Mapping for Sustainable Communities – A seminar for communities, practitioners and academics Dr Muki Haklay  Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering, UCL  [email_address]
£5m 2-year knowledge exchange programme Addresses barriers to building sustainable communities – breaks down academic/business silos Draws upon pan-UCL expertise to create tools and processes which are grounded in the research base Fosters a spirit of collaboration, not competition Will generate Education & Training material that is based on proven successful applications Can export much of its methodologies to help inform development in other countries
What are we trying to achieve today? A dialogue  between academics, practitioners and communities on participatory mapping/ participatory GIS practice and research in the UK Share the learning from  Mapping Change for Sustainable Communities  (UCL) and Mapping  Environmental Inequalities  (London 21) projects.
Outline of the day Lunch Reception Concepts and Theory – mapping and participation The practice of participatory mapping Techniques – where to start? Theorising participatory mapping The role of professional organisations Community Showcase
Outline GIS/2 (GIS, too) – introduction A very brief introduction to Philosophy of Technology Participatory GIS through Critical Theory of Technology prism What does it mean in practice?
History of GIS/2 Part of Participatory GIS / Public Participation GIS First suggested in 1996 A conceptual alternative  for GIS, which is open to the requirements and needs of communities
GIS 2 / GIS, Too GIS/2 : A set of methods and instruments which emphasize  process , and which are  oriented toward communication about representations  as much as toward the representations themselves.  A GIS/2 would increase emphasis on the  role of participants  in creation and evaluation of data.  GIS/2 would accommodate an  equitable representation of diverse views , preserving contradiction, inconsistencies and disputes.  Outputs would reflect the  standards and goals of the participants , rather than closeness of fit to standards of measurable accuracy.  A GIS/2 would be capable of managing and integrating all data components and participant contributions from one interface.  The GIS/2  would preserve and represent the history of its own development , and be more capable of handling time components than existing GIS. Source: Schroeder, P. (1996)  Criteria for the design of a GIS/2 .
‘ Rewiring’ GIS  Source: Sieber, R. (2004)  Rewiring for GIS/2 . Cartographica  39 (1) 25-39 GIS/2 Approach Material Aspects Discursive Aspect Integrating local and traditional knowledge File formats, contextual information, counter-maps Intermediaries, public outputs, GIS as part of collaborative decision making Infiltrating cyborg Greater integration, visualisation, software for low-end computing Activists in GIS companies, vendors and NGOs engagement, change textbooks Rewrite code New features, different analytic methods  Participate in software design, share info with other activists Rebuilding GIS New data models, alternate metadata schemas Collective discussion of data models, assumptions, processes
Problems with GIS Desktop GIS continues to rely on concepts from computer science, statistics, cartography, geography, CAD – and thus complex! Rewiring GIS requires ability to programme, understanding UML, Java, VB, Perl, XML etc.  Inherently, this is a tension between a technological domain and society...
Main positions in Philosophy of Technology Source: Feenberg, A. (1999)  Questioning Technology,  Routledge, New York. Technology is: Autonomous Humanly Controlled Neutral  (complete separation of means and ends) Determinism (traditional Marxism) Instrumentalism   (liberal faith in progress) Value-laden (means form a way of life that includes ends) Substantivism   (means and ends linked in a system) Critical Theory   (choice of alternative means-ends systems)
Applying the views to GIS Deterministic views : ‘GIS use is unstoppable and will advance no matter what the critics say and the technology itself is positive and enables us to extend our abilities’  Substantive view : ‘GIS cannot be reformed or used for expressing the human experience. This is an inherent flow which cannot be changed and therefore we need to ensure that other collaborative spaces remain open’ (Curry ‘Digital Places’ 1998? Massey 2005?)  Instrumentalist view:  ‘GIS can be used for guiding missiles as well as improving water provision to remote rural communities, the technology is neutral and it is the applications that matter’ (Longley et al 2005?)
Critical Theory view: technology is Humanly controlled and value-laden Emerged in the 1970s Theorists: A. Feenberg, H. Marcuse and not directly in the writings of Foucault, Latour, Habermas. Technology as ideology has definitive political implications, and it is possible to reform it and to force technological elites to be more responsive to a democratically informed public will
Feenberg’s Deep Democratisation  ‘ Technical representation is not primarily about the selection of a trusted personnel, but involves the embodiment of social and political demands in technical codes.’ Technology can be also change from within, through an intervention by the users Source: Feenberg, A. (1999)  Questioning Technology,  Routledge, New York.
‘ Hacking’ technology  Minitel – from phone directory to online chat / meeting ‘ the computer was politicized … Users "hacked" the network in which they were inserted and altered its functioning, introducing human communication on a vast scale where only the centralized distribution of information had been planned.’  AIDS therapy and the pharmaceutical test  protocol Possible democratic and participatory  transformation of technological projects  and domains Source: Feenberg, A. (1999)  Questioning Technology,  Routledge, New York.
