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Title Policy issues in modern cartography / edited by D.R. Fraser Taylor.

Imprint New York : Pergamon, 1998.

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Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe Elsevier ScienceDirect Ebook  Electronic Book    ---  Available
Edition 1st ed.
Description 1 online resource (viii, 277 pages) : illustrations, maps
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
Series Modern cartography ; v. 3
Modern cartography ; v. 3.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents National mapping as a business-like enterprise / David Rhind -- Spatial data policy and pricing in the United States / Stephen C. Guptill and Diane F. Eldridge -- Digital data, copyright, commercialization and related issues : a Canadian perspective / Mark Corey -- Availability and pricing of georeferenced data in Asia Pacific / Anthony Gar-On Yeh -- Copyright law issues in modern cartography / Lesley Ellen Harris -- The protection and availability of digital cartographic information and products / Aslesen Laila -- Legal protection of geographic databases : the viewpoint of the Institut Geographique National, France / Jean-Philippe Grelot -- A private sector perspective / Ed Kennedy -- Tragedy of the information commons / Harlan J. Onsrud -- Availability of geospatial data through libraries in the United States / Mary Lynette Larsgaard -- Modern cartography, policy issues and the developing nations : rhetoric and reality / D.R. Fraser Taylor -- Professional responsibility and ethics in the spatial sciences / Nancy J. Obermeyer -- The three R's of GIS-Based Site Selection : Representation, Resistance, and Ridicule / Mark Monmonier -- Why GIS needs postmodern social theory, and vice versa / Lakshman Yapa -- Some remaining challenges / D.R. Fraser Taylor.
Summary Modern cartography, as the two earlier volumes of this series on <IT>Geographic Information Systems: The Microcomputer and Modern Cartography</IT> (Taylor, 1991), and <IT>Visualization in Modern Cartography</IT> (MacEachren and Taylor, 1994) illustrate, is deeply interested in the technological advances of the information revolution and their impact on the discipline and profession. The vast majority of the growing literature in recent years has dealt with some aspect of technological change. The driving forces of the information era are developments in computer technology and related developments in satellites and telecommunications and these forces have had a fundamental impact on all aspects of cartography. It is understandable that the attention of cartographers has been focussed on technological change, especially in a situation where the speed of that change is so rapid. The half life of knowledge in some areas can now be measured in months, rather than years, and cartographers have been fully occupied with the struggle to adapt to rapidly changing technological circumstances. Computer technologies are now so all pervasive that there is little cartography without them and earlier terms such as digital cartography, automated cartography or computer assisted cartography which emerged in the 1960s and 70s are now anachronistic. What can be described as obsession with technological change has, in the last two decades in particular, led to a relatively narrow "technologized" normative and formalistic approach to cartography and to the relative neglect of the consideration of a wide range of policy issues which are imbedded in the societal context in which modern cartography finds itself. It is to a discussion of policy issues that this book hopes to make a contribution. As with the technology of the information revolution, the policy issues involved are not unique to cartography but several key policy issues are of special interest to cartographers. Some of them, such as copyright and intellectual property rights, are not new but take on new significance as a result of technological changes. Modern cartography has largely come to terms with the technological developments of the information revolution and the considerable adaptations required have been made although in some instances not without considerable difficulty. The same cannot be said, however, for some of the key policy issues discussed in this book. In many instances we are simply at the stage of defining the nature and extent of the problems which is a necessary first step in determining solutions. There are differences in opinion as to what the key policy issues are and how they should be approached. The various chapters of this book reflect these different perspectives. In selecting authors to contribute to the volume an attempt was made to ensure that the major policy issues were dealt with from a variety of different perceptions. An attempt has also been made to achieve a comprehensive discussion of major topics such as the pricing of digital spatial data, copyright and intellectual property by having several authors define and examine the key issues involved. As cartography increasingly moves from a supply driven approach to a demand driven one, producers must deal not only with the technical changes required by this fundamental shift but also with the policy issues involved. In several instances major cartographic producers, such as national mapping agencies, have responded superbly to the technological challenges of producing maps on demand in response to the specific requirements of individual users including maps on the World Wide Web thus making high quality cartographic information available in ways which have never before been possible. At the same time, however, the accessibility, pricing and copyright policies of the very same agencies are perhaps limiting access and creating new barriers to the utilization of the products they are creating. Unless these contradictions are addressed new problems may well be created. The situation is compounded by the neo-conservative fiscal policies of many of the governments of the industrial world which are reducing public spending on mapping and shifting costs to the end user. This volume contains the views of national mapping agencies, legal scholars, the library community, the private sector and academia on these and many other important issues. The book begins with perspectives from national mapping agencies in Britain, Canada and the United States followed by a survey of the situation in Asia. The next three chapters deal primarily with legal issues such as copyright and intellectual property from both North American and European perspectives. Chapter 8 presents an important perspective on the key issues by a representative of the private sector followed by six chapters written primarily by academics including an important contribution by a map librarian. The volume concludes with an assessment of the challenges remaining
Note Print version record.
Subject Cartography -- Government policy.
Geographic information systems -- Government policy.
Cartographie -- Politique gouvernementale.
Systèmes d'information géographique -- Politique gouvernementale.
TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING -- Cartography.
SCIENCE -- Earth Sciences -- Geography.
Cartographie.
SIG = Systèmes d'information géographique.
Politiques publiques.
Cartography -- Government policy
Geographic information systems -- Government policy
Cartografie.
Technische vernieuwing.
Beleid.
Added Author Taylor, D. R. F. (David Ruxton Fraser), 1937-
Other Form: Print version: Policy issues in modern cartography. 1st ed. New York : Pergamon, 1998 0080431119 9780080431116 (DLC) 98025805 (OCoLC)39261893
ISBN 9780080431116
0080431119
9780080539188
0080539181
1281072095
9781281072092
Standard No. AU@ 000048130813
DEBBG BV042309016
DEBSZ 36777271X
DEBSZ 482437103
NZ1 12432937
NZ1 15191549

 
    
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