#WithRefugees
Maps for World Refugee Day
According
to the United Nations, every minute 20 people leave everything behind to escape
war, persecution, and terror. Nearly 66
million people were forcibly displaced from their homes last year as
refugees.
A
refugee is someone who fled his or her home country to escape a natural or
man-made disaster, and June 20 is commemorated as “World Refugee Day” by the
United Nations.
“Every
year on June 20th, we commemorate the strength, courage, and
perseverance of millions of refugees.
This year, World Refugee Day also marks a key moment for the public to
show support for families forced to flee.”
People can sign the #WithRefugees petition to express solidarity.
The
Ball State University Libraries GIS Research and Map Collection (GRMC) provides
access to the latest cartographic resources depicting a number of current
events and social topics that may be used for research and learning. Maps and atlases provide visual
representations of global issues like refugees.
The GRMC collects the latest cartographic resources in the news and
provides digital access to these cartographic visual aids for students and others writing
research papers or researching social topics.
Business Insider published “mesmerizing maps” (above click to enlarge) created by Earth TimeLapse that show where
refugees are leaving and arriving. The
data for the maps was provided by the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees. Each red dot represents 17
refugees arriving in a country, while yellow dots identify the home countries
refugees are leaving. The maps highlight
the war-torn areas of the world from 2000 with the flow of refugees from
Afghanistan, Congo, and Sudan to 2015 and the height of the Syrian crisis.
The New York Times regularly publishes
maps covering current events. A
satellite map of Syria in 2012 (above) with the lights of major cities is
compared to the same area in 2014 where many cities have been destroyed from
the civil war. The Times also created maps showing the European countries
accepting refugees and a map of the United States showing where Syrian refugees
were located from 2012 to 2015.
Some
of the maps offer editorial views of the refugee crisis. Forbes published
a map identifying majority-Muslim countries with business ties to Trump
businesses alongside majority-Muslim countries affected by the Trump “travel
ban.”
The
GRMC scours news sites to provide research assistance and access to the latest
cartographic resources. For more
information about using maps as visual aids in research and creative writing,
please contact the GRMC at 765-285-1097.
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