All Issue

2013 Vol.2, Issue 2 Preview Page
2013. pp. 199~215
Abstract
Sorry, not available.
Click the PDF button.
References
  1. Aitken, S.C. and Michel, S.M., 1995, Who contrives the “Real” in GIS? Geographic Information, Planning and Critical Theory, Cartography and Geographic Information Systems, 22(1), 17-29.
  2. Al-Kodmany, K., 1999, Combining digital and traditional visualisation techniques in community-based planning and design, Digital Creativity, 10(2), 91-103.
  3. Barndt, M., 1998, Public Participation GIS-Barriers to Implementation, Cartography and Geographic Information Systems, 25(2), 105-112.
  4. Barnes, T.J., 2013, Big data, little history, Dialogues in Human Geography, 3(3), 297-302.
  5. Bodenhamer, D.J., Corrigan, J., and Harris, T.M., 2010, The Spatial Humanities: GIS and the future of humanities scholarship, Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
  6. Boyd, D. and Crawford, K., 2012, Critical questions for big data: provocations for a cultural, technological, and scholarly phenomenon, Information, Communication and Society, 15(5), 662-679.
  7. Brennan-Horley, C. and Gibson, C., 2009, Where is creativity in the city? Integrating qualitative and GIS methods, Environment and Planning A, 41, 2595-2614.
  8. Cieri, M., 2003, Between being and looking: queer tourism promotion and lesbian social space in Greater Philadelphia, ACME: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies, 2(2), 147-66.
  9. Clark, M.J., 1998, GIS--democracy or delusion?, Environment and Planning A, 30, 289-301.
  10. Couclelis, H., 2004, The third domain: The spread and use of GIS within social science, Cartographica, 39(1), 17-24.
  11. Cope, M. and Elwood, S., 2009, Qualitative GIS: A Mixed Methods Approach. London: SAGE.
  12. Crampton, J.W., 1995, The ethics of GIS, Cartography and Geographic Information Systems, 22(1), 84-89.
  13. Crampton, J.W., 2001, Map as social constructions: power, communication and visualization, Progress in Human Geography, 25(2), 235-252.
  14. Crampton, J. and Krygier, J.B., 2006, An introduction to Critical Cartography, ACME: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies, 4(1), 11-33.
  15. Corbett, J.M. and Keller, C.P., 2005, An analytical framework to examine empowerment associated with Participatory Geographic Information Systems (PGIS), Cartographica, 40(4), 91-102.
  16. Curry, M.R., 1998, Digital Places: Living with Geographic Information Technologies, London: Routledge.
  17. Demeritt, D., 1996, Social theory and the reconstruction of science and geography, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 21(3), 484-503.
  18. Dixon, D.P. and Jones, J.P., 1998, My dinner with Derrida, or spatial analysis and poststructuralism do lunch, Environment and Planning A, 30, 247-260.
  19. Dobson, J.E., 1983, Automated geography, Professional Geographer, 35(2), 135-143.
  20. Dorling, D., 1998, Human cartography: when it is good to map, Environment and Planning A, 30, 277-288.
  21. Egenhofer, M.J. and Mark, D.M., 1995, Naïve Geography, in Frank, A.U. and Kuhn, W. eds., Spatial Information Theory: A Theoretical Basis for GIS, London: Springer, 1-15.
  22. Egenhofer, M.J., Glasgow, J., Gunther, O., Herring, J.R., and Peuquet, D. J., 1999, Progress in computational methods for representing geographic concepts, International Journal of Geographical Information Science, 13(8), 775-796.
  23. Elwood, S., 2002, GIS use in community planning: a multidimensional analysis of empowerment, Environment and Planning A, 34, 905-922.
  24. Elwood, S., 2006, Beyond cooption or resistance: urban spatial politics, community organizations, and GIS-based spatial narratives, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 96(2), 323-341.
  25. Elwood, S., 2010, Geographic information science: Visualization, visual methods, and the geoweb, Progress in Human Geography, 34(3), 1-8.
  26. Elwood, S., 2011, Participatory approaches in GIS and society research: Foundations, practices, and future directions, in Nyerges, T., Couclelis, H., and McMaster, R.B. eds., The SAGE Handbook of GIS and Society, London: SAGE, 381-399.
  27. Elwood, S., forthcoming, Straddling the fence: Critical GIS and the geoweb, Progress in Human Geography, e-specials, 1-5. DOI: 10.1177/0309132514543616.
  28. Elwood, S. and Leitner, H., 1998, GIS and community-based planning: Exploring the diversity of neighborhood perspectives and needs, Cartography And Geographic Information Systems, 25(2), 77-88.
  29. Elwood, S. and Leitner, H., 2003, GIS and spatial knowledge production for neighborhood revitalization: negotiating state priorities and neighborhood visions, Journal of Urban Affairs, 25(2), 139-157.
