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Dr. Jon Corbett recently
moved from the University of Victoria to a faculty position in the
Community, Culture and Global Studies Unit at University of British
Columbia Okanagan. Jon’s community-based research investigates processes
and tools that can be used by local and Indigenous communities to help
express their relationship to, and knowledge of, their traditional
territories and resources. Jon has worked with communities in
Australia, Indonesia, the Philippines and over the
past three years with First Nations communities in British Columbia. In
particular Jon's research interests explore how digital multimedia
technologies can be effectively combined with maps to be used by remote
and marginal communities to document, store, manage and communicate
their culture, language, history and traditional ecological knowledge.
His research also examines how geographic representation of community
information using these technologies can strengthen the community
internally through the revitalization of culture and traditional
environmental management practices, as well as externally through
increasing their influence over regional decision-making processes.


Steve deRoy is an
Anishinabe member from the Ebb & Flow First Nation in Manitoba. He has
over 6 years experience providing training, mapping and geographic
information system (GIS) support with First Nation communities
and resource companies in Western Canada. Previous to joining the
Treaty 8 Tribal Association as GIS Advisor, Steve worked with non-profit
organizations including the Red Road HIV/AIDS Network and the
Aboriginal Mapping
Network supported by Ecotrust Canada. His experience as a GIS
Specialist range from managing the implementation of a traditional use
study; using GIS technology to incorporate scientific and cultural
values into community planning processes; creating maps for
resource-based projects such as watershed assessments, forest
development plans, fish & fish habitat inventory projects; working with
public utilities; and more recently, applying GIS technology to the
field of health, in particular to HIV/AIDS within the BC Aboriginal
community. Steve has been responsible for developing maps and GIS
products for several First Nation community land use plans and atlases,
as well as providing hands-on technical training support. Aside from
taking care of his newborn daughter Isabel, you can find Steve playing
disc golf with his dog Mac, strumming his guitars, learning to play
violin, camping, hiking, snowboarding, canoeing and kayaking.
 
Dr. Jefferson
M. Fox is
Coordinator of Environmental Studies, Senior Fellow at the
East-West Center, Hawaii. He holds a PhD in development studies from the University
of Wisconsin-Madison. Research Interests: land-use and land-cover change
in Asia and the possible cumulative impact of these changes on the region
and the global environment. Dr. Fox has co-edited several books, most
recently, People and the environment:
Approaches for Linking Household and Community Surveys to Remote Sensing
and GIS (Kluwer Academic Press, 2003). His ongoing research includes
spatial information technology and society: ethics, values, and practice,
funded by the National Science Foundation; the role of land-cover change
in Montane Mainland Southeast Asia in altering regional hydrological
processes under a changing climate, funded by NASA; and building regional,
national, and local capacities for community-based management of natural
resources in Asia, funded by The Ford Foundation. Formerly with watershed
management projects in Nepal, and lectured in Geography Department, Gadjah
Mada University, Yogyakarta, Indonesia.

Dr. Peter A. Kwaku
Kyem is an Associate Professor of Geography
at Central Connecticut
State University. He has a Ph.D. in Geography from Clark University,
Worcester, Massachusetts, USA and MA in Geography from Carleton
University, Ottawa, Canada. He obtained his BA degree in Geography from University
of Cape Coast, Cape Coast, Ghana. Dr. Kyem’s current research in
Participatory GIS Applications focuses on Conflict Management,
multi-criteria decision making and evaluation of community empowerment
through PGIS Applications. Dr. Kyem’s was introduced to GIS applications
within local and indigenous communities at Clark University where he
worked as a Research Assistant at the Idrisi GIS project, Clark University. At the Idrisi GIS Project, Peter was involved in writing GIS Training Manuals for
use by resource managers, planners and others interested in studying GIS
applications in resource and environmental management. Peter worked with
Resource managers and decision makers from local communities in several
developing countries. His experiences culminated in a thesis project on
PGIS applications within rural communities in the forest region of
Ghana. His work in Ghana involved the use of GIS to help establish
institutions for collaborative forest management among foresters and local
farming communities. He has since been active in PGIS research and
development and has published several articles on PGIS applications.

