geoweb

Part 1: Interview with PhD student Roman Lukayenko at Memorial University

 

In this podcast-video, Sophia an undergraduate environmental studies student at McGill University interviews, Roman Lukayenko (Memorial University of Newfoundland) is a PhD candidate and works on the technical development of nlnature.com/ a website dedicated to citizen wildlife sightings in Newfoundland,

Interview with Dr. Johnson Quebec Geoweb Research Project

 

In this podcast-video, Sophia an undergraduate environmental studies student at McGill University interviews, Dr. Peter Johnson a post-doctoral fellow at McGill University about his research. Dr. Johnson draws on his work in Quebec working with several government agencies, and specifically in the rural region of Acton vale to illustrate both the challenges and opportunities of these geospatial technologies in decision-making and citizen engagement,

Interview with Pierre Beaudreau: Developing Geoweb Tools with Government

 

In this interview, Pierre Beaudreau a third year undergraduate in Geography discusses how municipal governments are looking to use GeoWeb tools for rural development and to increase public involvement in decision-making. Drawing from a partnership project with the rural municipality of Acton Vale, Quebec, he explains the Geoweb, its function, motivation and challenges associated with government adoption along with his own challenges in developing interactive web tools with government.

GeoWeb Summer Series 2011: Interview with Korbin daSilva

 

In this interview Korbin daSilva discusses his Masters research on Participatory Urban Design and how the use of 3D tools, such as his Community Design Tool can provide a way for citizens to more effectively partake in the process of designing sustainable neighborhoods through government to public participatory processes

The Geoweb and the Rural Digital Divide

 

Team 41 at the GEOIDE Conference

Several graduate and undergraduate students represented Team 41 at the 2011 GEOIDE Annual Conference held this year in Toronto on May 16th and 17th:

  • Lukanyenko, Roman. 2011. Citizen Science 2.0: Increasing quality and participation. Poster presented at the 2011 Annual GEOIDE Conference May 16-17, Toronto.
  • Torio, Dante. 2011. Using Fuzzy Logic to Map the Threat of Coastal Squeeze in Marshes at Wells Reserve and Portland, Maine. Poster presented at the 2011 Annual GEOIDE Conference May 16-17, Toronto.
  • Tudge, Pamela. 2011. Participatory Geoweb: Communicating Climate Change Report for Year 2. Presented 2011 Annual GEOIDE Conference May 16-17, Toronto.
  • Walker, Blake, and Claus Rinner. 2011. Deconstructing Effective Participation on the Geoweb. Poster presented at the 2011 Annual GEOIDE Conference May 16-17, Toronto.
  • Zhou, Jian. 2011. A Debate on Using Climate Models: Is it Crazy or Not?.  Presented at the 2011 Annual GEOIDE Conference May 16-17, Toronto.

Team 41 students Blake Walker and Steven Chung also served on administrative roles during and after the conference: Blake moderated several conference sessions in his capacity as coordinator of the GEOIDE Student Network; and Steven was the coordinator of the GEOIDE Summer School that followed the conference.

 

Empowering communities to manage their water supply

As part of the project “Geoweb and Community Development in Quebec“, two teams of McGill School of the Environment students spent the fall term 2010 working with a community-based watershed monitoring agency CDRN (Corporation de développement de la rivière Noire) to explore the potential for the Geoweb to serve as a conduit for citizen participation in watershed management. These student groups developed two tools, conducted a series of workshops with community members, and produced reports and instructional materials. McGill Public Affairs produced a short film about the group activities that gives an excellent overview of the project and the potential for the Geoweb in a community development context.

 

Pamela Tudge completes MA thesis

I recently completed my MA thesis entitled Cultivating Change: using the geoweb to map the food system in the North Okanagan, with Dr. Jon Corbett and with support from GEOIDE team 41.

My study examined how the geoweb can be used as a communication tool between advocates, farmers and community members in a small town setting. I have attached a pdf of the thesis below.  

 

 

GeowebReviewPaper

 

Renee, Nama, 

 

Here is just a rough list of references to get us started. Feel free to delete as required. My reference software doesn't seem to like including all the author names, but you get the point. Here is a link to an archive that has each as a .pdf

http://dl.dropbox.com/u/551548/Geoweb.zip

 

Akehurst. User generated content: the use of blogs for tourism organisations and tourism consumers. Service Business (2009) vol. 3 pp. 51-61

 

Amin. Local community on trial. Economy and society (2005) vol. 34 (4) pp. 612-633

 

Arnstein. A ladder of citizen participation. Journal of the American Institute of Planners (1969) vol. 35 pp. 216-224

 

Ballas et al. Building a spatial microsimulation-based planning support system for local policy making. Environment and Planning A (2007) vol. 39 (10) pp. 2482-2499

 

Becu et al. Participatory computer simulation to support collective decision-making: Potential and limits of stakeholder involvement. Land Use Policy (2008) vol. 25 pp. 498-509

