论文标题
Facebook广告数据的潜力是了解从乌克兰到欧盟的人们的流动
The potential of Facebook advertising data for understanding flows of people from Ukraine to the European Union
论文作者
论文摘要
这项工作有助于讨论创新数据如何支持快速危机响应。我们使用Facebook的运营数据来获得有用的见解,了解俄罗斯入侵之后逃离乌克兰的人们可能会流离失所,重点是欧盟。在这种情况下,预期这些人在哪里移动非常重要,以便地方和国家当局可以更好地管理与他们的接收和融合有关的挑战。通过Facebook广告平台提供的讲乌克兰语的每月活跃用户估计,我们分析了逃离该国向欧盟的人们的流动。自战争开始以来的第五周,我们的结果表明,在所有欧盟国家 /地区,乌克兰讲的Facebook用户的数量增加,波兰的整体增长百分比份额($ 33 \%$),其次是德国($ 17 \%$ $)和捷赛($ 15 \%\%)。通过与乌克兰侨民的官方统计数据相比,我们评估了战前Facebook估计的可靠性,发现两个数据源之间存在很强的相关性(Pearson的$ R = 0.93 $,$ P <0.0001 $)。然后,我们将结果与难民专员办事处报道的有关波兰的到来的数据进行比较,我们观察到它们的趋势相似。总之,我们展示了Facebook广告数据如何在危机期间及时提供有关国际流动性的及时见解,旨在为流离失所者提供人道主义援助的举措,以及地方和国家当局,以更好地管理其接待和整合。
This work contributes to the discussion on how innovative data can support a fast crisis response. We use operational data from Facebook to gain useful insights on where people fleeing Ukraine following the Russian invasion are likely to be displaced, focusing on the European Union. In this context, it is extremely important to anticipate where these people are moving so that local and national authorities can better manage challenges related to their reception and integration. By means of the Ukrainian-speaking Monthly Active Users estimates provided by Facebook advertising platform, we analyse the flows of people fleeing the country towards the European Union. At the fifth week since the beginning of the war, our results indicate an increase in the number of Ukrainian-speaking Facebook users in all the EU countries, with Poland registering the highest percentage share ($33\%$) of the overall increase, followed by Germany ($17\%$), and Czechia ($15\%$). We assess the reliability of prewar Facebook estimates by comparison with official statistics on the Ukrainian diaspora, finding a strong correlation between the two data sources (Pearson's $r=0.93$, $p<0.0001$). We then compare our results with data on arrivals in Poland and Hungary reported by the UNHCR, and we observe a similarity in their trend. In conclusion, we show how Facebook advertising data could offer timely insights on international mobility during crisis, supporting initiatives aimed at providing humanitarian assistance to the displaced people, as well as local and national authorities to better manage their reception and integration.