LEADER : 00000nam 2200000uu 4500 |
008 120503s2011||||th 000 0 eng d |
020 ^a9781412946452^c(cloth) |
050 00 ^aG70.212^b.S266 2011 |
245 04 ^aThe Sage handbook of GIS and society /^cedited by Timothy L. Nyerges, Helen Couclelis, Robert McMaster |
250 ^a1st ed |
260 ^aThousand Oaks, CA :^bSage,^c2011 |
300 ^axvi, 559 p. :^bill., maps ;^c26 cm |
504 ^aIncludes bibliographical references and index |
505 00 ^gPart I Introduction --^tGeographic information systemsand society: a twenty year research perspective / Timothy L. Nyerges ; Robert McMaster ; Helen Coucletis --^gPart IIGIS and society research -- Section 1 Founations of GIS and society research --^tConcepts, principles, tools, and challenges in spatially integrated social science / DonaldG. Janelle ; Michael F. Goodchild --^tGeographic ontologies and society / Marino kavouras ; Margarita Kokla--^tThe social potential of GIS / Stacy Warren --^tCritical GIS / Sarah Elwood ; Nadine Schuurman ; MatthewW. Wilson --^gSection 2 GIS and modern life --^tConnectinggeospatial information to society through cyber infrastructure / Marc P. Armstrong ; Timothy L. Nyerges ; Shaowen Wang ; Dawn Wright --^tEnvironmental Sustainability: the role of geographic information scienceand spatial data infrastructures in the integration of people and nature / Clodoven A. Davis, Jr. ; Frederico T. Fonseca ; Gilberto Camara --^tGIS and population health: an overview / Nadine Schuurman ; Nathaniel Bell --^tCogitoergo mobilis sum: the impact of location-based services onour mobile lives / Martin Raubal --^gSection 3 Alternativerepresentations in GIS and society research --^tHuman-scaled visualizations and society / Dimitris Ballas ; Danny Dorling --^tIndigenous peoples^' issues and indigenous uses of GIS / Melinda Laituri --^tSpatial modeling of social networks / Carter T. Butts ; Ryan M. Acton --^tGIS designs for studying human activities / Hongbo Yu ; Shih-Lung Shaw -- |
505 00 ^gSection 4 GIS in organisations and institutions --^tEmerging frameworks in the information age: the spatial data infrastructure (SDI) phenomenon / Ian Masser --^tSpatial data infrastructure for cadastres: foundations and challenges / Francis Harvey --^tA GIS-based computer-supported collaborative work flow system in urban planning/ Anthony G. O. Yeh ; Kenneth S. S. Tang --^tGIS and emergency management / Christopher T. Emrich ; Susan L. Cutter ; Paul J. Weschler --^gSection 5 GIS in public participation and community development --^tDesigning public participation geographic information systems /^rPiotr Jankowski --^tOnline public participation GIS for spatial planning /^rRichard Kingston --^tParticipatory approaches in GIS and society research: foundations, practices, and future directions /^rSarah Elwood --^tPPGISimplementation and the transformation of US planning practice /^rLaxmi Ramasubramanian --^tPolitics and power in participation and GIS use for community decision making/^rRina Ghose --^gSection 6 Value, fairness and privacy ina GIS context --^tGeographic information value assessment /^rRoger Longhorn --^tGeovisualization of spatial equity /^rEmily Talen --^tNatural resource conflicts, their management, and GIS applications /^rPeter A. Kwaku Kyem --^tLegal and ethical issues of using geospatial technologies in society /^rDaniel Z. Sui --^gPart III Conclusion --^tGIS and society research: reflections and emerging themes /^rHelen Couclelis ; Timothy L. Nyerges ; Robert McMaster |
520 ^aPaul Longley, Professor of Geographic Information Science,University College London. -- |
520 ^aOver the past twenty years research on the evolvingrelationship between GIS and Society has been expanding into a wide variety of topical areas, becoming in the process an increasingly challenging and multifaceted endeavour. The SAGE Handbook of GIS and Society is a retrospective and prospective overview of GIS and Society research that provides an expansive and critical assessment of work in that field. -- |
520 ^aEmphasizing the theoretical, methodological andsubstantive diversity within GIS and Society research, thebook highlights the distinctiveness and intellectual coherence of the subject as a field of study, while also examining its resonances with and between key themes and among disciplines ranging from geography and computer science to sociology, anthropology, and the health and environmental sciences. -- |
520 ^aAimed at academics, researchers, postgraduates, and GISpractitioners, this Handbook will be the basic reference for any inquiry applying Geographical Information Science to societal issues. --Book Jacket |
650 0 ^aGeographic information systems |
650 0 ^aSociology^xData processing |
700 1 ^aNyerges, Timothy L |
700 1 ^aCouclelis, Helen |
700 1 ^aMcMaster, Robert Brainerd |
999 ^aใช้งานได้ทุกระบบ |