  30. Elwood, S. and Leszczynski, A., 2013, New spatial media, new knowledge politics, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 38(4), 544-559.
  31. Esnard, A.M., 1998, Cities, GIS, and ethics, Journal of Urban Technology, 5(3), 33-45.
  32. Fiedler, R., Schuurman, N., and Hyndman, J., 2006, Improving Census-based socioeconomic GIS for public policy: Recent immigrants, spatially concentrated poverty and housing need in Vancouver, ACME: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies, 4(1), 145-171.
  33. Fotheringham, A.S., 2006, Quantification, evidence and positivism, in Aitken, S.C. and Valentine, G. eds., Approaches to Human Geography, London: SAGE, 237-250.
  34. Gahegan, M., 1995, Proximity operators for qualitative spatial reasoning, in Frank, A. U., and Kuhn, W. eds., Spatial Information Theory: A Theoretical Basis for GIS, London: Springer, 31-44.
  35. Gahegan, M., 1999, What is Geocomputation?, Transactions in GIS, 3(3), 203-6.
  36. Ghose, R., 2001, Use of information technology for community empowerment: transforming Geographic Information Systems into Community Information Systems, Transactions in GIS, 5(2), 141-163.
  37. Ghose, R. and Huxhold, W.E., 2001, Role of local contextual factors in building Public Participation GIS: The Milwaukee experience, Cartography and Geographic Information Science, 28(3), 195-208.
  38. Gilbert, D., 1995, Between two cultures; geography, computing and the humanities, Ecumene: a journal of environment, culture, meaning, 2(1), 1-14.
  39. Gibson-Graham, J.K., 2000, Poststructuralist interventions, in Sheppard, E.S., and Barnes, T. J. eds., A Companion to Economic Geography, London: Blackwell, 95-110.
  40. Goodchild, M.F., 1992, Geographical Information Science, International Journal of Geographical Information Systems, 6(1), 31-45.
  41. Goodchild, M.F., forthcoming, Two decades on: Critical GIScience since 1993, The Canadian Geographer, DOI: 10.1111/ cag.12117.
  42. Graham, M. and Zook, M., 2013, Augmented realities and uneven geographies: exploring the geolinguistic contours of the web, Environment and Planning A, 45, 77-99.
  43. Harley, J.B., 1992, Deconstructing The Map, in Barnes, T.J., Duncan, J.S. eds., Writing Worlds: discourse, text & metaphor in the representation of landscape, London: Routledge, 231-247.
  44. Harris, T. and Weiner, D., 1998, Empowerment, marginalization and “Community-integrated” GIS, Cartography And Geographic Information Systems, 25(2), 67-76.
  45. Harvey, F., 1997, From geographic holism to Geographic Information System, The Professional Geographers, 49(1), 77-85.
  46. Harvey, F., 1998, Boundary objects and the social construction of GIS technology, Environment and Planning A, 30, 1683-1694.
  47. Harvey, F., 2000, The social construction of geographical information systems, International Journal of Geographical Information Science, 14(8), 711-713.
  48. Harvey, F., 2006, Reconfiguring administrative geographies in the United States, ACME: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies, 4(1), 57-79.
  49. Harvey, F., Kwan, M.-P., and Pavlovskaya, M.E., 2005, Introduction: Critical GIS, Cartographica, 40(4), 1-4.
  50. Heasley, L., 2003, Shifting boundaries on a Wisconsin landscape: can GIS help historians tell a complicated story?, Human Ecology, 31(2), 183-213.
  51. Jiang, H., 2003, Stories remote sensing images can tell: integrating remote sensing analysis with ethnographic research in the study of cultural landscapes, Human Ecology, 31(2), 215-232.
  52. Jung, J.-K., 2009, Computer-Aided Qualitative GIS: A software-level integration of qualitative research and GIS, in Cope, M. and Elwood, S. eds., Qualitative GIS: A Mixed Methods Approach, London: SAGE, 115-135.
  53. Jung, J.-K. and Elwood, S., 2010, Extending the qualitative capabilities of GIS: Computer-Aided Qualitative GIS, Transactions in GIS, 14(1), 63-84.
  54. Kanarinka., 2006, Art-Machines, Body-Ovens and Map-Recipes: Entries for a Psychogeographic Dictionary, Cartographic Perspectives, 53(Winter), 24-40.
  55. Kitchin, R., 2006, Positivistic geographies and spatial science, in Aitken, S.C., and Valentine, G. eds., Approaches to Human Geography, London: SAGE, 20-29.
  56. Kitchin, R., 2014, Big Data, new epistemologies and paradigm shifts, Big Data & Society, April-June, in press.
  57. Knigge, L. and Cope, M., 2006, Grounded visualization: integrating the analysis of qualitative and quantitative data through grounded theory and visualization, Environment and Planning A, 38(11), 2021-2037.
