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Description
Diversity and Inclusion: Stories from the field.
π
π Maning Sambale
π
Data @ Mapbox, maptivist
βοΈ @maningsambale, https://www.openstreetmap.org/user/maning/, emmanuel.sambale@gmail.com
π£οΈ https://github.com/maning/talkingpoints
The first public map we created for a local community tourism project. No Living Trees Were Harmed in the Making of This Sign. (Photo: https://pat3k.wordpress.com/my-community/
π€ We (development workers) need updated (map) data to support our work.
βοΈ data is wrong, incomplete and outdated.
A dynamic process intentionally designed with diversity and inclusion can reduce the risk when using π data.
π£οΈ Batak and Tagbanua community mapping
- Community mapping with IP communities in Palawan to support conservation plans of Puerto Princesa Subterranean River National Park.
- Participatory mapping with several villages using 3D map.
- Separate groups for men and women.
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Men - covered a larger areas of the community.
- names of all major rivers and streams;
- location of hunting grounds including accurate position of where they hunted the largest wild pig, snake, or eel;
- important trees for gathering resins and wild honey;
- approximate boundary of forest cover types.
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Women - covered a smaller area mostly within the established settlements of the tribe;
- location of community structures such as schools, place of worship, community halls for gatherings;
- sources of clean water (wells and springs);
- a stream that regularly overflows limiting access to children going to school;
- patches in the forest to gather medicinal plants and other wild vegetables;
- patches of swidden farmlots.
π€ Both maps shows very different priorities and perspectives but not one more important than the other.
π£οΈ Mapping with VIPs (visually impaired persons)
π€ Data can come even from those you least expect it to come from.
π£οΈ Lower Shire DRR Mapping

β Training sessions on open data and community mapping across different sectors.

β Collected geospatial data in the field in the two most flood prone districts of Malawi (Chikhwawa and Nsanje).

β Host the data on the Malawi Open Spatial Data Portal (MASDAP) and perform contingency planning using INASAFE.

β Identify and support community mobilizers to ensure sustainability of the outcomes.
π Does this address the most urgent concern of the community during flooding?
π and hippos βvisitingβ villages during floods!
π€ Even with open data, what you collect may not be what the people need.
π£οΈ Assisting local government towards disaster risk reduction
Guagua ESSC-OSMPH training field survey Photo by Eugene Alvin Villar (CC BY-SA 4.0)
Community Mapping for Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Guidebook Harnessing Local Knowledge to Build Resilience
Large OSM print in Guagua's DRRM office.
π story β¦
π€ Independence in creating, updating and analyzing data empowers communities.
Summary
See also
- https://github.com/maning/talkingpoints
- On getting lucky and finding this work meaningful
- https://www.slideshare.net/esambale/geoladies-20140609
- https://www.openstreetmap.org/user/maning/diary/19956
- https://www.hotosm.org/projects/malawi_flood_preparedness
- http://essc.org.ph/content/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/ESSC_WBDRR_Flyer_FINAL.pdf
- https://www.gfdrr.org/en/publication/community-mapping-disaster-risk-reduction-and-management
Meta
- Talk presented to DSWD and Miriam College MEP-Org events in celebration of Women's Month (March 2019)
- https://twitter.com/MapAmorePH/status/1109030457708994560







