Countermapping: Difference between revisions
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(Created page with " * Traditional Ecological Knowledge: For example, in the forests of Kalimantan, Indonesia, where the official maps of the government and the timber industry (for logging and mining) were blank, counter-maps from indigenous people told a very different story of generations of use, as well as customs and disputes among and within different tribes. * Scale on an orthodox map is uniform; counter-maps can represent psychological as well as physical distances that are rar...") |
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* Counter-mapping’s ability to capture fragmentation makes it a useful tool for documenting physical transformations wrought by climate change.<ref>https://www.theguardian.com/science/blog/2018/mar/06/counter-mapping-cartography-that-lets-the-powerless-speak</ref> | * Counter-mapping’s ability to capture fragmentation makes it a useful tool for documenting physical transformations wrought by climate change.<ref>https://www.theguardian.com/science/blog/2018/mar/06/counter-mapping-cartography-that-lets-the-powerless-speak</ref> | ||
= Cited = |
Revision as of 22:09, 8 August 2023
- Traditional Ecological Knowledge: For example, in the forests of Kalimantan, Indonesia, where the official maps of the government and the timber industry (for logging and mining) were blank, counter-maps from indigenous people told a very different story of generations of use, as well as customs and disputes among and within different tribes.
- Scale on an orthodox map is uniform; counter-maps can represent psychological as well as physical distances that are rarely linear or uniform.
- Counter-mapping’s ability to capture fragmentation makes it a useful tool for documenting physical transformations wrought by climate change.[1]