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This BBC article explores the critical role of clear and timely flood warnings in saving lives, especially as climate change increases flood frequency and intensity. It highlights the importance of effective messaging, community involvement, and tailored communication strategies to ensure people understand and respond appropriately to warnings. The article features expert opinions and case studies from around the world.
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- AI Headline
- The flood warnings that save lives
- Simplified Title
- Experts Discuss Flood Warnings Saving Lives Amid Climate Change
- AI Excerpt
- This BBC article explores the critical role of clear and timely flood warnings in saving lives, especially as climate change increases flood frequency and intensity. It highlights the importance of effective messaging, community involvement, and tailored communication strategies to ensure people understand and respond appropriately to warnings. The article features expert opinions and case studies from around the world.
- Subject Tags
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Floods Climate Change Disaster Preparedness Early Warning Systems Risk Communication Community Resilience Natural Disasters
- Context Type
- Analysis
- AI Confidence Score
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1.000
- Context Details
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{ "tone": "informative", "perspective": "neutral", "audience": "general", "credibility_indicators": [ "expert_quotes", "data_cited", "case studies" ] }
Source Information
Complete details about this source submission.
- Overall Status
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Completed
- Submitted By
- Brian Cash
- Submission Date
- August 7, 2025 at 5:13 PM
- Metadata
-
{ "source_type": "extension", "content_hash": "4d4558afdb7175217870f0bf9b391df90e1d3ceed690b27b5fb3221cabd9477d", "submitted_via": "chrome_extension", "extension_version": "1.0.18", "parsed_content": "7 hours agoShareSaveIsabelle Gerretsen, Jocelyn Timperley and Michael MaigaShareSaveGetty ImagesThe intensity and frequency of floods is increasing worldwide due to climate change (Credit: Getty Images)When floods hit, getting clear, timely warnings out to people becomes lifesaving, but too often these messages fail. The BBC asks disaster experts about how to get it right.In the Texan town of South Bend, people used to mark on a concrete pillar where floodwaters had reached in the past, disaster communications expert Keri Stephens recalls.\"It served as a reminder that water has been this high before. These visual warnings and community memories are very powerful,\" says Stephens, a professor at the University of Texas in Austin. Now, she says, the watermarks have faded.Texan communities have long had to live with the threat of flooding, which is becoming worse with climate change. When fatal flash flooding hit the state in 2025, questions were raised about whether adequate flood warnings had been provided. While warnings did go out, some residents said they did not understand the seriousness of the situation. For some in the hardest-hit areas, the warning alerts were delayed. Others said that they didn't receive any warnings at all, according to the New York Times.Alerting people about floods in time for them to act plays a critical role in saving lives and evacuating communities. Of course, warnings are only one part of protecting people from disasters: weather forecasting, long-term resilience measures and emergency responses are also incredibly important. But getting the messaging right about the risks and what to do is a crucial part of the puzzle. Sometimes all it takes is a shift in focus, says Stephens who has found that some people are more likely to respond to a call to protect their car than themselves.\u00a0With climate change making floods more frequent and intense, the BBC looks at what it takes to get these messages right, and save lives in the process.Getty ImagesThe challenge of getting the right messaging can be particularly difficult for floods. \"We're not taught in schools about responding to floods,\" says Stephens. \"In the US, it is common to have 'stop, drop and roll' drills for fires, but we don't have drills for flood warnings.\"Rising floodsFloods are the world's most common natural disasters, and their number is increasing. From 1980 to 1999, there were 1,389 major flooding events; this almost doubled in the next 20 years to 2019.\u00a0In the US, the National Weather Service (NWS) issues\u00a0six different types of flood warnings, from \"flash flood watch\" to \"flood warning\".\u00a0These reflect different types of risk at different severities.Existing flood warnings can be confusing, says Joseph Trujillo-Falc\u00f3n, a professor in the department of climate, meteorology, and atmospheric sciences at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. \"If we're taking all this time trying to make sense of what [the warning] even means, it can delay protective actions and not encourage as many people to seek shelter when needed. We need more plain-language statements that really outline the hazard and get straight to the point.