Conflict & Displacement • Syria
Following years of conflict and infrastructure damage and change in Syria, significant gaps remained in OSM data needed for humanitarian response and recovery. This page highlighted ongoing efforts to improve buildings, roads, populated places, and essential services data through remote mapping and contributions from Syrian communities and diaspora mappers.
Following the political transition in December 2024, Syria entered a critical and uncertain phase marked by both opportunity and risk. After more than a decade of conflict, communities across the country faced widespread infrastructure damage, fragmented governance, and deep social strain. At the same time, there was renewed momentum among Syrians—inside the country and across the diaspora—to contribute to recovery and long-term resilience.
Reliable, up-to-date geospatial data was a foundational requirement for recovery planning. Civil society organizations, local governments, and international partners required accurate information on buildings, roads, critical services, populated places, and damaged or abandoned infrastructure to support sustainable returns, service restoration, and reconstruction. Yet years of conflict had left Syria with severe data gaps and uneven data availability across platforms, making coordination difficult and often forcing actors to rely on outdated or incomplete maps.
To address these challenges, the Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team (HOT), with support from the H2H Network, supported a coordinated, community-driven initiative to strengthen OpenStreetMap (OSM) data and build a sustainable OSM Syria community. The project combined large-scale data improvement with local capacity building, ensuring that recovery efforts were informed by accurate, locally grounded, and openly accessible geospatial data.
Syria’s conflict-altered landscape presented acute challenges for geospatial data collection and use:
The fragmentation of datasets across institutions and platforms meant that actors were often working with different, incompatible versions of reality. These gaps directly affected humanitarian and recovery outcomes. According to UNHCR, over 1 million people had returned to Syria by September 2025, with many more expected if conditions improved and reconstruction scaled up. Without accurate spatial data, efforts to restore housing, education, health services, and livelihoods remained inefficient and uneven.
Syrians, whether inside the country or part of the diaspora, played a critical role in recovery-oriented mapping. Many possessed deep knowledge of local geography, place names, infrastructure histories, and cultural landmarks—knowledge that was often absent from satellite imagery or automated datasets.
More than 100 Syrians had already expressed interest in contributing to OSM Syria. For those in the diaspora, mapping was described as a way to reconnect with their homeland—sometimes referred to as “nostalgic mapping.” By engaging both Syrians inside the country and those in the diaspora, the project helped bridge divided experiences and fostered shared ownership of recovery data.
Contributors focused on priority areas where local knowledge was strongest, such as villages of origin or regions with known damage. This approach ensured higher accuracy, preserved culturally relevant information, and reduced reliance on incomplete automated sources.
In addition, HOT’s approach connected Syrian mappers with global OSM experts, creating pathways for skills transfer, leadership development, and long-term community sustainability.
To manage complex and evolving data needs, the project leveraged a range of open tools:
Together, these tools supported a hybrid approach that combined automation, human validation, and local expertise.
Mapping in a post-conflict context required strong ethical safeguards. At project onset, HOT and partners conducted a data protection and ethics review to determine what data could be shared openly and what should be restricted or shared through trusted channels.
Key principles included:
This framework ensured that open data supported recovery without putting communities or contributors at risk.
All validated edits were published live in OpenStreetMap and made available through:
Humanitarian Data Exchange (HDX) for country-level and thematic extracts. For Syria, users could access the filtered HDX list or select from the categories below:
Datasets not suitable for OSM—such as partner damage assessments—were shared via platforms like HDX or ESRI Living Atlas, following agreed data protection protocols.
Syria’s recovery depended on shared, trusted, and locally informed data. By combining community-driven mapping, ethical data practices, and open platforms, this initiative laid the groundwork for more effective recovery planning and stronger social cohesion.
OSM Syria represented more than a dataset—it became a growing network of Syrians using open geospatial data to reconnect with place, support reconstruction, and shape a more resilient future.
Cover Photo: View of the Umayyad Mosque, Damascus, Syria. By Bernard Gagnon
Whether you were a mapper, researcher, organization, or member of the Syrian community, there were many ways to contribute.
To collaborate, volunteer, or support recovery mapping efforts in Syria or other conflict-affected contexts, stakeholders were encouraged to contact info@hotosm.org.
This project was funded by the H2H Network’s H2H Fund, which was supported by UK aid - from the British people.
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