The Disaster Information Reference Library

DIRL

Version 7.0 is the most recent update of this reference library. It has been published as of November 25, 2024 as a semiannual update. The library now contains 5,435 references of predominantly English-language, peer-reviewed work in the study domains of disaster information and information technologies and their uses in the context of disasters. This represents an increase over the previous version of 293 references, or 5.7%.

The DIRL has increasingly become an indispensable tool for Disaster Information and Technology-interested scholars. In particular, peer reviewers of paper submissions may want to rely on this reference library.

Packaged in a zip file, bibTeX, RIS as well as an Endnote package (enlp) versions are available. Mendeley or Zotero versions can easily be created by importing from RIS or bibTeX files. Please get back to us in case of any errors or omissions. Thank you for your interest and cooperation.

Acknowledgement: No curator can do the work alone. Under the curator and editorship of Hans Jochen Scholl, the DIRL has been maintained and expanded over the years with the help of University of Washington teams led by Jan Boyd, Galen Guffy, and Matthew Unruh and graduate student team members Andrea Leigh Berg, Leslie Harka, Grace Landers, Andrew Mckenna-Foster, Jessie Novotny, Marie Peeples, and Hannah Robinson. Andrea Chapman at the Center for E-Governance, Krems, Austria, has been instrumental in preparing the current version.

With the next version (7.5) slated for release on April 15, 2025, this version (7.0) is the first in the transition from the current host (the University of Washington) to its future host, the Center for E-Governance at the University for Continued Education at Krems, Austria (aka as Donau University Krems/DUK).

Citation: Scholl, H. J. (2024). The Disaster information Reference Library (DIRL). Versions 6.5—7.0. Retrieved from: http://faculty.washington.edu/jscholl/dirl/

Please also note: The DIRL is provided on basis of self-service. Do not request any support.