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Mapping Power: Ironic Effects of Spatial Information Technology. Jefferson Fox, Krisnawati Suryanata, Peter Hershock, Albertus Pramono. Introduction. Map (and SIT) can assist communities to assert specific and permanent territorial claims to resources.
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Mapping Power: Ironic Effects of Spatial Information Technology Jefferson Fox, Krisnawati Suryanata, Peter Hershock, Albertus Pramono
Introduction • Map (and SIT) can assist communities to assert specific and permanent territorial claims to resources. • Maps can empower communities through sharing history of place, enhancing group awareness and identity, and building trust and communication between people.
Unintended consequences of mapping • Conflicts between and within communities • Loss of indigenous conceptions of space • Increased regulation and cooptation by the state
Tools, Technologies, and Ironic Effects • Tools—a hand-held GPS is a tool • Technologies—Complex system of material and conceptual practices
No exit rights from technologies • Widespread adoption of a technology leads to unintended consequences, ironic or revenge effects • Ironic effects are not incidental consequences but systematically conducive to the further deployment of the technology
Three Hypotheses • Enrollment: Local actors strategically choose to adopt or reject mapping technology • Unexpected Consequences: SIT has embedded within it values such as “objectivity”, “standardization”, and “precision.” The introduction of these values into societies where they have not been prominent will have unexpected effects.
SITs and NGOS: The adoption of spatial information technologies by non-government organizations (NGOs) causes problems because of their social context, the potential for cooptation, and a lack of resources.
Enrollment and Empowerment • Why do communities map? • Who was empowered by SIT? • Who was disadvantaged? • Who controls the maps? • What are the processes in which empowerment happens?
Advantages • Empowerment does happen—both in terms of advocacy (making territorial claims against the state), and in communities in terms of being better able to plan the management of resources, monitor the implementation of projects, and resolve conflicts.
Enrollment: Who owns the map? • Case Study from Sumba, eastern Indonesia
Unexpected Consequences: Multiple interests and actors • Mapping can force communities to confront latent issues which can lead to conflicts. • Who represents the community? • Boundaries • Land Use
One of the ironic effects of SIT is that mapping efforts initiated to resolve conflicts between local communities and government agencies, often results in increased conflict between and within communities.
Unexpected Consequences: Impacts on community values • Are there any changes in the community’s conceptions of space? • Are there any changes in the community’s relationship to its land and landscape? • Are there any changes in inter-community relationships?
Changes in communities perception of space • Case study from Ratanakiri, eastern Cambodia
Unexpected Consequences: Changes in the community’s relationship to its land and landscape • Mapping seeks to increase security of land ownership, but once we map, people can only obtain security through land titling, a process that is controlled by outside authorities.
One of the practices often used to protect common property resources is control of knowledge about the location of valuable resources. • By making knowledge accessible to all, mapping breaks down common property systems.
SIT and NGOs • How does an NGO decide to invest in developing an SIT component to their work? • How do they sustain operating costs beyond initial investments? • Does the adoption of SIT affect relations with donors? • Does it affect the expectations of community members vis-à-vis the NGO partner.
How does SIT affect NGOs • Case studies from Indonesia
Problem: Effects of SIT on NGOs • Reasons for adopting SIT vary among NGOs but reasons external to the NGOs were at least as important as those from within. • Shortage of technical capacity • Gap in expectations and work cultures between staff trained in SIT and those trained in community development
Over-riding need for strong protocol to follow when introducing SIT into a community • NGOs pay too little attention on building local capacity to revise and re-map as circumstances change.
Summary: Ironic effects • Mapping seeks to mediate conflict between communities and government agencies over land claims. Yet mapping often lead to further conflicts among communities and within communities
Mapping seeks to increase security of land ownership, but once we map, people could only obtain security through land titling, a process that is controlled by outside authorities.
We map to protect common property resources but mapping seems to drive privatization of resources and by making knowledge accessible to all, mapping breaks down common property systems.
Summary: But Yet • SIT does provide a means for re-inserting local people into “empty” state maps and strengthening their claims to land and other resources.
Mapping and working with maps enhances community capacity to negotiate access to local resources, develops technical and analytical skills for understanding both the immediate local and its complex relationships to surrounding locales and regions.
Conclusion • We have no choice but to map, but we need to map with a clear understanding of both intended and unintended consequences of our actions.