\"\u00a0Research testing warning messages shows they are most effective if they include several\u00a0critical components: a clear description of the hazard, information about the specific location, and concrete guidance on how and when to act. They also must come from what is seen as a credible source.Visual warnings and community memories are very powerful \u2013 Keri Stephens\"We need to be more precise with our geography [in warnings], especially in areas with mixed topography,\" says Stephens. Messages should also make it clear that they are only being sent to communities at risk, rather than the entire region.Getty ImagesThe key thing, Stephens adds, is for warnings to tell people whether they should evacuate or stay where they are. \"One of the big challenges we have with floods is that when sirens go off, people don't know if they're supposed to shelter in place or evacuate,\" she says. \"You must tell them an action at the end [of the warning]. Just saying 'You're in danger' or 'This is happening in your community'. People read that message and go, 'Ok, what do I do with this?'\"\u00a0The impact of floodsGlobally, roughly 5,000 people are killed each year in flooding events, and in the US, the yearly average is 127 people. But flooding events also cause lots of other disruption to people's lives: they destroy homes, businesses and crucial infrastructure, ruin financial prospects and can rob people of a life's worth of personal possessions. They can also have lasting impacts on health, spreading infectious diseases and cause post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).Psychologists at the University of Houston\u00a0recently tested an update of a flood warning system available on\u00a0a popular Houston weather blog. One hundred people living on the Gulf Coast were asked how likely they were to take protective measures, such as gathering supplies or charging phones, after being given a warning. The alerts for one group came from the previous colour-coded rating system which told them only the flood risk faced (for example, \"1 green\" was \"street flooding only\" and \"5 purple\" was \"historic regional flooding\"). The other group was given\u00a0a new version\u00a0with examples of how to act for each stage of flood risk, for example, \"never drive into flooded roadways\" or \"be prepared to shelter in place for multiple days\". People in the second group did a better job of planning for the storms, the researchers said.But even if there are clear instructions about what to do, it's important that the type of communication is tailored to different users, says Liz Saccoccia, water security associate at the World Resources Institute, a non-profit based in Washington DC. \"Women, disabled, elderly, different levels of literacy, and those without phone service or radio communication will need different communication methods,\" she says.\u00a0The content of the message \"also needs to be tailored to groups' specific risk tolerance\", says Saccoccia. For example, Stephens, who is carrying out (as yet unpublished) research\u00a0into flood communication in Texas, has found that the NWS warning phrase,\u00a0\"Turn\u00a0around don't drown\"\u00a0doesn't tend to resonate with young men.In her focus groups, some young men responded to this message by laughing and saying: \"I'm not going to die, I've got a big truck,\" Stephens says. \"When we have a message [like turn around don't drown] that people don't feel applies to them, they're not going to take it seriously,\" says Stephens. In the US,\u00a0men are much more likely to die in floods\u00a0than women, according to a 60-year national analysis of flood fatalities. Men are more likely to drive through floodwater and more likely to exhibit risk-taking behaviour, the analysis found.\u00a0But Stephens says the warning \"Keep your car high and dry\" does seem to appeal to young men. \"I tested [this] message in groups and it worked beautifully,\" she says.\u00a0Getty ImagesIn many parts of the US, multilingual warnings are also crucial, says Trujillo-Falc\u00f3n, who researches these warnings.\"We have a very significant multilingual population in the United States, 67.8 million people speak a language other than English at home,\" he says. \"That's one in five Americans.\" In a state like Texas, he adds, where there are a lot of Spanish-speaking communities, multilingual flood warnings can \"be the difference between life and death\".\u00a0A 2022 study by Trujillo-Falc\u00f3n and other researchers found that the urgency of weather warnings often gets lost in translation. US Spanish speakers were asked to indicate the urgency they felt when shown different Spanish words used in translations of weather \"watch\", \"warning\" and \"advisory\" alerts. They consistently rated \"aviso\", the translation of \"warning\" used by US organisations responsible for sending out alerts, as less urgent than many other alternatives. In fact, they found that \"\", the translation of \"advisory\", communicated more urgency than both the \"watch\" and \"warning\" translations.Community members and word of mouth can help disseminate crucial information in multiple languages, says Trujillo-Falc\u00f3n. \"They can be language brokers. We should depend on the community more, because not only are we getting the warnings out, but there's also increased trust.