Different levels of ‘Hacking’ Deep technical hacking  (system programming) – changing the actual code of GIS, writing new analytical tools  Shallow technical hacking  (end-user programming) – changing the interface through basic customisation, writing macros  Use hacking  – applying existing tools differently Meaning hacking  – using information in new ways, beyond its original ‘design’
Typology of hacking Type No. of participants Issue for PGIS Deep technical Significant skills, negotiation & translation of knowledge Shallow technical Skills, user / programmer, control over the application  Use Knowledge of GIS, legitimacy of outputs, access to data and software Meaning Outputs, legitimacy of interpretation, overcoming  ‘technophobia’
Meaning Hacking  Attributing new readings to existing information – noticing modelling and conceptual errors and misrepresentation of experiences . In this case, noticing the focus on road noise and the mismatch with City Airport and river noise.
Meaning Hacking  Re-reading existing maps. Using the map to share local knowledge and experience.
Use Hacking Reusing Flickr ability to mark different areas of the image for geographical annotation and creation of Memory Maps
Use Hacking Reusing Google Maps ability to create a Green Map for the Transition Town Brixton project
Use Hacking New use of sound meters and paper maps for data collection, then the data is integrated in the GIS and a map is produced.  Map construction requires knowledge of GIS, access to data, analytical knowledge
Shallow Technical Hacking ChicagoCrime.org – one of the first Google Maps Mashups.  Developed with some web programming  knowledge, but take the data sets as they are.  The innovation is in the application and its meaning
Shallow / Deep Technical Hacking New use of Google Maps, allowing entering information, editing and moderating.  Requires knowledge of GIS, programming, web development, web design
Deep Technical Hacking  Christian Nold’s work explores new ways of representation of technical and spatial information.
Deep Technical Hacking  OpenStreetMap and MySociety project are examples for complex projects that deal with geographical representation and use of geographical information.  However, what are the values that are encapsulated in these projects?
GIS/2 and practice of PPGIS Core GIS technology is still complex technically, making ‘deep technical hacking’ difficult Desktop GIS has improved, but remains unfriendly and difficult to negotiate, thus preventing ‘shallow’ and ‘use’ hacking New internet technologies provide new spaces for ‘shallow’ and surely ‘use’ hacking but are limited in scope and sophistication It is important to find ways to enhance ‘use’ and ‘meaning’ hacking, and facilitate the gap between the technical and the social
Conclusions Critical Philosophy of Technology provides a framework for understanding PGIS The ‘Hacking’ typology provide a way to position the technical aspect of the GIS with PGIS projects Much more work – both conceptual and technical – is needed for GIS/2

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Muki Haklay (UCL) Mapping For Sustainable Communities 170608

  • 1. Mapping for Sustainable Communities – A seminar for communities, practitioners and academics Dr Muki Haklay Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering, UCL [email_address]
  • 2. £5m 2-year knowledge exchange programme Addresses barriers to building sustainable communities – breaks down academic/business silos Draws upon pan-UCL expertise to create tools and processes which are grounded in the research base Fosters a spirit of collaboration, not competition Will generate Education & Training material that is based on proven successful applications Can export much of its methodologies to help inform development in other countries
  • 3. What are we trying to achieve today? A dialogue between academics, practitioners and communities on participatory mapping/ participatory GIS practice and research in the UK Share the learning from Mapping Change for Sustainable Communities (UCL) and Mapping Environmental Inequalities (London 21) projects.
  • 4. Outline of the day Lunch Reception Concepts and Theory – mapping and participation The practice of participatory mapping Techniques – where to start? Theorising participatory mapping The role of professional organisations Community Showcase
  • 5. Outline GIS/2 (GIS, too) – introduction A very brief introduction to Philosophy of Technology Participatory GIS through Critical Theory of Technology prism What does it mean in practice?
  • 6. History of GIS/2 Part of Participatory GIS / Public Participation GIS First suggested in 1996 A conceptual alternative for GIS, which is open to the requirements and needs of communities
  • 7. GIS 2 / GIS, Too GIS/2 : A set of methods and instruments which emphasize process , and which are oriented toward communication about representations as much as toward the representations themselves. A GIS/2 would increase emphasis on the role of participants in creation and evaluation of data. GIS/2 would accommodate an equitable representation of diverse views , preserving contradiction, inconsistencies and disputes. Outputs would reflect the standards and goals of the participants , rather than closeness of fit to standards of measurable accuracy. A GIS/2 would be capable of managing and integrating all data components and participant contributions from one interface. The GIS/2 would preserve and represent the history of its own development , and be more capable of handling time components than existing GIS. Source: Schroeder, P. (1996) Criteria for the design of a GIS/2 .
  • 8. ‘ Rewiring’ GIS Source: Sieber, R. (2004) Rewiring for GIS/2 . Cartographica 39 (1) 25-39 GIS/2 Approach Material Aspects Discursive Aspect Integrating local and traditional knowledge File formats, contextual information, counter-maps Intermediaries, public outputs, GIS as part of collaborative decision making Infiltrating cyborg Greater integration, visualisation, software for low-end computing Activists in GIS companies, vendors and NGOs engagement, change textbooks Rewrite code New features, different analytic methods Participate in software design, share info with other activists Rebuilding GIS New data models, alternate metadata schemas Collective discussion of data models, assumptions, processes
  • 9. Problems with GIS Desktop GIS continues to rely on concepts from computer science, statistics, cartography, geography, CAD – and thus complex! Rewiring GIS requires ability to programme, understanding UML, Java, VB, Perl, XML etc. Inherently, this is a tension between a technological domain and society...
