Victor N.Sunday

Dr. Victor Ndubuisi Sunday, Ph.D.
Senior Lecturer | Geospatial & Environmental Consultant | Founder, Unique Mappers Network | Fellow, Institute of Certified Geographers of Nigeria

Dr. Victor Ndubuisi Sunday is an internationally recognized leader in Geospatial Information Science, Environmental Resilience, and Citizen-Led Mapping. With over two decades of experience in academia, consultancy, and grassroots innovation, he leverages geospatial technologies to advance sustainable development, disaster risk reduction, and youth empowerment.

He serves as Senior Lecturer in the Department of Geography & Environmental Management at the University of Port Harcourt and Adjunct Lecturer at Rivers State University. His expertise spans GIS, Remote Sensing, Cartography, Environmental Management, Citizen Science, and OpenStreetMap Science, integrating advanced research with impactful community projects.

Leadership & Key Roles

Founder & National Coordinator, Unique Mappers Network – Nigeria’s foremost OSM-driven civic mapping organization.

National Coordinator, Institute of Certified Geographers of Nigeria.

Chair, State of the Map Nigeria; Chair, Scientific Committee, State of the Map Africa.

Project lead on initiatives such as GIS Mapping of Opobo War Canoe Houses, Drone Mapping of Ogrute, Stall Catchers Alzheimer’s Research, Niger Delta Land Pollution Lookout, and Microsoft/HOT-USA 38M Building Footprint Mapping.

Academic Credentials

Ph.D., Geoinformatics & Surveying – University of Nigeria, Nsukka

M.Sc., Cartography & Geoinformation Science – AFRIGIST, Ile-Ife

M.Phil., Environmental Management – Rivers State University

B.Sc., Geography – University of Nigeria, Nsukka

Global Impact
Dr. Sunday has collaborated with NASA GLOBE, SciStarter-USA, and GODAN, and secured grants from HOT-USA, Healthy Gulf-USA, among others. He has earned international fellowships to Rwanda, Italy, Romania, and Ghana, and is listed in the World Scientist Ranking 2024 (AD Scientific Index).

Technical Expertise
ArcGIS | QGIS | ENVI | ERDAS | Drone Mapping | KoboToolbox | Spatial Analysis | SDG Monitoring

📧 victor.sunday@uniport.edu.ng | victor.n.sunday@gmail.com
🔗 Google Scholar | 🔗 LinkedIn


Intervention

28/11
15:20
20minutes
Open Mapping Initiative in Nigeria: Challenges and Personal Experiences in Volunteer Mobilization for OpenStreetMap
Victor N.Sunday, SALVATION PERE OKOH

The Open Mapping Initiative in Nigeria, driven by Unique Mappers Network- the OpenStreetMap community in Nigeria is pivotal for creating freely and accessible geospatial data to enhance humanitarian aid, urban planning, and disaster response. With 17 YouthMappers chapters, Nigeria fosters geospatial expertise among students, yet volunteer mobilization faces significant hurdles. Limited funding creates a great barrier to effective volunteering, restricting access to essential tools like laptops and smartphones while high mobile internet data subscription cost and unreliable internet connectivity impede data collection and uploads, particularly as students’ upkeep does not cover cost of internet for volunteering projects. Low awareness of OSM’s societal impact, coupled with economic pressures and a weak volunteer culture, discourages consistent participation. Gender imbalances and insufficient leadership further challenge community engagement, limiting the initiative’s scalability. During Industrial Training with Unique Mappers Network in Port Harcourt, I experienced these obstacles firsthand. The prohibitive cost of mobile data curtailed contributions to OSM due to lack of funding and donation to provide free internet access at the mapathon center,where student volunteers mobilized to be engaged with various humanitarian response mapping projects. Mobilizing volunteers was daunting, as many prioritized income-generating opportunities over unpaid mapping efforts. Despite these setbacks, open mapping remains vital for youth geospatial skill empowerment as well as addressing geospatial data gaps in local challenges, such as flood mapping and urban development. To surmount these barriers, increased funding of Local community NGOs like Unique Mappers Network, targeted OSM data awareness campaigns and mapping projects ,as well as collaborations with academic, government agencies and international agencies i are essential to bolster volunteer engagement and elevate the quality of Nigeria’s geospatial data, unlocking its potential for transformative impact using the OpenStreetMap.

Keywords: OpenStreetMap, Unique Mappers Network, Geospatial data, volunteer mobilization, Nigeria

Communauté
Audition Room - 2nd Floor