08431nam 2200529 450 991067819850332120230109223326.01-119-98675-31-119-98673-7(MiAaPQ)EBC6995034(Au-PeEL)EBL6995034(CKB)22444500200041(EXLCZ)992244450020004120221210d2022 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe politics of mapping /coordinated by Bernard Debarbieux, Irene HirtHoboken, New Jersey :ISTE Ltd/John Wiley and Sons Inc,[2022]©20221 online resource (279 pages)Print version: Debarbieux, Bernard The Politics of Mapping Newark : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated,c2022 9781789450675 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover -- Half-Title Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. The Map as a Legitimate Space: Cartography as a Language, a Stage and an Issue -- 1.1. Introduction -- 1.2. Map truth regimes -- 1.3. The new spaces of the electoral map -- 1.4. Cartographic turn, geographic turn and political space -- 1.5. Ethical turn and mapping -- 1.6. Mapping, citizen science -- 1.7. References -- Chapter 2. Cartography and Spatial Production of Society -- 2.1. The map, politics and morality -- 2.2. The map, territory and globe -- 2.3. The map, order and modernity -- 2.4. The map, reason and rhetoric -- 2.5. The map, constraint and the self-organization -- 2.6. The map, production and society -- 2.7. References -- Chapter 3. Farewell to Maps: Reformulating Critical Cartography in the Digital Age -- 3.1. Introduction -- 3.2. Farewell to maps: when the digital world disrupts the objects and questions of a research current -- 3.2.1. The main issues of conventional critical mapping -- 3.2.2. What the digital world does to critical mapping: Russian doll-like difficulties -- 3.2.3. Methods maladapted to digital technology changes -- 3.3. The shortcomings of critical mapping exacerbated by digital technology -- 3.3.1. The "Harlesian" of reflections on the finished product -- 3.3.2. The taste for successful maps -- 3.3.3. A taste for great narratives -- 3.4. Reformulating critical mapping in the digital age -- 3.4.1. Three priority disciplinary alliances -- 3.4.2. Making political sense of what does not work: investigating "maps for nothing" in the digital age -- 3.4.3. The political meaning of cartographic modesty: what do the "small maps of the Web" tell us? -- 3.4.4. Circulation and policy -- 3.5. Conclusion -- 3.6. References -- Chapter 4. Mapping and Participation in the topos and chora Test -- 4.1. Introduction.4.2. Participatory mapping tested by topos and chora -- 4.3. Toward a reflective approach to participatory mapping -- 4.4. From solicited mapping to collaborative systems and digital traces -- 4.5. The new boundaries of collaborative mapping systems produced by geolocation technologies -- 4.6. Representing the spatiotemporal dimension of urban mobility using data produced by inhabitants -- 4.7. Toward a reflective and chorographic approach to collaborative mapping systems -- 4.7.1. Solicited mapping systems with active participation -- 4.7.2. Voluntary and participatory mapping systems -- 4.7.3. Derivative and passive participatory map systems -- 4.8. Conclusion -- 4.9. References -- Chapter 5. The Cartographic Factory of Modern States -- 5.1. Introduction -- 5.2. The invention of spatial modernity in the Renaissance -- 5.3. State imaginaries of space and territory -- 5.4. The construction of the nation-state through the map -- 5.5. The colonial adventure: a counter-illustration? -- 5.6. Maps and the government of things and people -- 5.7. Current state of the issue -- 5.8. References -- Chapter 6. Statistical Cartography and International Governance in the Age of Big Data -- 6.1. Introduction -- 6.2. Birth and internationalization of statistical cartography -- 6.3. International statistical mapping -- 6.3.1. Statistics and mapping by international organizations -- 6.3.2. Coordination of statistical and geographical information -- 6.3.3. Is the aggregation of national data outdated? -- 6.4. Cartography in the digital age -- 6.4.1. Computerization and dissemination of cartographic resources -- 6.4.2. A global information space based on the Web and Big Data -- 6.5. Mapping the SDGs -- 6.5.1. A set of non-binding targets for 2030 -- 6.5.2. Governance of the SDG indicators -- 6.5.3. Information coverage of the SDGs.6.5.4. Cartographic visualizations of the SDGs -- 6.5.5. The SDG indicator process challenged by Big Data -- 6.6. (Re)configurations of international cartography -- 6.6.1. From the visual paradigm to the datamatic paradigm -- 6.6.2. Informational alignments -- 6.6.3. Political alignments -- 6.7. Conclusion -- 6.8. References -- Chapter 7. Indigenous Mapping: Reclaiming Territories, Decolonizing Knowledge -- 7.1. Introduction -- 7.2. Conceptual and theoretical milestones -- 7.2.1. Indigenous counter-mapping: a struggle for concrete and symbolic spaces -- 7.2.2. Indigenous mapping as a field of academic thinking -- 7.3. Using maps to claim rights and reclaim territories -- 7.3.1. Brief history of the political use of maps -- 7.3.2. Indigenous mapping in the Americas: similarities and differences between North and South -- 7.3.3. The aporias of the "cartographic-legal strategy" -- 7.3.4. Controlling the flow of geographic information -- 7.3.5. The ambiguous role of the digital giants -- 7.4. Decolonizing maps and cartography -- 7.4.1. Toward an inclusive definition of maps -- 7.4.2. "Reconstructing" maps -- 7.4.3. Representing "Indigenous depth of place" -- 7.5. Conclusion -- 7.6. References -- Chapter 8. Chorematic Representations in Participatory Processes of Territorial Projects -- 8.1. Introduction -- 8.2. Methodological choices -- 8.3. Three illustrations of the use of choremes in territorial projects -- 8.3.1. The Pikogan forest in Quebec or choremes for communicating -- 8.3.2. The Western Pacific Islands or the choremes for integrating the issues -- 8.3.3. The gardens of the Billom area in France or the choremes for acting -- 8.4. How can we evaluate this co-construction of territories? -- 8.5. References -- Chapter 9. National Territorial Prospective Maps -- 9.1. Introduction -- 9.2. DATAR, foresight and mapping.9.3. The Paris Basin White Paper -- 9.3.1. Cartographic design -- 9.3.2. The graphic vocabulary -- 9.3.3. Translating, visualizing and expressing intentions -- 9.4. The first maps of the great national debate on regional planning -- 9.5. France in 2015 -- 9.6. France in 2020 -- 9.6.1. Three "deterrent" scenarios -- 9.6.2. The "connected polycentrism" scenario -- 9.7. Lessons from a wealth of experience -- 9.8. References -- Chapter 10. Making Maps to Fight Unjust Migration Policies -- 10.1. Introduction -- 10.2. Actors and objectives of cartographic productions -- 10.2.1. From respect to emancipation of semiological conventions -- 10.2.2. The two network compasses -- 10.3. Mapping experiments undertaken -- 10.3.1. Carrying knowledge and claims -- 10.3.2. New modes of representation -- 10.3.3. The words on the maps are also important -- 10.3.4. The issue of esthetics -- 10.4. Conclusion -- 10.5. References -- List of Authors -- Index -- EULA.Cartographyhttp://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85020515Philosophyhttp://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh99005065Cartographyhttp://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85020515Political aspectshttp://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh00005651Cartographyhttp://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85020515Technological innovationshttp://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2001009095GeographyCartographyPhilosophy.CartographyPolitical aspects.CartographyTechnological innovations.Geography.526.01Debarbieux BernardHirt IrèneMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910678198503321The politics of mapping3060977UNINA