Full Circle : More than just Social Implications of GIS

AbstractThe emergence of geographic information systems (GIS) has raised a useful debate in the discipline of geography over the connection between technology and society. Proponents of GIS have argued from the beginning that their work had a value that warranted adoption; hence, that technology brought something to society. A wave of criticism argued that there were implications and risks to society in adopting these technologies. While this debate served some useful purposes, it was only a start on the issue. The focus on implications risked the simplification of seeing GIS as an inexorable, implacable force, a form of “technological determinism.” This paper argues for a full circle of implication: GIS – the daily practice, the data stored, the software – is constructed and maintained by social processes embedded in historical and geographically contingent settings. The full circle requires an openness to studies of the influence from the social realm to the technology. By tracing the full circle, too, ...

[1]  Howard Veregin,et al.  COMPUTER INNOVATION AND ADOPTION IN GEOGRAPHY: A CRITIQUE OF CONVENTIONAL TECHNOLOGICAL MODELS.. , 1995 .

[2]  L. D. Hopkins,et al.  Methods for Generating Land Suitability Maps : A Comparative Evaluation , 2013 .

[3]  John C. Antenucci,et al.  Geographic Information Systems: A Guide to the Technology , 1991 .

[4]  James C. Scott,et al.  Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed , 1999 .

[5]  David H. DeVorkin,et al.  Inventing Accuracy: A Historical Sociology of Nuclear Missile Guidance , 1990 .

[6]  N. Schuurman Trouble in the heartland: GIS and its critics in the 1990s , 2000 .

[7]  J. B. Harley,et al.  DECONSTRUCTING THE MAP , 1989 .

[8]  John Pickles,et al.  Discourse on Method and the History of Discipline: Reflections on Dobson's 1983 Automated Geography∗ , 1993 .

[9]  J. L. Heilbron,et al.  Leviathan and the air-pump. Hobbes, Boyle, and the experimental life , 1989, Medical History.

[10]  B. Latour Science in Action , 1987 .

[11]  Michael F. Goodchild,et al.  Geographical information science , 1992, Int. J. Geogr. Inf. Sci..

[12]  Roderick Martin,et al.  Scientific knowledge and sociological theory , 1975, Nature.

[13]  R. E. Sieber,et al.  Conforming (to) the opposition: the social construction of geographical information systems in social movements , 2000, Int. J. Geogr. Inf. Sci..

[14]  L. Winner Autonomous Technology: Technics-out-of-Control as a Theme in Political Thought , 1977 .

[15]  M. Armstrong On Automated Geography , 1993 .

[16]  Susan M. Roberts,et al.  EARTH SHATTERING: GLOBAL IMAGERY AND GIS. , 1995 .

[17]  W. L. Sumner The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution , 1959, Nature.

[18]  Francis Harvey,et al.  Boundary Objects and the Social Construction of GIS Technology , 1998 .

[19]  R. Merton The Normative Structure of Science , 1973 .

[20]  J. B. Harley,et al.  Cartography, ethics and social theory , 1990 .

[21]  Ron Johnston,et al.  GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS AND GEOGRAPHY. , 1995 .

[22]  J. E. Dobson The Geographic Revolution: A Retrospective on the Age of Automated Geography , 1993 .

[23]  D. Bloor,et al.  Knowledge and Social Imagery , 1977 .

[24]  T. Wilbanks Geography and Technology , 2004 .

[25]  P. Gummett The Social Construction of Technological Systems: New Directions in the Sociology and History of Technology , 1988 .

[26]  Ronald F. Abler,et al.  The National Science Foundation National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis , 1987, Int. J. Geogr. Inf. Sci..

[27]  E. Sheppard GIS and Society: Towards a Research Agenda , 1995 .

[28]  J. Pickles Representations in an Electronic Age: Geography, GIS, and Democracy , 1995 .

[29]  Michael F. Goodchild,et al.  A spatial analytical perspective on geographical information systems , 1987, Int. J. Geogr. Inf. Sci..

[30]  J. Pickles Tool or Science? GIS, Technoscience, and the Theoretical Turn , 1997 .

[31]  Jeffrey K. Pinto,et al.  Diffusion of geographic information innovations , 1991, Int. J. Geogr. Inf. Sci..

