Tracking and Targeting Illegal Deforestation
 Decision support challenge:
Decision support challenge: 
To communicate priorities on tropical deforestation to the United Nations Office on
                     Drug and Crime (UNODC) for investigating illegal logging, mining, or illicit crop
                     cultivation.
Decision makers or end users: 
Field offices in Colombia, Peru, Bolivia, Myanmar and Laos, where UNODC tracks cultivation
                     of illicit crops coca — the raw material used to process cocaine — and opium poppy.
                     The national governments and law enforcement branches of countries cooperating with
                     UNODC.
Research challenges and data skills relating to decision-making process: 
Currently, UNODC field offices track illicit crops and environmental crimes through
                     annual surveys of remote sensing imagery combined with targeted aerial surveys and
                     site visits for validation. Machine learning techniques are deployed to expedite initial
                     analyses, but all decisions are made based on information hand-curated by a few experienced
                     technicians. The annual surveys are unresponsive to the need for immediate action,
                     and decision making currently occurs without modeling the impact of particular actions.
                     Developing real-time tools to quickly rank hotspots of land-use change for further
                     investigation will both increase the performance and reduce the costs of flights and
                     field visits. It will also enhance the ability of national governments to prevent
                     illegal deforestation. Using spatial data on illicit crops, illegal logging and  mining,
                     bioclimatic variables, and remote sensing imagery, our multidisciplinary research
                     will produce the tools to track and forecast forest loss. More importantly, building
                     interactive visual scenarios will support interactive target prioritization.
Data science skills necessary to improve decision making: 
First, data scientists need to effectively communicate with a law-enforcement audience
                     using non-technical language. The UNODC constituents uphold the Single Convention
                     on Narcotic Drugs and must adhere in their decisions to its protocols, amendments
                     and subsequent agreements. Second, it is critical to communicate uncertainty regarding
                     models and make explicit the assumptions underlying different scenarios. This work
                     bridges remote sensing, high-performance computing, and economic geography. The urgent
                     need for improved tools provides excellent motivation and impact for interdisciplinary
                     students.
Assessing improved decision making: 
The effectiveness of improved decision making can be assessed by quantifying the performance
                     of flights and visits. Another metric is the change in deforestation rates over time,
                     as decision making shifts from its current format to real-time, interactive computational
                     tools.