  • 10. Main positions in Philosophy of Technology Source: Feenberg, A. (1999) Questioning Technology, Routledge, New York. Technology is: Autonomous Humanly Controlled Neutral (complete separation of means and ends) Determinism (traditional Marxism) Instrumentalism (liberal faith in progress) Value-laden (means form a way of life that includes ends) Substantivism (means and ends linked in a system) Critical Theory (choice of alternative means-ends systems)
  • 11. Applying the views to GIS Deterministic views : ‘GIS use is unstoppable and will advance no matter what the critics say and the technology itself is positive and enables us to extend our abilities’ Substantive view : ‘GIS cannot be reformed or used for expressing the human experience. This is an inherent flow which cannot be changed and therefore we need to ensure that other collaborative spaces remain open’ (Curry ‘Digital Places’ 1998? Massey 2005?) Instrumentalist view: ‘GIS can be used for guiding missiles as well as improving water provision to remote rural communities, the technology is neutral and it is the applications that matter’ (Longley et al 2005?)
  • 12. Critical Theory view: technology is Humanly controlled and value-laden Emerged in the 1970s Theorists: A. Feenberg, H. Marcuse and not directly in the writings of Foucault, Latour, Habermas. Technology as ideology has definitive political implications, and it is possible to reform it and to force technological elites to be more responsive to a democratically informed public will
  • 13. Feenberg’s Deep Democratisation ‘ Technical representation is not primarily about the selection of a trusted personnel, but involves the embodiment of social and political demands in technical codes.’ Technology can be also change from within, through an intervention by the users Source: Feenberg, A. (1999) Questioning Technology, Routledge, New York.
  • 14. ‘ Hacking’ technology Minitel – from phone directory to online chat / meeting ‘ the computer was politicized … Users "hacked" the network in which they were inserted and altered its functioning, introducing human communication on a vast scale where only the centralized distribution of information had been planned.’ AIDS therapy and the pharmaceutical test protocol Possible democratic and participatory transformation of technological projects and domains Source: Feenberg, A. (1999) Questioning Technology, Routledge, New York.
  • 15. Different levels of ‘Hacking’ Deep technical hacking (system programming) – changing the actual code of GIS, writing new analytical tools Shallow technical hacking (end-user programming) – changing the interface through basic customisation, writing macros Use hacking – applying existing tools differently Meaning hacking – using information in new ways, beyond its original ‘design’
  • 16. Typology of hacking Type No. of participants Issue for PGIS Deep technical Significant skills, negotiation & translation of knowledge Shallow technical Skills, user / programmer, control over the application Use Knowledge of GIS, legitimacy of outputs, access to data and software Meaning Outputs, legitimacy of interpretation, overcoming ‘technophobia’
  • 17. Meaning Hacking Attributing new readings to existing information – noticing modelling and conceptual errors and misrepresentation of experiences . In this case, noticing the focus on road noise and the mismatch with City Airport and river noise.
  • 18. Meaning Hacking Re-reading existing maps. Using the map to share local knowledge and experience.
  • 19. Use Hacking Reusing Flickr ability to mark different areas of the image for geographical annotation and creation of Memory Maps
  • 20. Use Hacking Reusing Google Maps ability to create a Green Map for the Transition Town Brixton project
  • 21. Use Hacking New use of sound meters and paper maps for data collection, then the data is integrated in the GIS and a map is produced. Map construction requires knowledge of GIS, access to data, analytical knowledge
  • 22. Shallow Technical Hacking ChicagoCrime.org – one of the first Google Maps Mashups. Developed with some web programming knowledge, but take the data sets as they are. The innovation is in the application and its meaning
  • 23. Shallow / Deep Technical Hacking New use of Google Maps, allowing entering information, editing and moderating. Requires knowledge of GIS, programming, web development, web design
  • 24. Deep Technical Hacking Christian Nold’s work explores new ways of representation of technical and spatial information.
  • 25. Deep Technical Hacking OpenStreetMap and MySociety project are examples for complex projects that deal with geographical representation and use of geographical information. However, what are the values that are encapsulated in these projects?
  • 26. GIS/2 and practice of PPGIS Core GIS technology is still complex technically, making ‘deep technical hacking’ difficult Desktop GIS has improved, but remains unfriendly and difficult to negotiate, thus preventing ‘shallow’ and ‘use’ hacking New internet technologies provide new spaces for ‘shallow’ and surely ‘use’ hacking but are limited in scope and sophistication It is important to find ways to enhance ‘use’ and ‘meaning’ hacking, and facilitate the gap between the technical and the social
  • 27. Conclusions Critical Philosophy of Technology provides a framework for understanding PGIS The ‘Hacking’ typology provide a way to position the technical aspect of the GIS with PGIS projects Much more work – both conceptual and technical – is needed for GIS/2