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Cover image for A framework for geodesign : changing geography by design
Title:
A framework for geodesign : changing geography by design
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
Redlands, Calf : esri, 2012
Physical Description:
208 p. : ill. some col. 28 cm.
ISBN:
9781589483330

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Library
Item Barcode
Call Number
Material Type
Item Category 1
Status
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35000000003981 NK1520 S74 2012 f Open Access Book Folio Book
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30000010328257 NK1520 S74 2012 f Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

A Framework for Geodesign: Changing Geography by Design presents the key concepts, history, and methodology of geodesign. As an idea, geodesign has the potential to enable more effective and symbiotic collaboration among the several design professions, geographically-oriented sciences, information technologists, and people impacted by change ("the people of the place") when all of these groups aim to influence major environmental and social change for the better. According to author Carl Steinitz, this collaboration is essential.

Steinitz's framework, described here in detail, can contribute to that goal. It is clear that for serious societal and environmental issues, designing for change cannot be a solitary activity. It inevitably is a team endeavor with many participants from the design professions and geographic sciences, linked by technology from several locations for rapid communication and feedback, and reliant on transparent communication with the people affected by change. These demands create opportunities for geodesign and the need for organizing that collaboration.

Part I of the book is about the necessary but sometimes difficult collaboration between designers and scientists, and also focuses on key aspects of study areas, scale, and size which influence how geodesign is organized and carried out. Part II presents Steinitz's framework and addresses six key questions, and their related types of models, which must be integrated in geodesign. Part III features nine case studies that illustrate different ways of designing for change, while Part IV explores the future of geodesign in research, education, and practice.

A Framework for Geodesign ooks mostly to the future, with a primary intention of helping the collaborating participants to achieve, in the words of the author, "practical benefits from geodesign."


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