\"Getty ImagesIn fact, again and again community connections have proven crucial in ensuring people act appropriately when floods and other disasters hit. This is especially important in rural areas which may be harder to reach via official channels.A 2021 review of flood warnings found that word of mouth warnings, delivered for example via door knocking, transmitted a greater sense of urgency and authority and made recipients more likely to follow recommended actions. More widely, speech-based warnings (face-to-face, via radio, TV or telephone) were more effective than sirens, text alerts, websites and social media.\u00a0Bangladesh, one of the most disaster-prone countries in the world, has been especially praised for developing an advanced early warning system with relatively few resources. Its approach includes text messages, radio announcements and thousands of formal shelters which double up as schools and community centres. It also has a large number of volunteers \u2013 half of them women \u2013 who patrol streets with megaphones to disseminate the warnings and go door-to-door to help and encourage people to evacuate. ( ).We should depend on the community more, because not only are we getting the warnings out, but there's also increased trust \u2013 Joseph Trujillo-Falc\u00f3nIn Peru, climate change is worsening flood risk including due to glacial retreat and in 2023, devastating floods left over 800,000 people in need of assistance. In flood-prone regions community participation has been lifesaving, according to Miluska Ordo\u00f1ez, a risk management specialist at UK-based non-profit Practical Action, who spoke to the BBC in 2022.\u00a0Several settlements along the Rimac watershed faced an unmistakable flood risk, she says, but were also resistant to the government's attempts to relocate them. Practical Action involved three of these communities in mapping flood risk and helped set up community flooding brigades which alert people via word of mouth. Forty brigade members helped evacuate hundreds of people when floods hit during Cyclone Yaku in March 2023, Ordo\u00f1ez says.\u00a0Evacuating people at risk from floods is difficult to do with technology alone, she adds. While a community-led network broadcasts alerts via WhatsAppto at risk communities, it's people who have been engaged with, listened to and included in the creation and maintenance of warning systems who are the most responsive, Ordo\u00f1ez says. In most cases, she says, community leaders are men, and especially older men, but it's important to listen to younger people and women as well, which often includes adapting to their needs and schedules.\u00a0\"What has worked for me a lot is listening,\" says Ordo\u00f1ez.Overall, says Trujillo-Falc\u00f3n, getting the word out through various mediums will always be incredibly important. \"I do think that is the future of flood warning communication systems, that just as much as we're relying on these formal systems to warn us, we should depend on the community more,\" he says. \"Because at the end of the day, we're here to help each other out.\"--For essential climate news and hopeful developments to your inbox, sign up to the while\u00a0The Essential List\u00a0delivers a handpicked selection of features and insights twice a week.For more science, technology, environment and health stories from the BBC, follow us on\u00a0Facebook\u00a0and\u00a0Instagram.\u00a0Extreme weatherEarthFuture PlanetClimateEnvironmentCommunicationPsychologyWaterNatural disasterScienceFeatures", "ai_headline": "The flood warnings that save lives", "ai_simplified_title": "Experts Discuss Flood Warnings Saving Lives Amid Climate Change", "ai_excerpt": "This BBC article explores the critical role of clear and timely flood warnings in saving lives, especially as climate change increases flood frequency and intensity. 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- AI Extraction Metadata
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7 hours agoShareSaveIsabelle Gerretsen, Jocelyn Timperley and Michael MaigaShareSaveGetty ImagesThe intensity and frequency of floods is increasing worldwide due to climate change (Credit: Getty Images)When floods hit, getting clear, timely warnings out to people becomes lifesaving, but too often these messages fail. The BBC asks disaster experts about how to get it right.In the Texan town of South Bend, people used to mark on a concrete pillar where floodwaters had reached in the past, disaster communications expert Keri Stephens recalls."It served as a reminder that water has been this high before. These visual warnings and community memories are very powerful," says Stephens, a professor at the University of Texas in Austin. Now, she says, the watermarks have faded.Texan communities have long had to live with the threat of flooding, which is becoming worse with climate change. When fatal flash flooding hit the state in 2025, questions were raised about whether adequate flood warning...