  58. Krygier, J.B., 1999, Cartographic multimedia and praxis in human geography and the social science, in Cartwright, W., Peterson, M.P., and Gartner, G. eds., Multimedia Cartography, London: Springer, 245-255.
  59. Kwan, M.-P., 2002, Feminist visualisation: Re-envisioning GIS as a method in feminist geographic research, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 92 (4), 645-661.
  60. Kwan, M.-P., 2004, Beyond difference: From canonical geography to hybrid geographies, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 94(4), 756-763.
  61. Kwan, M.-P. and Lee, J., 2004, Geovisualization of Human Activity Patterns Using 3D GIS: A Time-Geographic Approach, in Goodchild, M.F. and Janelle, D.G. eds., Spatially Integrated Social Science: Examples in Best Practice, Oxford: Oxford Press, 48-66.
  62. Kwan, M.-P. and Knigge, L., 2006, Guest editorial, Environment and Planning A, 38(11), 1999-2002.
  63. Lake, R.W., 1993, Planning and applied geography: positivism, ethics, and geographic information systems, Progress in Human Geography, 17(3), 404-413.
  64. Leszczynski, A. and Wilson, M.W., 2013, Guest editorial: theorizing the geoweb, GeoJournal, 78, 915-919.
  65. Leszczynski, A. and Elwood, S., forthcoming, Feminist geographies of new spatial media, The Canadian Geographer, DOI: 10.1111/cag.12093.
  66. Mark, D.M., 1999, Spatial representation: a cognitive view, in Longley, P.A., Goodchild, M.F., Maguire, D.J., and Rhind, D.W. eds., Geographical Information Systems, New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
  67. Mark, D., Comas, D., Egenhofer, M.J., Freundschuh, S.M., Gould, M.D., and Nunes, J., 1995, Evaluating and refining computational models of spatial relations through cross-linguistic human-subjects testing, in Frank, A.U., and Kuhn, W. eds., Spatial Information Theory: A Theoretical Basis for GIS, London: Springer, 553-568.
  68. Mark, D., Chrisman, N., Frank, A.U., McHaffie, P.H., and Pickles, J., 1997, The GIS History Project, in UCGIS, Bar Harbor, Maine.
  69. Matthews, S.A., Detwiler, J.E., and Burton, L.M., 2005, Geo-ethnography: Coupling Geographic Information Analysis techniques with ethnographic methods in urban research, Cartographica, 40(4), 75-90.
  70. McLafferty, S.L., 2002, Mapping women's worlds: knowledge, power and the bounds of GIS, Gender, Place and Culture, 9(3), 263-269.
  71. McLafferty, S.L., 2005, Women and GIS: Geospatial technologies and feminist geographies, Cartographica, 40(4), 37-45.
  72. Miller, R.P., 1995, Beyond method, beyond ethics: Integrating social theory into GIS and GIS into social theory, Cartography and Geographic Information Systems, 22(1), 98-103.
  73. Nyerges, T., Couclelis, H., and McMaster, R.B., 2011, The SAGE Handbook of GIS & Society, London: SAGE.
  74. Obermeyer, N.J., 1998, The Evolution of Public Participation GIS, Cartography and Geographic Information Systems, 25(2), 65-66.
  75. Openshaw, S., 1991, A view on the GIS crisis in geography, or, using GIS to put Humpty-Dumpty back together again, Environment and Planning A, 23, 621-628.
  76. Openshaw, S., 1992, Further thoughts on geography and GIS: a reply, Environment and Planning A, 24, 463-466.
  77. Openshaw, S., 1997, The truth about Ground Truth, Transactions in GIS, 2(1), 7-24.
  78. Pain, R., MacFarlane, R., Turner, K., and Gill, S., 2006, 'When, where, if, and but': qualifying GIS and the effect of streetlighting on crime and fear, Environment and Planning A, 38(11), 2055-2074.
  79. Pavlovskaya, M.E., 2002, Mapping Urban Change and Changing GIS: other views of economic restructuring, Gender, Place and Culture, 9(3), 281-289.
  80. Pavlovskaya, M.E., 2004, Other transitions: Multiple economies of Moscow households in the 1990s, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 94(2), 329-351.
  81. Pavlovskaya, M.E., 2006, Theorizing with GIS: A tool for critical geographies?, Environment and Planning A, 38(11), 2003-2020.
  82. Pickles, J., 1995, Ground Truth: The Social Implications of Geographic Information Systems, New York: The Guilford.
  83. Poore, B.S. and Chrisman, N.R., 2006, Order from Noise: Toward a Social Theory of Geographic Information, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 96(3), 508-523.
