Geolocating Social Media for Crisis Management: A Systematic Literature Review

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.59297/fehb2w57

Keywords:

Geolocation, Social media, Information systems, Emergency management, GIS, Large language models

Abstract

To assess the state of social media geolocation research and inform its application to crisis management, we conducted a systematic literature review of 46 peer-reviewed studies published between 2020–2024. These studies establish a pre-generative AI baseline for understanding how emerging large language model (LLM) approaches may extend geolocation capabilities. Our review reveals inconsistently defined geolocation inference goals and spatial resolution targets, a predominant—though not universal—focus on Twitter/X, and goal-contingent uses of methods and data sources that constrain operational applicability in crisis contexts. Synthesizing these findings, we introduce a standardized conceptual framework for classifying geolocation inference goals and spatial resolutions, enabling consistent comparison across existing and LLM-based approaches. We conclude by highlighting the need and opportunities to align social media geolocation research with operational needs and requirements in crisis management contexts.

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Published

2026-05-22

Conference Proceedings Volume

Section

ISCRAM Proceedings

How to Cite

Rangaraj, A., Nadipalli, C., Grace, R., & Imran, M. (2026). Geolocating Social Media for Crisis Management: A Systematic Literature Review. Proceedings of the International ISCRAM Conference, 23. https://doi.org/10.59297/fehb2w57

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