Abstract

The Covid-19 pandemic put a heavy burden on member states in the European Union. To govern the pandemic, having access to reliable geo-information is key for monitoring the spatial distribution of the outbreak over time. This study aims to analyze the role of spatio-temporal information in governing the pandemic in the European Union and its member states. The European Nomenclature of Territorial Units for Statistics (NUTS) system and selected national dashboards from member states were assessed to analyze which spatio-temporal information was used, how the information was visualized and whether this changed over the course of the pandemic. Initially, member states focused on their own jurisdiction by creating national dashboards to monitor the pandemic. Information between member states was not aligned. Producing reliable data and timeliness reporting was problematic, just like selecting indictors to monitor the spatial distribution and intensity of the outbreak. Over the course of the pandemic, with more knowledge about the virus and its characteristics, interventions of member states to govern the outbreak were better aligned at the European level. However, further integration and alignment of public health data, statistical data and spatio-temporal data could provide even better information for governments and actors involved in managing the outbreak, both at national and supra-national level. The Infrastructure for Spatial Information in Europe (INSPIRE) initiative and the NUTS system provide a framework to guide future integration and extension of existing systems.

Highlights

  • The pandemic put an unprecedented burden on society and almost void of information, governments initially struggled to respond effectively to minimize the impact of the outbreak

  • This article aims to assess the role of geo-information in governing the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe and its Member States

  • A pandemic requires a coordinated response at all governance levels

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Summary

Introduction

The pandemic put an unprecedented burden on society and almost void of information, governments initially struggled to respond effectively to minimize the impact of the outbreak. Measures taken by national governments in Europe ranged from school, shop and workplace closures, travel bans, curfew to closing borders [2]. It is key for governments and their agencies to have the appropriate and reliable information at hand to make informed decisions—to the extent possible and amidst all uncertainty. The many connections between countries, for example the international traffic of people, goods and knowledge, nations within Europe and beyond inevitably lead to interdependencies. Closing shops in a country will lead to an influx of cross-border movements by people going to the neighboring country for shopping

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