Summary of Workshop at the University of Aruba: Mapping for Sustainability: Cartography, Islands, and Global Collaboration

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Maps can and should be used to build understanding and illuminate pathways towards a sustainable world. To address this transdisciplinary challenge, to explore how cartography and geospatial data can support sustainable development, the Workshop for Cartography and Sustainable Development brought together international experts, educators, government officials, students, and practitioners. Small islands are hubs of innovation and knowledge leaders in sustainability and resilience. Islands are facing sustainability challenges decades ahead of the rest of the world, meaning they are also the first to find solutions. The University of Aruba was the perfect location for this workshop as it is home to the Sustainable Island Solutions through Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (SISSTEM) academic program. This interdisciplinary program is trailblazing, in which research and teaching directly serve the residents and students of the island (and islands more broadly), ensuring that solutions are generated by islanders for islanders to support a comfortable livelihood for generations to come. Workshop participants were eager to learn from the successes of this program.

The University of Aruba hosted this three-day event (January 26-28, 2026), in collaboration with Utrecht University Copernicus Institute for Sustainable Development, the International Cartographic Association (ICA), and sponsored by GIS4C. On the first day of the workshop, participants met and enjoyed a curated sustainable island tour. The main event was Tuesday with formal presentations. On the final day, in the morning, participants met with members of the Aruba Sustainable Development Goal Task Force to exchange ideas. In the afternoon, workshop participants gathered to outline ideas to start assembling a shared publication. Read the full details of each event below.

Day 1: Sustainability Island Tour of Aruba

To start the workshop, it is important for the international participants to learn more about sustainability challenges and successes on islands, all while learning and mingling with our local hosts from Aruba. Eric Mijts guided the tour. He is the founder of the Sustainable Island Solutions through Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (SISSTEM) program at the University of Aruba and is an expert on challenges for island sustainability. This tour was also a fantastic way for workshop participants to better understand the geography of the island, while getting to know each other and exchanging ideas in an informal setting. We started the tour at the University of Aruba, where we got in 3 different cars. At each stop, we switched cars to ensure we got a chance to speak to everyone. 

First stop was the Bubali Bird Sanctuary. We climbed a high tower overlooking the manmade freshwater lagoon behind the hotels. This is where the brown and grey water collects. This has become a bird refuge – beautiful birds congregate here, making a dynamic place to visit, a surprising result.  

Bubali Bird

We toured the beautiful mangroves at Mangel Halto – we discussed their boundless ecosystem services while physically feeling the dramatic cooling shade, and watching the fish swim around their roots. We observed and discussed some of the human-caused harm to their health and future growth. Interactive 360 video from the tour of Maarten Eppinga telling us about Mangroves – click this link and then move your phone around to see all around the mangroves – join us on this stop of the tour!

Best to open this in the YouTube Mobile App – to really “look around” or open the link in a new tab from desktop/laptop, and you will be able to scroll around the screen and look at the mangroves above you and the roots below.
Scan this QR code to open the video in the YouTube App for Interaction.

We also viewed the landfill that is now decommissioned and discussed waste disposal on small islands and abroad, we observed the desalination plant (there is no fresh water on the island – all water we drink and shower with is desalinated!!!), and viewed the emissions as we passed through. Wastewater treatment plants and landfills – these are all places we use every day, at home and abroad, but rarely think about them. Our waste simply disappears. On a small island, it is more visible–fewer places to hide waste.

Next, we enjoyed a delicious lunch together at Kamani’s Kitchen, where we enjoyed local delicacies. We admired the murals in San Nicolaas and learned more about Aruban culture and values.

For our final stop of the tour, we visited the ruins of the Balashi Gold Mines. We had a beautiful view of Spanish Lagoon Mangroves – a protected RAMSAR site.

This tour was inspiring for us all to create a sustainability tour for our own students – at each of our home institutions, we could make a field trip showing our students where our waste and wastewater and other local context related to sustainability as a point to discuss new possibilities and make maps of the waste!