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Claims from this Source (52)
All claims extracted from this source document.
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Climate Change , Disaster π a114b452-c52f-4371-a43b-f5afb68f2be0Simplified: Floods intensity and frequency is increasing worldwide due to climate change
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Safety , Communication π a114b46c-e26d-4544-a691-ef2d1fe72a86Simplified: Getting the messaging right about risks and what to do is a crucial part
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Communication , Disaster π a114b47b-6438-46b6-be73-7742451f6703Simplified: The challenge of getting the right messaging can be particularly difficult for floods
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Disaster , Statistics π a114b489-f32b-4aaa-b3bc-d34eec710b29Simplified: Floods are the world's most common natural disasters and their number is increasing
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Statistics , Disaster π a114b48e-e5d9-440d-9286-c106ee465a59Simplified: From 1980 to 1999 there were 1389 major flooding events this almost doubled in the next 20 years to 2019
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π€ Joseph Trujillo-FalcΓ³n π News Article π·οΈ Communication , Safety π a114b49a-56a2-4cf0-9668-c6f24bf8978dSimplified: Existing flood warnings can be confusing
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We need more plain-language statements that really outline the hazard and get straight to the point.0.900π€ Joseph Trujillo-FalcΓ³n π News Article π·οΈ Communication , Safety π a114b49d-c843-47c6-a776-a3559f6a0eb9Simplified: We need more plain language statements that outline the hazard and get straight to the point
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Communication , Safety π a114b4a4-485a-4a39-bfa3-c59809ced93cSimplified: Warning messages are most effective if they include a clear description of the hazard information about the specific location and concrete guidance on...
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π€ Keri Stephens π News Article π·οΈ Communication , Safety π a114b4a9-40e8-4186-bb4a-2e24d931074dSimplified: Messages should make it clear that they are only being sent to communities at risk rather than the entire region
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π€ Keri Stephens π News Article π·οΈ Safety , Communication π a114b4b1-5dc8-4c24-9342-e285fb9052fdSimplified: Warnings should tell people whether they should evacuate or stay where they are
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Statistics , Safety π a114b4ba-e231-457d-bac2-e0d54dde44f8Simplified: Globally roughly 5000 people are killed each year in flooding events and in the US the yearly average is 127 people
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π€ Liz Saccoccia π News Article π·οΈ Communication , Safety π a114b4d8-2a38-4787-a64e-286173e54db5Simplified: The type of communication should be tailored to different users
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Simplified: Message content needs tailoring to groups' specific risk tolerance
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π€ Stephens π News Article π·οΈ Communication , Safety π a114b4e5-2134-4c28-884f-c91ba086f11eSimplified: NWS warning phrase "Turn around don't drown" does not resonate with young men
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Health , Safety , Statistical π a114b4ea-0ab0-4c6e-994c-6b98f4a24d1cSimplified: Men are more likely to die in floods than women in US according to 60-year national analysis of flood fatalities
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Safety , Social Science π a114b4f0-83a6-4f95-bb85-bf0a2c56b967Simplified: Men are more likely to drive through floodwater and exhibit risk-taking behavior
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π€ Stephens π News Article π·οΈ Communication , Safety π a114b4f6-f7a6-4f85-8e45-9d5dc0e5105fSimplified: Warning "Keep your car high and dry" appeals to young men
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π€ Trujillo-FalcΓ³n π News Article π·οΈ Communication , Safety π a114b4fb-ea43-4253-9bf8-9b37e47e62caSimplified: Multilingual warnings are crucial in many parts of US
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π€ Trujillo-FalcΓ³n π News Article π·οΈ Statistical π a114b4ff-5c8a-49e6-99a3-25c9a749b2b5Simplified: 678 million people speak language other than English at home in United States
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π€ Trujillo-FalcΓ³n π News Article π·οΈ Statistical π a114b508-e517-47ff-baf5-fc72981dd8e8Simplified: That is one in five Americans
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Multilingual flood warnings can "be the difference between life and death" in a state like Texas.0.900π€ Trujillo-FalcΓ³n π News Article π·οΈ Safety , Communication π a114b510-e8f3-461b-af32-bf772b42089cSimplified: Multilingual flood warnings can be difference between life and death in Texas
