
Tracking Sandy: Monmouth County Remembers
Author(s) -
Melissa Ziobro
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
new jersey studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2374-0647
DOI - 10.14713/njs.v5i1.152
Subject(s) - perpetuity , subject (documents) , tracking (education) , state (computer science) , crowdsourcing , history , archaeology , genealogy , library science , sociology , law , computer science , political science , business , pedagogy , finance , algorithm
This article is a modified version of the exhibit text used in “Tracking Sandy: Monmouth County Remembers.” Guest curated for the Monmouth County Historical Association (MCHA) by the author of this piece, this crowdsourced exhibit was installed in MCHA’s headquarters in October 2017. The text is being published in this format to allow distribution to a wider audience/in perpetuity after the exhibit has come down, and to ensure the stories shared for the creation of the exhibit can continue to be told. This is not intended to be a comprehensive history of Sandy’s impact globally, in the US, or even on the entire state of New Jersey (NJ) specifically, nor is it a thorough case study on the effectiveness of crowdsourcing community history (though that may be an interesting subject for another discussion).