Sahana FOSS Disaster Management System

"Sahana" redirects here. For the Sahana Software Foundation, see Sahana Software Foundation.
Sahana
Developer(s) Sahana Software Foundation
Stable release
0.9.1 (Vesuvius) and 0.5.4 (Eden) / 2010
Written in PHP, Javascript, Perl, HTML, Python
Operating system Cross-platform
Platform Apache, MySQL
Available in English - Language packs available for v.0.6.2.2 for Arabic, Bahasa Indonesian, Bengali, Burmese, Simplified Chinese, English/UK, English/US, German, Hindi, Portuguese & Portuguese/Brazil, Russian, Sinhala, Spanish, Spanish/Latin America, and Tamil.
Type Disaster Management System
License LGPL and MIT
Website www.sahanafoundation.org

The Sahana Free and Open Source Disaster Management System is emergency management and disaster preparedness software developed by the Sahana Software Foundation. Conceived during the 2004 Sri Lanka tsunami to help manage the disaster, Sahana software was deployed by the Sri Lankan government's Center of National Operations (CNO), which included the Center of Humanitarian Agencies (CHA). Funding was provided by the Swedish International Development Agency (SIDA). The project has grown, with deployments during other disasters such as the Asian Quake in Pakistan (2005), Southern Leyte Mudslide Disaster in Philippines (2006), the Jogjakarta Earthquake in Indonesia (2006) and the January 2010 Haiti earthquake.

Sahana currently has three projects: Eden, being developed in Python; Agasti, being developed in PHP; and the localization project, L10n.

Functionality

The Sahana project aims to provide a set of modular, web-based disaster management applications.

Sahana also includes tools for synchronization between multiple instances, allowing for responders or district offices to capture data on victims in the field and exchange the data with the other field offices, headquarters or responders.

Historic Trigger

The tsunami that hit Sri Lanka on December 26, 2004, resulted in a massive outpouring of support for the relief of the nearly one million people that it affected. The Sahana was created for information management and collaboration in the aftermath.[1]

Humanitarian-FOSS Community

Sahana has developed into a community founded by a humanitarian consultant, Paul Currion, and the Sahana project lead, Chamindra de Silva. Much of their work is based on the more generic ideals of Humanitarian-FOSS, where the ideals of FOSS are applied for building humanitarian-ICT applications or applications built to help alleviate human suffering. The community consists of a mailing list and an active wiki with membership including Emergency Management practitioners, Humanitarian Consultants, Crisis Management Academics and Free and Open Source developers from around the world. Domain representation in this group includes members from ISCRAM, UNDP, Red Cross, IBM, Saravodaya (largest NGO in Sri Lanka), Australian Fire Services, etc.

They have been recognized by the Free Software Foundation (FSF), where it inspired a new FSF Award for Projects of Social Benefit, which is broader in coverage than humanitarian-FOSS and by the UNDP IOSN on their Humanitarian-FOSS Portal.[2]

Research

The Sahana Project has resulted in independent research projects. Professor Louiqa Raschid of the University of Maryland is leading/guiding a team in Sahana and Disaster Management research.[3]

Sahana has been presented at numerous conferences/workshops/events and already has one paper accepted for an international conference.[4] A paper on Sahana and Disaster Management was accepted for the 2nd International Conference on Information and Automation 2006.[5] Due to the lack of previous research in ICT for Disaster Management, research has played a key role in Sahana's development.[6]

Sahana is also a participating project in Google Summer of Code, a global program that offers student developers stipends to write code for various open source software projects.[7][8]

Recognition & Awards

See also

References

External links

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