Developing sustainable Geographic Information System (GIS) services for parliamentary clients

Cargando...
Miniatura

Fecha

Título de la revista

ISSN de la revista

Título del volumen

Editor

Resumen

Parliamentary libraries and research centres work primarily with text-based documents and reports. A common challenge faced by Members of Parliaments and their staff is finding time to read all of the information surrounding a complex issue. Visualization of this information can lead to a faster and improved understanding of multidimensional policy issues. Geographical Information System (GIS) services can provide such visual presentation and analysis. This paper describes what is involved in setting up a reputable GIS service as well as some of the challenges encountered in making it sustainable in times of budget constraints.
Las bibliotecas parlamentarias y los centros de investigación trabajan principalmente con documentos e informes escritos. Los Miembros y el personal del Parlamento se enfrentan al mismo desafío: encontrar el tiempo necesario para leer toda la información relacionada con un tema determinado. A través de la visualización de esta información se puede lograr una mejor y más ágil comprensión de asuntos políticos multidimensionales. Los servicios del Sistema de Información Geográfica (SIG) pueden proveer dicho análisis y presentación visual. Esta ponencia describe cómo se suministra un servicio SIG respetable y cuáles son los desafíos que se presentan cuando se quiere lograr la sustentabilidad de este servicio en tiempos de limitaciones presupuestarias.

Descripción

Palabras clave

Citación

Bishop, Bradley W., and Lauren H. Mandel. 2010. “Utilizing geographic information systems (GIS) in library research.” Library Hi Tech, 28: 536-547. Bishop, Bradley W., and Melissa Johnston. 2013. “Geospatial Thinking of Information Professionals.” Journal of Education for Library and Information Science, 54 (1): 15-21. Dodsworth, E. 2010. Indirect Outreach in a GIS Environment: Reflections on a Map Library's Approach to Promoting GIS Services to Non-GIS Users. Journal of Library Innovation, 1 (1), 24-34. Donnelly, F. P. 2010. “Evaluating Open Source GIS for Libraries.” Library Hi Tech, 28 (1): 131-151. Let’s Talk Maps, blog postings by a group of library students in a GIS Literacy course at the University of Waterloo, Ontario. http://letstalkmaps.wordpress.com/category/inf2102-final-project/gis-literacy-and-librarianship/ Mandel, Lauren H. 2010. “Geographic Information Systems: Tools for Displaying In-Library Use Data.” Information Technology and Libraries, 29 (1): 47-52 Norman, D. A. 2002. Emotion and design: Attractive things work better. Interactions Magazine, ix (4), 36-42. http://www.jnd.org/dn.mss/emotion_design_at.html Sedighi, Mehri. 2010. “Application of geographic information system (GIS) in analyzing geospatial information of academic library databases.” The Electronic Library, 30 (3): 367-376 Todd, Julia L. 2008. GIS and Libraries: A Cross-Disciplinary Approach. Online, 32 (5). 14. Ozimec, Ana-Marija, Natter, Martin, and Thomas Reutterer. 2010. “GIS-Based Marketing Decisions: Effects of Alternative Visualizations on Decision Quality,” The Journal of Marketing Postprint, 1-63. http://www.marketing.uni-frankfurt.de/fileadmin/Publikationen/GIS_Based_Marketing_Decisions.pdf.