[32]  C. Tomlin Geographic information systems and cartographic modeling , 1990 .

[33]  Eugene W. Martin,et al.  Actor-networks and implementation: examples from conservation GIS in Ecuador , 2000, Int. J. Geogr. Inf. Sci..

[34]  Claire Beesley,et al.  Ground truth: The social implications of geographic information systems , 1996 .

[35]  P. Feyerabend,et al.  Against Method: Outline of an Anarchistic Theory of Knowledge , 1976 .

[36]  M. Foucault,et al.  Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison. , 1978 .

[37]  F I G Rawlins,et al.  Philosophical Foundations of Physics—An Introduction to the Philosophy of Science , 1967 .

[38]  Andrew Barry,et al.  Viewing the Earth: The Social Construction of the Landsat Satellite System by Pamela E. Mack (review) , 1992, Technology and Culture.

[39]  Trevor Pinch,et al.  How users matter : The co-construction of users and technologies , 2003 .

[40]  M. Serres,et al.  A History of Scientific Thought: Elements of a HIstory of Science , 1995 .

[41]  R. Lake Planning and applied geography: positivism, ethics, and geographic information systems , 1993 .

[42]  Roger F. Tomlinson,et al.  Geographic Information Systems—a new frontier , 1990 .

[43]  P. McHaffie MANUFACTURING METAPHORS: PUBLIC CARTOGRAPHY, THE MARKET AND DEMOCRACY. , 1995 .

[44]  Ahmed Riahi-Belkaoui The cultural shaping of accounting , 1995 .

[45]  Stan Openshaw,et al.  A View on the GIS Crisis in Geography, or, Using GIS to Put Humpty-Dumpty Back Together Again , 1991 .

[46]  Andrew Pickering,et al.  The mangle of practice : time, agency, and science , 1997 .

[47]  Simon Sheikh The Production of Space , 1996 .

[48]  Eric S. Fowler,et al.  Exploring Geographic Information Systems , 1997 .

[49]  A. Feenberg SUBVERSIVE RATIONALIZATION: TECHNOLOGY, POWER AND DEMOCRACY 1 , 1992 .

[50]  Jon Louis Bentley,et al.  Multidimensional divide-and-conquer , 1980, CACM.

[51]  Jon Goss,et al.  MARKETING THE NEW MARKETING: THE STRATEGIC DISCOURSE OF GEODEMOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS. , 1995 .

[52]  David M. Mark,et al.  Introduction to the Varenius project , 1999, Int. J. Geogr. Inf. Sci..

[53]  B. Latour,et al.  Laboratory Life: The Construction of Scientific Facts , 1979 .

[54]  DAVID DAVIES,et al.  Understanding of science , 1989, Nature.

[55]  Ghislaine M. Lawrence The social construction of technological systems: new directions in the sociology and history of technology , 1989, Medical History.

[56]  T. Kuhn,et al.  The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. , 1964 .

[57]  Susan Leigh Star,et al.  Institutional Ecology, `Translations' and Boundary Objects: Amateurs and Professionals in Berkeley's Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, 1907-39 , 1989 .

[58]  Waldo R. Tobler,et al.  A Transformational View of Cartography , 1979 .

[59]  N. Chrisman Beyond spatio-temporal data models: A model of GIS as a technology embedded in historical context , 1993 .

[60]  N. Smith History and philosophy of geography: real wars, theory wars , 1992 .

[61]  C. Bullard Shaping technology/Building society , 1994 .

[62]  Automated Geography: Some Problems and Pitfalls , 1983 .

[63]  P. Feyerabend Against Method: Outline of an Anarchistic Theory of Knowledge , 1976 .

[64]  M. Curry On the possibility of ethics in geography: writing, citing, and the construction of intellectual property , 1991 .

[65]  R. Tomlinson PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS: GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS and GEOGRAPHERS IN THE 1990s , 1989 .

[66]  D. Massey Space‐Time, ‘Science’ and the Relationship between Physical Geography and Human Geography , 1999 .

[67]  P. Walsh The Power of Maps. , 1998 .

[68]  C. Lawrence The pasteurization of France , 1990, Medical History.

[69]  Francis Harvey The social construction of geographical information systems , 2000, Int. J. Geogr. Inf. Sci..