About PGIS
What is ‘PGIS – Participatory GIS’?
The participatory creation of maps, above and beyond their
interpretation, started in the late ‘1980s. At that time,
development practitioners were inclined to adopt Participatory
Rural Appraisal (PRA) methods (i.e, sketch mapping)
rather than venturing into more complex, demanding and time
consuming scale mapping. Preference was given to
eliciting indigenous knowledge and utilizing local community
dynamics to facilitate communication between insiders and
outsiders (researchers). The strategies placed little emphasis
on charting courses of action that enabled communities to
interact efficiently with policymakers. In some developing
countries, aerial photography, satellite imagery and official
large scale topographic maps were under governmental control and
their access restricted because of national security concerns.
The situation changed in the ‘90s, with the diffusion of modern
spatial information technologies including geographic
information systems (GIS), low-cost global positioning systems
(GPS), remote sensing image analysis software, open access to
data via the Internet and steadily decreasing cost of computer
hardware. Spatial data, previously controlled by government
institutions became progressively more
accessible to
and mastered by non-governmental and community-based
organisations, minority groups and sectors of society
traditionally disenfranchised by maps and marginalized from
decision making processes. This new environment facilitated the
integration of geographic information technologies and systems (GIT&S)
into community-centred initiatives. Practitioners and
researchers around the world all sharing the goal of empowering
the underprivileged adopted a variety of GIT&S to integrate
multiple realities and diverse forms of information to foster
social learning, support two-way communication and broaden
public participation across socio-economic contexts, locations
and sectors.
This has spurred a rapid development in community-based
management of spatial information through what is generally
termed Participatory GIS (PGIS).
PGIS is the result of a spontaneous merger of Participatory
Learning and Action (PLA) methods with GIT&S and builds on using
combinations of geo-spatial information management tools ranging
from sketch maps, Participatory 3D Models (P3DM), aerial
photographs, satellite imagery, Global Positioning Systems (GPS)
and Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to compose peoples’
spatial knowledge in the forms of virtual or physical, 2 or 3
dimensional maps used as interactive vehicles for spatial
learning, discussion, information exchange, analysis, advocacy
and decision making.
PGIS practice is usually geared towards community empowerment
through measured, demand-driven, user-friendly and integrated
applications of GIT&S, where maps become a major conduit in the
process. The practice is multidisciplinary in nature, relies on
the integration of ‘expert’ with socially and gender
differentiated local knowledge, and builds on high levels of
stakeholders’ participation in the processes of spatial
learning, analysis, decision making and action.
Geo-referencing and visualising Indigenous Spatial Knowledge (ISK)
helps communities engage in peer-to-peer dialogues and promotes
their issues and concerns vis-à-vis higher level authorities and
economic forces. Georeferenced ISK is also used in more
adversarial contexts like in the case of tenure mapping where
indigenous communities have adapted participatory mapping
methodologies to regain a maximum measure of control over
ancestral lands and resources.
The integrated and multifaceted process of which PGIS is a
component, gives communities confidence in interacting with
outsiders and adds authority to local knowledge. In fact, there
is power associated with the practice as ‘flashy’ map outputs
can be highly communicative forms of spatial representation,
communicate information immediately, convey a sense of authority
and are rarely disputed.
As a result, if appropriately utilized, the practice may have
profound implications and stimulate innovation and social
change. More importantly and unlike traditional GIS
applications, PGIS aims at placing control on access and use of
culturally sensitive spatial data in the hands of those who
generated these thereby protecting traditional knowledge and
wisdom from external exploitation.
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