 

Carver et al. Developing and Testing an Online Tool for Teaching GIS Concepts Applied to Spatial Decision-making. Journal of Geography in Higher Education (2004) vol. 28 (3) pp. 425-438

 

Carver. The future of participatory approaches using geographic information: developing a research agenda for the 21st century. URISA Journal (2003) vol. 15 (1) pp. 61-71

 

Carver et al. Public participation, GIS, and cyberdemocracy: evaluating on-line spatial decision support systems. Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design (2001) vol. 28 (6) pp. 907-921

 

Carver et al. Accessing Geographical Information Systems over the World Wide Web: Improving public participation in environmental decision-making. Information Infrastructure and Policy (2000) vol. 6 pp. 157-170

 

Chadwick. Web 2.0: New Challenges for the Study of E-Democracy in Era of Informational Exuberance. ISJLP (2008)

 

Cinnamon and Schuurman. Injury surveillance in low-resource settings using Geospatial and Social Web technologies. International Journal of Health Geographics (2010) vol. 9 pp. 25

 

Connor. A new ladder of citizen participation. National Civic Review (1988) vol. 77 (3) pp. 249-257

 

Corbett and Keller. An Analytical Framework to Examine Empowerment Associated with Participatory Geographic Information …. Cartographica: The International Journal for Geographic … (2005) vol. 40 (4) pp. 91-102

 

Cormode and Krishnamurthy. Key differences between Web 1.0 and Web 2.0. First Monday (2008)

 

Craglia et al. Next-Generation Digital Earth. International Journal of Spatial Data Infrastructures Research (2008) vol. 3 pp. 146-167

 

Crampton. Cartography: maps 2.0. Progress in Human Geography (2009) vol. 33 (1) pp. 91-100

 

Crampton. Can Peasants Map? Map Mashups, The Geo-Spatial Web and the Future of Information. Locative Media Conference (2007) pp. 1-37

 

Dunn. Participatory GIS a people's GIS?. Progress in Human Geography (2007) vol. 31 pp. 616-637

 

Ellul et al. A Mechanism to Create Community Maps for Non-Technical Users.  (2009) pp. 1-6

 

Ellul et al. Beyond the Internet Increasing Participation in Community Events by Text Messaging.  (2009) pp. 1-10

 

Elwood. Geographic information science: emerging research on the societal implications of the geospatial web. Progress in Human Geography (2009) pp. 1-9

 

Elwood. Geographic Information Science: new geovisualization technologies--emerging questions and linkages with GIScience research. Progress in Human Geography (2009) vol. 53 pp. 256-263

 

Elwood. Volunteered geographic information: key questions, concepts and methods to guide emerging research and practice. GeoJournal (2008) vol. 72 (3) pp. 133-135

 

Elwood. Grassroots groups as stakeholders in spatial data infrastructures: challenges and opportunities for local data development and sharing. International Journal of Geographical Information Science (2008) vol. 22 (1) pp. 71-90

 

Elwood. Volunteered geographic information: future research directions motivated by critical, participatory, and feminist GIS. GeoJournal (2008) vol. 72 (3) pp. 173-183

 

Esri. The GeoWeb: Spatially Enabling the Next Generation Web.  (2006) pp. 1-10

 

Evans et al. Democratic input into the nuclear waste disposal problem: The influence of geographical data on decision making examined through a Web-based GIS. Journal of Geographical Systems (2004) vol. 6 (2) pp. 1-16

 

Flanagin and Metzger. The credibility of volunteered geographic information. GeoJournal (2008) vol. 72 (3) pp. 137-148

 

Ganapati. Using Geographic Information Systems to Increase Citizen Engagement. IBM Center for The Business of Government (2010) pp. 1-46

 

Goodchild and Glennon. Crowdsourcing geographic information for disaster response: a research frontier. International Journal of Digital Earth (2010) vol. 99999 (1) pp. 1-11

 

Goodchild. Commentary: whither VGI?. GeoJournal (2008) vol. 72 (3) pp. 239-244

 

Goodchild. Citizens as Voluntary Sensors: Spatial Data Infrastructure in the World of Web 2.0. International Journal of Spatial Data Infrastructures Research (2007) vol. 2 (24-32)

 

Gorman. Is academia missing the boat for the GeoWeb revolution? A response to Harvey's commentary. Environment and Planning B - Planning and Design (2007) vol. 34 pp. 949-952

 

Gouveia and Fonseca. New approaches to environmental monitoring: the use of ICT to explore volunteered geographic information. GeoJournal (2008) vol. 72 (3) pp. 185-197

 

Haklay et al. Web mapping 2.0: the Neogeography of the Geoweb. Geography Compass (2008) vol. 2 (6) pp. 2011-2039

 

Hasse and Milne. Participatory Approaches and Geographical Information Systems (PAGIS) in Tourism Planning. Tourism Geographies (2005) vol. 7 (3) pp. 272-289

