Researching and developing non-traditional analytic methods and communications tools for journalism.

Ver 1.0 Proceedings ON SALE NOW!
Co-directors:
  • Steve Doig - Tempe
  • Tom Johnson - Santa Fe
  • Steve Ross - Boston
    Fellows:
  • Patrick Mattimore - San Francisco & Geneva, Switzerland
  • John R. Sadd - Boston & Santa Fe
  • George T. Duncan - Pittsburgh, PA & Santa Fe

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  • View Article  JAGIS at The University of Hong Kong
    What have we here? Cooperation between two academic departments in the same university? Largely unheard of in most schools, but it has happened with positive results in Hong Kong.

    23 Nov 2007 http://www.hku.edu/press/news_detail_5671.html

    Power Distribution of the Four Political Camps, Seeing the 2007 District Council Election Results with Maps

    The Department of Geography and the Journalism and Media Studies Centre of The University of Hong Kong (HKU) announced today (November 23) an analysis of results of the 2007 District Council Election of four political camps from the spatial perspective.

    Dr. P.C. Lai, Associate Professor of the Department of Geography, and her team applied the Geographic Information System (GIS) to analyze results of the District Council Election. The GIS technology was used to explore the power re-distribution of the four political camps or affiliations - pro-government, pro-democrat, moderate (Liberal Party) and independent candidates - of the said election. [more]

    View Article  Radio does mapping. Mapping????

    Who says radio can't do stories on something as image-rich as maps. 
    See this from NPR: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=17173936&ps=bb2 

    'Cartographia' Showcases Maps as History, Art

    Listen Now [16 min 56 sec] add to playlist

     
       “A map is a dream, an idea, an action, an emblem of human endeavor. It instigates adventures... Careful perceptions of our surroundings have always been matters of life and death.”
    From Vincent Virga's 'Cartographia'
     

    Talk of the Nation, December 12, 2007 · Vincent Virga's Cartographia is a rare collection of 250 color maps and illustrations drawn from the world's largest cartographic collection at the Library of Congress. The collection spans everything from maps of ancient Mesopotamia, to maps of Columbus' discoveries, to contemporary satellite images and maps of the human genome.

    Virga says that maps are like time machines — they reveal as much about the society that created them as they do about the geography of the places they describe.

    Virga discusses the collection, which he culled from the Library of Congress' millions of maps and tens of thousands of atlases.

    "Maps always have and always will help us communicate our physical, mental, and spiritual journeys," Virga says.


     

     

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