Peter MBILE Ngembeni
has a Masters degree in Resources Management from the University of
Edinburgh, Scotland, and currently works for the
World Agroforestry Centre
Africa Humid Tropics Regional Programme in Cameroon, as Integrated Natural
Resources Management Researcher. Since 1998 he has been using PGIS
practices at local level in Cameroon in the contexts of (i) collaborative
protected area management, (ii) collaborative research and development on
insitu and exsitu conservation of plant genetic through use,
and (iii) integrating indigenous technical and spatial knowledge in
developing biometrically sound sampling designs for inventorying NTFP in
community forests. Since 2004 Peter is the PGIS member on the editorial
board of the EJISDC www.ejisdc.org.

Dr. Mike McCall,
Associate Professor Urban and Regional Planning and Geo-information
Management Department, International Institute for Geo-Information
Science and Earth Observation (ITC), Enschede, the Netherlands. Primary
involvement is in P-GIS and P-mapping applied to rural land and natural
resource management, resource rights, etc. An on-going bibliography and
literature review of these (and urban) applications kept updated on this
website. Professional background is in training and research in
collaborative NRM and participatory spatial planning, with working
experience in Eastern & Southern Africa and South Asia. Translation of
these experiences into P-mapping / P-GIS highlights the key function of
indigenous knowledge of resource management and value of land; and beyond
this, the assessment of P-GIS in terms of participation processes and
“good governance” dimensions.

Giacomo Rambaldi
is senior programme coordinator at the
Technical Center for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation (CTA) in
Wageningen, Netherlands. He has 25 years of
professional experience in Africa, Latin America, South Asia,
South-East Asia, South Pacific and the Caribbean where he worked for a number of international organizations
including FAO, Italian Aid to Development, the European Commission (ASEAN Regional Center for Biodiversity Conservation,
ARCBC) and the Asian
Development Bank (ADB). He holds a degree in agricultural
sciences from the State University of Milan, Italy and is currently
conducting a
PhD research with the Communication and Innovation Studies Group,
Communication Science, Wageningen
University, the Netherlands. Giacomo’s first involvement in community mapping dates back to the
late 80’s. Giacomo has been developing and promoting Participatory 3D
Modelling (P3DM), a community-based mapping method fully integrated with
GPS and GIS applications, now widely used in South-east Asia and
other parts of the world. In August
2000 he launched Participatory Avenues
www.iapad.org, a web site dedicated to sharing knowledge on community
mapping and collaborative spatial information management. Areas of
professional interest include visualizing indigenous spatial knowledge for
improving communication, facilitating peer-to-peer dialogue and managing
conflicts on issues related to the territory;
collaborative natural resource/protected area management; participatory
spatial planning; networking and web publishing. Giacomo is
the author of a number of publications
on these subjects, and the developer of this web site
www.ppgis.net and lead
administrator of the [ppgis] DGroup.

Dr. Daniel Weiner
is Professor of Geography and Director of the
Office of International
Programs at the West Virginia University, USA. His research areas include:
political ecology, with a regional focus on Appalachia and Africa;
discourses of development; GIS and Society; and, participatory GIS. In the
early 1990s, Dr. Weiner was a principal investigator on a participatory
land reform project in South Africa. The project used conventional PRA
methods to develop village-based community land reform proposals for a
post-apartheid era. Towards the end of this project, the team experimented
with geo-spatial technologies and integrated local knowledge into a GIS.
This successful experiment stimulated further research into participatory
GIS. Dr. Weiner is now helping to develop a participatory GIS in Monongalia County, West Virginia (USA). This is being done in
collaboration with researchers in Mozambique and South Africa who are developing
community-based geographic information systems in southern Africa. Dr.
Weiner co-edited a recent publication
Community Participation and Geographical Information Systems (T&F
STM publishers, 2003).

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