I think we would all agree that this sustainable island tour was a highlight of the workshop for all of us!

Visit with us in this 360 video of Eric Mijts explaining to students about the Schoco Owls in 2025

Again for best results – open in a new tab or on mobile in the YouTube app.

Check out this ArcGIS StoryMap that was made with students in 2022.

The course Consultancy Project Aruba, with students from Utrecht University together with students at the University of Aruba – that Eric Mijts also coordinates, was the inspiration for this workshop the location of this workshop.

Footage from students from Utrecht University, University College Utrecht, and the University of Aruba together taking courses at the University of Aruba in 2025

Day 2 Presentation 27 January 2026

Presentations throughout the day showcased:
🗺️ Applications of Cartography, GIS, and Remote Sensing, for sustainability communication
📚 Innovative sustainability education
🌱 Mapping SDGs, environmental justice, and island ecosystems

Tuesday, the workshop participants gathered in the beautiful Aula at the University of Aruba. In addition to the speakers mentioned below (both international and local), interested audience members from Aruba included Nathalie Maduro Director, and Facundo Franken, Policy Advisor, both of the Department of Agriculture, Livestock, and Fisheries (Santa Rosa) Aruba, as well as Sietske van der Wal from the Aruba Conservation Foundation (ACF). Students and colleagues from Utrecht University Global Sustainability Science Bachelor program and from the University of Aruba were also in attendance, and a few more familiar faces. 

all speakers at the workshop (missing georg who had to fly!)

The event opened with welcoming remarks from Sue-Ann Lee, Rector of the University of Aruba. In her welcoming opening remarks, she accentuated the importance of international collaboration, the role of universities in advancing sustainability, and the growing relevance of cartography for addressing complex social and environmental challenges, particularly in island contexts.

Britta Ricker, Assistant Professor at the Copernicus Institute for Sustainable Development at Utrecht University, Chair of the ICA Commission on Cartography and Sustainable Development (co-organizer of the workshop), emphasized the importance of global–local collaboration and the unique role islands play as living laboratories for sustainability innovation. She also described leverage points in sustainability and how cartography can and should play a pivotal role. Additionally, she reminded cartographers to reflect on representation on maps, to reflect and consider the local context.

Georg Gartner, President of the International Cartographic Association and Professor at TU Wien, delivered a passionate keynote on the role of cartography in sustainable development. He highlighted how maps and geospatial thinking help translate complex data into actionable insights, supporting decision-making across environmental, social, and economic domains.

The morning keynote session continued with Eric Mijts from the University of Aruba, who introduced initiatives focused on developing sustainable island solutions through education, research, and applied consultancy projects. He emphasized valuable educational advancements and institution building at the University of Aruba, and highlighted the important research being done in the Sustainable Island Solutions through Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (SISSTEM) project at the University of Aruba. He also shared ideas from his new co-edited book, Turning the Tide: Climate Change, Social Change, and Islandness.

Eric and Georg
Eric Mijts from the University of Aruba gifting his book to ICA president Georg Gartner

The session on Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) resources showcased innovative tools and teaching approaches. Lily Houtman (Penn State University) introduced the QGIS Technical Supplement for Mapping for a Sustainable World, demonstrating how open-source tools can support sustainability-focused mapping. Robert Roth (University of Wisconsin–Madison) followed with an introduction to the Atlas of Sustainability, illustrating how cartography can drive real-world action.

Additional perspectives included Lorenzo De Simone from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), who presented the UN Handbook on Remote Sensing for Agricultural Statistics and Mapping, and Sharona Jurgens (University of Aruba), who shared research on urbanization in the Dutch Caribbean. In her contribution, Yelena Ogneva-Himmelberger (Clark University) shared her curriculum for her course that focuses on Geographic Information Science solutions for Sustainable Development. She showed how we can integrate creative thinking and problem-solving to advance the UN SDG agenda through cartography in the curricula. Carolyn Fish (University of Oregon and co-organizer of the workshop) explored how GIS education and data scale influence awareness of the SDGs and environmental justice.