  84. Ramasubramanian, L., 1995, Building Communities: GIS and participatory decision making, The Journal of Urban Technology, 3(1), 67-79.
  85. Rose, G., 2001, Visual Methodologies: An Introduction to the Interpretation of Visual Materials, London: SAGE.
  86. Schroeder, P., 1997, A Public participation approach to charting information spaces, ACSM/ASPRS Annual Convention and Exposition Technical Papers, 5, 244-253.
  87. Schuurman, N., 1999a, Critical GIS: Theorizing an Emerging Science, Cartographica, Monograph 53.
  88. Schuurman, N., 1999b, Speaking with the enemy?, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 17, 1-3.
  89. Schuurman, N., 2000, Trouble in the heartland: GIS and its critics in the 1990s, Progress in Human Geography, 24(4), 569-590.
  90. Schuurman, N., 2002, Reconciling social constructivism and realism in GIS, ACME: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies, 1, 73-90.
  91. Schuurman, N., 2004, GIS: A Short Introduction, Oxford: Blackwell Publishing.
  92. Schuurman, N. and Pratt, G., 2002, Care of the subject: feminism and critiques of GIS, Gender, Place and Culture, 9(3), 291-299.
  93. Shariff, A.R.B.M., 1998, Metric Details for Natural-Language Spatial Relations, ACM Transactions on Information Systems, 16(4), 295-321.
  94. Sheppard, E.S., 1993, Automated geography: What kind of geography for what kind of society?, Professional Geographers, 45(4), 457-460.
  95. Sheppard, E.S., 1995a, Sleeping with the enemy, or keeping conversation going?, Environment and Planning A, 27, 1026-28.
  96. Sheppard, E.S., 1995b, GIS and Society: Toward a research agenda, Cartography and Geographic Information Systems, 22(1), 5-16.
  97. Sheppard, E.S., 2001, Quantitative geography: representations, practices, and possibilities, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 19(5), 535-554.
  98. Sheppard, E.S., 2005, Knowledge Production through Critical GIS: Geneology and Prospects, Cartographica, 40(4), 5-21.
  99. Shin, J., 2014, Theoretical review and quantitative spatial exploration of Tweet data in the context of Digital Divide: Case of King County, US, Journal of Korean Cartographic Association, 14(2), in press.
  100. Sieber, R.E., 2004, Rewiring for a GIS/2, Cartographica, 39(1), 25-39.
  101. Sieber, R.E., 2006, Public Participation Geographic Information Systems: A literature review and framework, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 96(3), 491-507.
  102. Smith, N., 1992, History and philosophy of geography: real wars, theory wars, Progress in Human Geography, 16(2), 257-271.
  103. Stephens, M., 2013, Gender and the GeoWeb: divisions in the production of user-generated cartographic information, GeoJournal, 78, 981-996.
  104. Sui, D.Z., 1994, GIS and urban studies: positivism, postpositivism, and beyond, Urban Geography, 15(3), 258-278.
  105. Sui, D.Z. and Goodchild, M.F., 2011, The convergence of GIS and social media: challenges for GIScience, International Journal of Geographical Information Science, 25(11), 1737-1748.
  106. Sui, D.Z., Elwood, S., and Goodchild, M.F., 2013, Crowdsourcing Geographic Knowledge: Volunteered Geographic Information (VGI) in Theory and Practice, New York: Springer.
  107. Talen, E., 2000, Bottom-Up GIS: A New tool for individual and group expression in participatory planning, Journal of the American Planning Association, 66(3), 279-294.
  108. Taylor, P.J., 1990, GKS, Political Geography Quarterly, 9(3), 211-212.
  109. Thatcher, J., 2013, Avoiding the Ghetto through hope and fear: an analysis of immanent technology using ideal types, GeoJournal, 78, 967-980.
  110. Turner, A., 2006, Introduction to Neogeography, Sebastopol, CA: O'Reilly Media.
  111. Weiner, D., Harris, T.M., and Craig, W.J., 2002, Community Participation and Geographic Information Systems, Proceedings, Spoleto Workshop.
  112. Wilson, M., 2009, Towards a genealogy of qualitative GIS, in Cope, M. and Elwood, S. eds., Qualitative GIS: A Mixed Methods Approach, London: SAGE, 156-170.
  113. Wilson, M., forthcoming, New lines? Enacting a social history of GIS, The Canadian Geographer, DOI: 10.1111/cag.12118.
  114. Wilson, M., forthcoming, Morgan Freeman is dead and other big data stories, Cultural Geographies, DOI: 10.1177/1474474014525055.
Information
  • Publisher :The Association of Korean Geographers
  • Publisher(Ko) :한국지리학회
  • Journal Title :Journal of the Association of Korean Geographers
  • Journal Title(Ko) :한국지리학회지
  • Volume : 2
  • No :2
  • Pages :199~215