Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published bySilvia Lang Modified over 9 years ago
1
1 PGM Department Participatory GIS & Participatory Mapping – Uses and Applications Applications: Land & Resource Claims Community NRM & Local Planning Promoting Equity Conflict Management Cultural Historical Identity
2
2 PGM Department P-GIS Applications Claiming land and resource rights & entitlements, Community management (& planning) of lands & NR, v Promoting equity (ethnicity, culture, gender, environmental justice, etc.), v Conflict management (amongst communities, between communities & higher-level forces), v Cultural historical identity building & awareness.
3
3 PGM Department ´Claiming Our Land´ - Demarcating Customary Lands & Traditional Boundaries Identify areas of Use and Occupancy Priorities for Claims Evaluation of Scenarios – of alternative land management Prep. for Court Procedures – rigour, accuracy, appearance
4
4 PGM Department GIS & Maps in Land Claims “A map is likely to enhance a court’s understanding, synthesis, and resolution of a land dispute” “GIS [is] a useful tool in bridging the gap between traditional landscape images and the demand for formal cartographic representations of land necessary for land claim negotiation.” “the key text for modern states to take over resource tenure is the map”
5
5 PGM Department Maps and Land Titling - a Warning “.. mapping of land titling oversimplifies overlapping claims from different family members and reduces them to simplistic 2-D space of ‘household title’ – leads to exclusion, dispossession, & conflicts” (Ganjanapan 1994)
6
6 PGM Department Respect for People’s Land Rights Concepts of Land ISK as symbolic, emotional, and visionary knowledge – Cultural, historical, & spiritual values of land. Land in the stewardship of people. Land determines activity spaces and responsibility spaces.
7
7 PGM Department Representing land tenure Customary Land Tenure System e.g. Aboriginal Australia Market-oriented Land Tenure e.g. Australian Cadastral System Spiritual physical connection to landLand as a marketable commodity Communal Ownership. Stewardship.Register land with cadastre. Exclusive ownership. Land transferred through inheritanceTransfer land sale, lease, inheritance. Evidence tenure via song, dance, stories, pictures, ceremony – ‘incorporating’ Written Records by Certificate of Title granted by state. Long-term ‘inscribed’ storage in databases. Boundaries are ‘limits of influence’ topography, sacred spaces. Boundaries geodetic, demarcated by monuments. State regulation. Overlapping rights, responsibilities, negotiate with neighbour peoples Rights on neighbouring lands restricted & controlled by the State Soft boundariesHard boundaries Temporary/Seasonally flexible bound Richer Meanings – holistic GIS cannot handle – Maybe PGIS Mostly fixed boundaries Preciser meanings - reductionist
8
8 PGM Department ISK / ITK - Indigenous (Spatial) Technical Knowledge IK and scientific knowledge are not always so different. ITK/ISK maybe more accurate because embodies generations of practical knowledge, and works in interactive, holistic systems. Examples: Interpret satellite images of land capability with Bedu shepherds Jordan (Patrick 2002); ITK of grazing lands in Burkina Faso (Sedogo 2002); Australia: mapping ITK of valuable vegetation types Senegal River valley: comparison farmers’ & scientific soil classifications (Tabor & Hutchinson 1994);
9
9 PGM Department
10
10 PGM Department
11
11 PGM Department
12
12 PGM Department Mapping Local Urban Resources
13
13 PGM Department Equity & Legitimacy - Gendered Space Spatial knowledge is a form of power over space and power over behaviour. Gendered spaces are different in character and value and use. Women’s space may be very restricted (due to culture, or danger) Women’s space may not be visible, nor easily transferable to GIS
14
14 PGM Department
15
15 PGM Department
16
16 PGM Department
17
17 PGM Department Poverty & Conservation Sketch Map, Mali village
18
18 PGM Department Children´s Map of Beacon Park
19
19 PGM Department P-GIS in Conflict Management Conflict mapping Fuzzy and flexible boundaries, Conflicts over land, land resources, access to resources, ownership of resources, Or, conflicts between different forms of ownership or entitlements Counter mapping
20
20 PGM Department
21
21 PGM Department
22
22 PGM Department
23
23 PGM Department Cultural-Historical Identity > Building the Community - Promote Community awareness - Cultural Historical Knowledge > local history - Community development of GIS strengthened Ifugao historical cultural consciousness and prepared for negotiations. - Sacred Lands - Land for the Ancestors
24
24 PGM Department
25
25 PGM Department Mental Maps – Los Angeles white elite, black, hispanic
26
26 PGM Department Rosario, Argentina
27
27 PGM Department Community Green Map, James Bay
28
28 PGM Department Bostonian´s Image
29
29 PGM Department New Yorker´s Image of the USA
30
30 PGM Department Jefferson City - watersheds
31
31 PGM Department Ownership of Spatial Data o gathering, hunting, fishing, grazing, woodfuel o waterholes. o boundaries of culture areas, clans, tribes. o customary property demarcations within a cultural boundary, e.g. by clan, lineage, household, o historic places o ancestral grounds, sacred areas, buried art o indigenous place names, cosmological (creation) locations.
32
32 PGM Department Maori Indigenous Values of Land (Harmsworth)
33
33 PGM Department How is Ownership protected? o concealed files linked to GIS o overlay only at a crude scale o hyperlink to an accepted authority figure
34
34 PGM Department Questions of ownership (Rambaldi) Who decides on what is “important”? Who owns l the pictorial language, l its graphic vocabulary and l the resulting message? Who owns the Legend?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.