In the afternoon, the focus shifted to sustainability innovations. Britta Ricker (Utrecht University) discussed spatial data challenges for small islands and exploratory visualizations related to SDG 15: Life on Land. She showcased her ongoing work with students, looking into how to define a forest for different SDG indicator reporting agencies from global to local decision-making and showing different examples of what it matters. You can view her interactive presentation here in this ESRI StoryMap Brief. Next was N.T. Nawshin (University of Wisconsin–Madison), who presented an inspiring locative audio cartography as a tool for sustainability education and the usability results thereof.

Maarten Eppinga (University of Zurich) examined mapping invasive plant species in the Caribbean using self-organizing mapping techniques and scrutinizing the results based on his local geographical knowledge of the place, while Anthony Sevold (University of Aruba and Metabolic Foundation) shared extensive examples and insights into island-scale coastal ecosystem monitoring and innovative sustainable development initiatives across the island. Jan Brus (Palacký University Olomouc) closed the session with lessons on communicating data quality in citizen science.

In the last session, Judith Stratmann presented on GIS4C, highlighting applied GIS tools for conservation. She shared in-depth information about the value of ArcGIS products for advanced science as well as the platforms they offer for data sharing within an organization and for the outside world. We saw a range of cloud-based solutions ideal for sharing interactive maps for the public to better understand sustainable pathways. 

The event concluded with an enthralling closing keynote from Erik Houtepen of the CARMABI Foundation. His presentation, Mapping Our Islands, demonstrated how maps can tell stories about ecology. In his presentation, he guided the audience through the history, evolution, and experimentation with different nature management strategies on the island of Curaçao. He dazzled us with a showcase of old maps, vivid imagery of the island, so the audience could draw connections between the map and what was happening on the ground. He had conducted serious, deep map archival research to bring together this exciting presentation highlighting the value of maps for understanding ecological evolution. He used cartography and aerial photography to vividly show the results of different environmental management techniques and experimentation to achieve environmental sustainability. He used maps to support and clearly communicate his narrative to show the audience the evolution of ecology practices on the island. The presentation concluded with a lively round of questions and answers. We thank Erik Houtepen for his engaging and enlightening presentation.

Special Greeting to participants from Guillaume Le Sourd from the United Nations GGIM office in New York

Watch the lectures below – if you click “watch on YouTube”, the video will open in the YouTube App or in a new browser window, open the description section below the video to be able to jump to different “chapters” or the different speakers’ talks.

Day 3: Meeting with the Aruba SDG Taskforce and Planning an Agenda

During the morning of day three, participants met with members of the Aruban Sustainable Development Goal Taskforce, including Gayle Arendsz policy advisor in Economic Policy and Research at the Department of Economic Affairs, Commerce and Industry for Aruba, and Louisette Christiaans-Yarzagaray, Policy Advisor in Sustainable Development Planning at the Department of Economic Affairs, Commerce and Industry for Aruba.

This meeting was an opportunity to facilitate knowledge exchange between academia, government, and industry. Government employees informed us about exciting and innovative work being done by the government of Aruba.  They are using cartography and GIS to address the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). They are internally working on methodologies to use cartography to address the UN SDGs and indicators more locally. They also shared that relevant practical applications could be useful to incorporate into teaching and opportunities for research collaborations. Infrastructural Government Agencies also have a GIS platform (gis.infra.aw) Ms Arendsz and Ms. Christiaans-Yarzagaray drew our attention to the Open SDG initiative in Aruba and CBS publications and the comprehensive SDG report. Together, we discussed how indicators could be improved and incorporate localized context. We discussed how geospatial data should be included in official SDG indicator metadata collection and curation. This would afford opportunities for more cartography to facilitate informed place-based decision-making. 

