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Localizing Earthquake Response in Haiti
Tracy Kijewski-Correa, professor of engineering and global 
affairs and the William J. Pulte Director of the Pulte Institute 
for Global Development, was the lead author of the study, 
published in the Bulletin of Earthquake Engineering.
“This research shows how the 2021 earthquake response in 
Haiti leveraged both local data collection and remote expertise 
on a large scale to quickly assess the damage and inform 
local decision makers,” Kijewski-Correa said. “This hybrid 
approach shows how we can proactively embrace 
localization, enabling affected populations to play a 
significant role in generating solutions.”
Kijewski-Correa, partners at GeoHazards International, and 
students at Notre Dame helped coordinate the assessment, 
which she said unfolded amid travel constraints following the 
assassination of the Haitian president in 2021. But going hybrid 
turned out to be an advantage: Small teams of Haitians used 
smartphones to share data and images with remote engineers.
This divide-and-conquer approach allowed responders to 
cover more ground more quickly than they could have with a 
conventional arrangement where engineers traveled to see 
damage sites firsthand, Kijewski-Correa said. And after any 
disaster, she said, gathering forensic information quickly, before 
debris shifts, is critical to determining what caused the damage.
Responders captured a representative sample of different 
building classes, including residential, educational, commercial, 
government, and medical facilities—and facilitated a rapid 
assessment that assigned global damage ratings to over 
12,500 buildings.
Next, remote engineers used machine learning to analyze 
approximately 40,000 collected images and identify 
some 200 homes that were built using traditional Haitian 
“This model can help vulnerable 
communities worldwide more swiftly 
learn from disasters and build back 
better to reduce future risk.”
construction. This in turn enabled data collectors in Haiti 
to conduct forensic documentation of 30 of these homes 
that performed well in the earthquake using another 
mobile app.
The results were surprising, Kijewski-Correa said: Structures 
built using traditional Haitian construction fared better 
than those built with contemporary concrete and masonry 
approaches that experts had been touting in Haiti. The 
traditional homes’ bracing scheme, which determines how 
buildings distribute and support the shock imparted by the 
earthquake, made all the difference.
Kijewski-Correa has shared takeaways from the 
earthquake assessment with researchers and humanitarian 
responders, including those at the World Bank, to help 
better support housing recovery after major disasters.
The Pulte Institute for Global Development
07 | 2023-24 Annual Review
On this page: Rubble resulting from damage to structures during Haiti’s deadly 
earthquake in August 2021.

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