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Can participatory mapping activate spatial and political practices? Mapping popular resistance and dwelling practices in Bogotá eastern hills
Author(s) -
Allen Adriana,
Lambert Rita,
Apsan Frediani Alexandre,
Ome Tatiana
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
area
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.958
H-Index - 82
eISSN - 1475-4762
pISSN - 0004-0894
DOI - 10.1111/area.12187
Subject(s) - citizen journalism , politics , resistance (ecology) , sociology , participatory gis , state (computer science) , inequality , space (punctuation) , political science , law , computer science , ecology , algorithm , mathematical analysis , mathematics , biology , operating system
Within the wider ongoing debate of P articipatory A ction R esearch, this paper interrogates the capacity of participatory mapping not just as a means to tap into plural knowledges over and emanating from specific geographies but rather to disrupt exclusionary constructions of space and place and the reproduction of the governing relationships that cause inequality. Focusing on a participatory mapping experience undertaken by the authors in collaboration with local residents in the steep slopes of B ogotá's eastern hills – an area threatened by forced evictions in the name of ecological preservation and risk protection arguments – we explore why and under what conditions participatory mapping might have the potential to disrupt conflicting interpretations of place and space held both by local residents and state agencies, which in turn can open the room to rework what types of interventions are actually needed and why. We hypothesise that this depends on the extent to which mapping can abridge the different scales at which the state and marginalised communities make sense of a site historically underpinned by different forms of spatial myopia and territorial stigma. This is in our view not just a consequence of the application of participatory mapping techniques per se, but depends on the way in which mapping is used to expand the political space in which different conceptions of a territory can effectively talk to each other.

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