illuminating inequality
Satellite photo of Earth's artificial lights at night. (NASA) |
This map shows the levels of poverty throughout the world.(Map by 5W Infographics. Map source by Earth Observation Group, NOAA National Geophysical Data ) |
Photos from: "A New Way to Illuminate Inequality Around the World" »
Satellite photos of Earth’s artificial lights at night form a
luminescent landscape. But researcher Chris Elvidge of NOAA and
colleagues from the University of Colorado and the University of Denver
realized that they could also illuminate something much darker: the
magnitude of human poverty. By comparing the amount of light in a
particular area and its known population, they realized that they could
infer the percentage of people who are able to afford electricity and
the level of government spending on infrastructure development. This
allowed them to extrapolate levels of human development—a measure of
well-being that includes such factors as income, life expectancy and
literacy.
Their Night Light Development Index (NLDI) uses a composite of
cloudless night images taken by Air Force satellites. They found that
the NLDI (below) measured human development with uncanny accuracy. The
results closely correlated with conventional indices and in some cases
even surpassed them. “The NLDI helps us get at the spatial patterns that
you can’t see with traditional economic indices,” Elvidge says. “For
instance, most nations report their GDP at the country or province
level, but the NLDI can reveal subregional patterns, down to the
one-kilometer scale.” The index also provides information on some
countries, mostly in Northern Africa and the Middle East, for which
reliable economic data are simply unavailable.
This text is excerpt from Smithsonian Magazine [link]
This text is excerpt from Smithsonian Magazine [link]
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