 

Hudson-Smith et al. The Neogeography of Virtual Cities: Digital Mirrors into a Recursive World. Handbook of Research on Urban Informatics (2009) pp. 270-290

 

Hudson-Smith et al. NeoGeography and Web 2.0: concepts, tools and applications. Journal of Location Based Services (2009) vol. 3 (2) pp. 118-145

 

Hudson-Smith et al. Mapping for the Masses: Accessing Web 2.0 through Crowdsourcing. CASA Working Papers Series (2008) pp. 1-19

 

Hudson-Smith. The Renaissance of Geographical Information: Neogeography, Gaming and Second Life. CASA Working Papers Series (2008) pp. 1-16

 

Jankowski. Towards participatory geographic information systems for community-based environmental decision making. Journal of Environmental Management (2009) vol. 90 pp. 1966-1971

 

Kingston. Public Participation in Local Policy Decision-making: The Role of Web-based Mapping. The Cartographic Journal (2007) vol. 44 (2) pp. 138-144

 

Kingston et al. Web-based public participation geographical information systems: an aid to local environmental decision-making. Computers, Environment and Urban Systems (2000) vol. 24 (2) pp. 109-125

 

Komarkova et al. Usability of GeoWeb sites: case study of Czech regional authorities web sites. Business Information Systems: Lecture Notes in Computer Science (2007)

 

Komarkova et al. Heuristic Evaluation of Usability of GeoWeb Sites. LECTURE NOTES IN COMPUTER SCIENCE (2007)

 

Lee et al. Web 2.0 and opportunities for small businesses. Service Business (2008)

 

Lessig. Free Culture.  (2004) pp. 1-352

 

Maguire. GeoWeb 2.0: implications for ESDI. Proceedings of the 12th EC-GIGIS Workshop (2005)

 

Maiyo et al. Collaborative post-disaster damage mapping via GEO web services. Geographic Information and Cartography for Risk and Crisis Management: Lecture Notes in Geoinformation and Cartography (2010)

 

Manzo and Pitkins. Using Maps to Promote Health Equity.  (2009) pp. 1-34

 

Maptogether.org. The Illustrated Guide to Nonprofit GIS and Online Mapping.  (2010) pp. 1-46

 

O'Connor. User-generated content and travel: A case study on Tripadvisor. com. Information and Communication Technologies in Tourism 2008 (2008)

 

O'Reilly. What Is Web 2.0. O'Reilly (2005) pp. 1-17

 

Osimo. Web 2.0 in government: why and how. Institute for Prospectice Technological Studies (IPTS) (2008)

 

Rinner and Bird. Evaluating community engagement through argumentation maps—a public participation GIS case study. Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design (2009) vol. 36 (4) pp. 588-601

 

Rinner et al. The use of Web 2.0 concepts to support deliberation in spatial decision-making. Computers (2008)

 

Rinner. Web-based spatial decision support: Status and research directions. Journal of Geographic Information and Decision Analysis (2003) vol. 7 (1) pp. 14-31

 

Rinner. Argumentation maps: GIS-based discussion support for on-line planning. Environment and Planning B (2001) vol. 28 pp. 847-863

 

Rouse et al. Participating in the geospatial web: collaborative mapping, social networks and participatory GIS. The Geospatial Web (2007)

 

Schegg et al. An exploratory field study of Web 2.0 in Tourism. Information Technologies in Tourism (2008)

 

Sidlar and Rinner. Utility assessment of a map-based online geo-collaboration tool. Journal of Environmental Management (2009) vol. 90 pp. 2020-2026

 

Sieber. Geoweb for Social Change. Position Paper (2007)

 

Strohmaier. The Web 2.0 way of learning with technologies. International Journal of Learning Technology (2007) vol. 3 (1) pp. 87-107

 

Sui. The wikification of GIS and its consequences: Or Angelina Jolie’s new tattoo and the future of GIS. Computers, Environment and Urban Systems (2008) vol. 32 pp. 1-5

 

Tritter and McCallum. The snakes and ladders of user involvement: moving beyond Arnstein. Health Policy (2006) vol. 76 (2) pp. 156-168

 

Tulloch. Is VGI participation? From vernal pools to video games. GeoJournal (2008) vol. 72 (3) pp. 161-171

 

Wunsch-Vincent and Vickery. Participative Web: User-Created Content. OECD Committee for Information, Computer and Communications Policy (2007) pp. 1-74

 

Zhao and Coleman. GeoDF: Towards a SDI-based PPGIS application for E-Governance. Proceedings of the GSDI-9 Conference (2006) pp. 6-10

 

Abstracts from Botshelo and Nyaladzani on VGI

Two recent graduates from University of New Brunswick share their abstracts on Volunteer Geographic Information (VGI) which is an important area for inquiry for our team. 

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