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Simplified: Urgency of weather warnings often gets lost in translation
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Communication , Social Science π a114b51d-d266-4137-b61d-666a91cffc18Simplified: US Spanish speakers were asked to indicate urgency when shown different Spanish words used in translations of weather alerts
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Simplified: US Spanish speakers rated "aviso" as less urgent than other alternatives
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Simplified: "Aviso" communicated more urgency than "watch" and "warning" translations
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Community members and word of mouth can help disseminate crucial information in multiple languages.0.900π€ Trujillo-FalcΓ³n π News Article π·οΈ Communication π a114b535-c5bc-41c2-bc7f-f9ff9c57acecSimplified: Community members and word of mouth can help disseminate crucial information in multiple languages
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π€ Trujillo-FalcΓ³n π News Article π·οΈ Communication π a114b53a-b37d-4725-ac26-90f8718d530eSimplified: Community members can be language brokers
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π€ Trujillo-FalcΓ³n π News Article π·οΈ Communication π a114b541-2df8-4a18-b950-192665f335afSimplified: Depend on community more because of increased trust
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Communication , Safety π a114b54a-addb-4bcc-8bef-d9ee101af678Simplified: Community connections have proven crucial in ensuring people act appropriately when floods and other disasters hit
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Communication , Safety π a114b54f-9f21-424e-8a14-d2119b69c450Simplified: Word of mouth warnings transmitted greater sense of urgency and authority and made recipients more likely to follow recommended actions
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Speech-based warnings were more effective than sirens, text alerts, websites and social media.0.900π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Communication , Safety π a114b557-9b45-4d78-8a95-9235e5673ffeSimplified: Speech-based warnings were more effective than sirens text alerts websites and social media
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Safety , Communication π a114b55e-112e-43a2-8498-6fd0d6e67682Simplified: Bangladesh has been praised for developing advanced early warning system with few resources
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Communication , Safety π a114b563-042c-4647-926f-0054413a4e0eSimplified: Bangladesh's approach includes text messages radio announcements and shelters
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Communication , Safety π a114b569-7483-4d9c-a428-d196e9a1c2fbSimplified: Bangladesh has volunteers who patrol streets with megaphones to disseminate warnings and encourage evacuation
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Environment , Safety π a114b571-798b-47cf-9f27-aaa4c84c709fSimplified: Climate change is worsening flood risk in Peru and in 2023 devastating floods left over 800000 people in need of assistance
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π€ Miluska OrdoΓ±ez π News Article π·οΈ Safety , Communication π a114b577-f452-4178-88c5-956aba170ce2Simplified: Community participation has been lifesaving in flood-prone regions
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Safety , Communication π a114b57f-f4b0-43b9-9eeb-0d0b47df5b6dSimplified: Practical Action involved three communities in mapping flood risk and helped set up community flooding brigades
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π€ OrdoΓ±ez π News Article π·οΈ Safety , Communication π a114b584-e043-4407-b169-1236d5ba7001Simplified: Forty brigade members helped evacuate hundreds of people when floods hit during Cyclone Yaku in March 2023
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π€ OrdoΓ±ez π News Article π·οΈ Safety , Communication π a114b58c-db9c-4028-b413-7a71e3c3fd25Simplified: Evacuating people at risk from floods is difficult with technology alone
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π€ OrdoΓ±ez π News Article π·οΈ Communication , Safety π a114b595-517c-41fb-85c9-85d3acea2c7aSimplified: People engaged with listened to and included in warning systems are most responsive
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π€ OrdoΓ±ez π News Article π·οΈ Communication , Social Science π a114b59b-c16f-4695-8ca8-f280abef8f1aSimplified: Community leaders are men but it is important to listen to younger people and women
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π€ Trujillo-FalcΓ³n π News Article π·οΈ Communication π a114b5a3-b97c-444c-a73b-55f8180bd417Simplified: Getting word out through various mediums will always be important
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π€ Trujillo-FalcΓ³n π News Article π·οΈ Communication π a114b5ab-be1a-469c-9f57-427614445379Simplified: We should depend on community more