Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

E-raamat: Politics of Mapping [Wiley Online]

  • Formaat: 288 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Aug-2022
  • Kirjastus: ISTE Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1119986753
  • ISBN-13: 9781119986751
  • Wiley Online
  • Hind: 174,45 €*
  • * hind, mis tagab piiramatu üheaegsete kasutajate arvuga ligipääsu piiramatuks ajaks
  • Formaat: 288 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Aug-2022
  • Kirjastus: ISTE Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1119986753
  • ISBN-13: 9781119986751
Maps and mapping are fundamentally political. Whether they are authoritarian, hegemonic, participatory or critical, they are most often guided by the desire to have control over space, and always involve power relations. This book takes stock of the knowledge acquired and the debates conducted in the field of critical cartography over some thirty years.

The Politics of Mapping includes analyses of recent semiological, social and technological innovations in the production and use of maps and, more generally, geographical information. The chapters are the work of specialists in the field, in the form of a thematic analysis, a theoretical essay, or a reflection on a professional, scientific or militant practice. From mapping issues for modern states to the digital and big data era, from maps produced by Indigenous peoples or migrant–advocacy organizations in Europe, the perspectives are both historical and contemporary.
Introduction xi
Bernard Debarbieux
Irene Hirt
Chapter 1 The Map as a Legitimate Space: Cartography as a Language, a Stage and an Issue
1(24)
Jacques Levy
1.1 Introduction
1(2)
1.2 Map truth regimes
3(3)
1.3 The new spaces of the electoral map
6(7)
1.4 Cartographic turn, geographic turn and political space
13(3)
1.5 Ethical turn and mapping
16(2)
1.6 Mapping, citizen science
18(4)
1.7 References
22(3)
Chapter 2 Cartography and Spatial Production of Society
25(22)
Franco Farinelli
2.1 The map, politics and morality
25(3)
2.2 The map, territory and globe
28(3)
2.3 The map, order and modernity
31(4)
2.4 The map, reason and rhetoric
35(4)
2.5 The map, constraint and the self-organization
39(1)
2.6 The map, production and society
40(3)
2.7 References
43(4)
Chapter 3 Farewell to Maps: Reformulating Critical Cartography in the Digital Age
47(22)
Pierre Gautreau
Matthieu noucher
3.1 Introduction
47(1)
3.2 Farewell to maps: when the digital world disrupts the objects and questions of a research current
48(7)
3.2.1 The main issues of conventional critical mapping
48(2)
3.2.2 What the digital world does to critical mapping: Russian doll-like difficulties
50(4)
3.2.3 Methods maladapted to digital technology changes
54(1)
3.3 The shortcomings of critical mapping exacerbated by digital technology
55(3)
3.3.1 The "Harlesian" of reflections on the finished product
55(1)
3.3.2 The taste for successful maps
56(2)
3.3.3 A taste for great narratives
58(1)
3.4 Reformulating critical mapping in the digital age
58(7)
3.4.1 Three priority disciplinary alliances
59(1)
3.4.2 Making political sense of what does not work: investigating "maps for nothing" in the digital age
60(2)
3.4.3 The political meaning of cartographic modesty: what do the "small maps of the Web" tell us?
62(1)
3.4.4 Circulation and policy
63(2)
3.5 Conclusion
65(1)
3.6 References
65(4)
Chapter 4 Mapping and Participation in the topos and chora Test
69(22)
Federica Burini
4.1 Introduction
69(1)
4.2 Participatory mapping tested by topos and chora
70(1)
4.3 Toward a reflective approach to participatory mapping
71(1)
4.4 From solicited mapping to collaborative systems and digital traces
72(3)
4.5 The new boundaries of collaborative mapping systems produced by geolocation technologies
75(1)
4.6 Representing the spatiotemporal dimension of urban mobility using data produced by inhabitants
76(2)
4.7 Toward a reflective and chorographic approach to collaborative mapping systems
78(8)
4.7.1 Solicited mapping systems with active participation
80(3)
4.7.2 Voluntary and participatory mapping systems
83(2)
4.7.3 Derivative and passive participatory map systems
85(1)
4.8 Conclusion
86(1)
4.9 References
87(4)
Chapter 5 The Cartographic Factory of Modern States
91(36)
Bernard Debarbieux
5.1 Introduction
91(1)
5.2 The invention of spatial modernity in the Renaissance
92(1)
5.3 State imaginaries of space and territory
93(10)
5.4 The construction of the nation-state through the map
103(7)
5.5 The colonial adventure: a counter-illustration?
