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Diversity and Inclusion: Stories from the fieldΒ #5

@maning

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@maning

Diversity and Inclusion: Stories from the field.

πŸ‘‹

😜 Maning Sambale
πŸ’… Data @ Mapbox, maptivist
✍️ @maningsambale, https://www.openstreetmap.org/user/maning/, emmanuel.sambale@gmail.com
πŸ—£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/)
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/


πŸ€“ We (development workers) need updated (map) data to support our work.

☝️ data is wrong, incomplete and outdated.

A dynamic process intentionally designed with diversity and inclusion can reduce the risk when using πŸ‘† data.


πŸ—£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.
  • 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.
  • 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.

πŸ€“ Both maps shows very different priorities and perspectives but not one more important than the other.


πŸ—£οΈ Mapping with VIPs (visually impaired persons)

Initial contact
Initial contact

πŸ€“ Data can come even from those you least expect it to come from.


πŸ—£οΈ Lower Shire DRR Mapping

Photo by Emir Hartato (CC BY-SA 2.0)

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

Field data collection at Lower Shire, Malawi Photo by Emir Hartato (CC BY-SA 2.0) Photo by Emir Hartato (CC BY-SA 2.0)

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

Photo by Emir Hartato (CC BY-SA 2.0)

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

Photo by Emir Hartato (CC BY-SA 2.0)

βœ… Identify and support community mobilizers to ensure sustainability of the outcomes.

πŸ™‹ Does this address the most urgent concern of the community during flooding?

🐊 and hippos β€œvisiting” villages during floods!

πŸ€“ Even with open data, what you collect may not be what the people need.


πŸ—£οΈ Assisting local government towards disaster risk reduction

Guagua ESSC-OSMPH training field survey  Photo by Eugene Alvin Villar (CC BY-SA 4.0)
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
Community Mapping for Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Guidebook Harnessing Local Knowledge to Build Resilience

Large OSM print in Guagua's DRRM office.
Large OSM print in Guagua's DRRM office.

πŸš’ story …

πŸ€“ Independence in creating, updating and analyzing data empowers communities.


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