about the context of your selected location and the disaster risk challenges and questions it faces.Anyone else working with this dataset? process: “Checking out my chosen #VizRisk data in Visidata – based on a histogram of fuel types, I’m going to use the first 10 and lump the last 5 together. ![]() Save the URL link to this post! You’ll need it when you submit your final visualization. Using #VizRisk, share a social post (Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, or LinkedIn) with a screenshot of some or all of your rough, ‘pre-visualized’ data and a brief teaser explanation of the insight or story that you plan to visualize. The first step to any effective data visualization is finding the compelling insights or narratives buried in your data. Part 1 – Data analysis: Identify insights in your data You may use any risk or hazard datasets (we encourage you to use open data as much as possible). You are also welcome to select another geography to focus on if you are interested in other locations or other risk datasets. #VizRisk partners have prepared three suggested geographies and recommended datasets for your visualizations: /vizrisk/data/. First – choose a location and datasets to focus on You can also check out resources suggested by challenge participants in a living Google Doc here. The rest of this page details the four parts of the challenge, with suggested resources for each. See the full challenge rules at: /vizrisk/rules/ A whole host of tools are compatible with Mapbox basemaps, including Mapbox GL JS, Leaflet, Tableau, Power BI, Microstrategy, D3, Carto, and more. ![]() You can use any data visualization software or tools that you prefer, provided that you can use a Mapbox basemap as part of your project. Tip: If you are submitting an entry as a team, you only need to have one blog and one social post per part. Ultimately, you’ll need to submit three URLs to posts that show your dataviz process, a URL to a blog post, and a URL to your finished visualization. You don’t necessarily need to do these parts in order, but you do need to complete each part.
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