110(3)
5.6 Maps and the government of things and people
113(5)
5.7 Current state of the issue
118(1)
5.8 References
119(8)
Chapter 6 Statistical Cartography and International Governance in the Age of Big Data
127(28)
Hy Dao
6.1 Introduction
127(1)
6.2 Birth and internationalization of statistical cartography
128(1)
6.3 International statistical mapping
129(5)
6.3.1 Statistics and mapping by international organizations
129(3)
6.3.2 Coordination of statistical and geographical information
132(1)
6.3.3 Is the aggregation of national data outdated?
133(1)
6.4 Cartography in the digital age
134(8)
6.4.1 Computerization and dissemination of cartographic resources
134(2)
6.4.2 A global information space based on the Web and Big Data
136(6)
6.5 Mapping the SDGs
142(5)
6.5.1 A set of non-binding targets for 2030
142(1)
6.5.2 Governance of the SDG indicators
142(1)
6.5.3 Information coverage of the SDGs
143(1)
6.5.4 Cartographic visualizations of the SDGs
144(2)
6.5.5 The SDG indicator process challenged by Big Data
146(1)
6.6 (Re)configurations of international cartography
147(3)
6.6.1 From the visual paradigm to the datamatic paradigm
147(1)
6.6.2 Informational alignments
148(2)
6.6.3 Political alignments
150(1)
6.7 Conclusion
150(1)
6.8 References
151(4)
Chapter 7 Indigenous Mapping: Reclaiming Territories, Decolonizing Knowledge
155(32)
Irene Hirt
7.1 Introduction
155(2)
7.2 Conceptual and theoretical milestones
157(6)
7.2.1 Indigenous counter-mapping: a struggle for concrete and symbolic spaces
157(4)
7.2.2 Indigenous mapping as a field of academic thinking
161(2)
7.3 Using maps to claim rights and reclaim territories
163(9)
7.3.1 Brief history of the political use of maps
163(1)
7.3.2 Indigenous mapping in the Americas: similarities and differences between North and South
164(4)
7.3.3 The aporias of the "cartographic-legal strategy"
168(2)
7.3.4 Controlling the flow of geographic information
170(1)
7.3.5 The ambiguous role of the digital giants
171(1)
7.4 Decolonizing maps and cartography
172(6)
7.4.1 Toward an inclusive definition of maps
172(2)
7.4.2 "Reconstructing" maps
174(1)
7.4.3 Representing "Indigenous depth of place"
175(3)
7.5 Conclusion
178(1)
7.6 References
179(8)
Chapter 8 Chorematic Representations in Participatory Processes of Territorial Projects
187(14)
Sylvie Lardon
8.1 Introduction
187(2)
8.2 Methodological choices
189(1)
8.3 Three illustrations of the use of choremes in territorial projects
190(7)
8.3.1 The Pikogan forest in Quebec or choremes for communicating
190(2)
8.3.2 The Western Pacific Islands or the choremes for integrating the issues
192(3)
8.3.3 The gardens of the Billom area in France or the choremes for acting
195(2)
8.4 How can we evaluate this co-construction of territories?
197(2)
8.5 References
199(2)
Chapter 9 National Territorial Prospective Maps
201(16)
Anne Bailly
9.1 Introduction
201(1)
9.2 DATAR, foresight and mapping
201(2)
9.3 The Paris Basin White Paper
203(4)
9.3.1 Cartographic design
205(1)
9.3.2 The graphic vocabulary
205(1)
9.3.3 Translating, visualizing and expressing intentions
206(1)
9.4 The first maps of the great national debate on regional planning
207(3)
9.5 France in 2015
210(2)
9.6 France in 2020
212(3)
9.6.1 Three "deterrent" scenarios
213(1)
9.6.2 The "connected polycentrism" scenario
213(2)
9.7 Lessons from a wealth of experience
215(1)
9.8 References
215(2)
Chapter 10 Making Maps to Fight Unjust Migration Policies
217(20)
Olivier Clochard
10.1 Introduction
217(1)
10.2 Actors and objectives of cartographic productions
218(7)
10.2.1 From respect to emancipation of semiological conventions
218(5)
10.2.2 The two network compasses
223(2)
10.3 Mapping experiments undertaken
225(9)
10.3.1 Carrying knowledge and claims
225(3)
10.3.2 New modes of representation
228(1)
10.3.3 The words on the maps are also important
229(3)
10.3.4 The issue of esthetics
232(2)
10.4 Conclusion
234(1)
10.5 References
234(3)
List of Authors 237(2)
Index 239
Bernard Debarbieux is Professor of Cultural and Political Geography at the University of Geneva, Switzerland. His research focuses on the spatial dimension of social imaginaries, including the role of maps in the configuration of these imaginaries, and associated social collectives.

Irene Hirt is Professor of Human Geography at the University of Geneva, Switzerland. Her research focuses on participatory and decolonial methods, processes of land territorial reappropriation by Indigenous peoples across the Americas and mapping in Indigenous contexts.