In the afternoon, workshop participants, including Facundo Franken Policy Advisor for the Santa Rosa Department of Agriculture in Aruba, and speakers started sorting and outlining our ideas for a collaborative research agenda paper, coalescing and communicating all the exciting ideas shared during this three-day event.

Conclusion 

Together, the event showcased how cartography connects global sustainability goals with local action. We shared resources for teaching and data sources, creative ideas, and lessons learned. The University of Aruba was the ideal place to hold this cartography and sustainable development workshop. By centering island perspectives, we learned even more about sustainability, necessary for mapmaking. These experiences help paint a local picture of sustainability issues that can be mapped. The workshop strengthened collaboration, shared practical tools, and highlighted the essential role of maps in shaping a more sustainable future. Now the real work begins – writing and continuing collaborative efforts for effective cartography for a sustainable world!

Aruban Culture

This figure above means “Our Culture” in Papiamento – one of the 3 official languages on the island. Thank you for sharing your culture with us, Aruba.

Agenda for the Workshop on Cartography and Sustainable Development at the University of Aruba

The workshop for Cartography and Sustainable Development at the University of Aruba is quickly approaching! January 26-28, 2026! All are welcome to attend! Especially University of Aruba students. Workshop attendance is free of charge.

Please Join us!

Monday January 26th, 2026 Island Sustainability Tour

Tuesday January 27th, 2026 Workshop Presentations in the University of Aruba Aula

Session 1: Welcome – Global to Local Moderator: Britta Ricker

09:00 – 09:20 Welcome Sue-Ann Lee Rector of the University of Aruba and Britta Ricker Chair, ICA Commission Chair for Cartography and Sustainable Development

09:20 – 09:50 The Role of Cartography in Sustainable Development
Georg Gartner President International Cartographic Association Professor, TU Wien

09:50 – 10:20 Program Development for Sustainable Island Solutions Eric Mijts University of Aruba

10:20 – 10:30 Program Overview Britta Ricker

10:30 – 11:00 | Coffee Break

Session 2: SDG Resources Moderator: Britta Ricker

11:00 – 11:20 Re-Introducing the QGIS Technical Supplement for Mapping for a Sustainable World Lily Houtman Penn State University https://github.com/uwcartlab/MappingSDGsTechnicalSupplement

11:20 – 11:40 Mapping for a Sustainable World & Introducing the Atlas of Sustainability Robert Roth University of Wisconsin–Madison View the Atlas Here

11:40 – 11:50 Introducing the UN Handbook on Remote Sensing for Agricultural Statistics and Mapping. Lorenzo De Simone United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization https://fao-eostat.github.io/UN-Handbook

11:50 – 12:10 Mapping Urbanization in the Dutch Caribbean Sharona Jurgens University of Aruba

12:10 – 12:30 Raising Awareness of the SDGs in a University GIS Course Yelena Ogneva-Himmelberger Clark University

12:30 – 12:50 Challenges of Data Scale in Mapping Environmental Justice Carolyn Fish University of Oregon

12:50 – 13:00 | Discussion and 13:00 – 14:00 | Lunch University of Aruba Cafeteria

Session 3: Sustainability Innovations Moderator: Robert Roth

14:00 – 14:20 Small Islands on the Map: Spatial Data Acquisition Considerations Britta Ricker Copernicus Institute for Sustainable Development, Utrecht University

14:20 – 14:40 Locative Audio Cartography for Sustainability Education N. T. Nawshin
University of Wisconsin–Madison

14:40 – 15:00 Mapping Exotic Plant Invasions in the Caribbean Maarten Eppinga University of Zurich

15:00 – 15:20 Island-Scale Observation of Coastal Ecosystems Anthony Sevold University of Aruba and Metabolic Foundation

15:20 – 15:40 Communicating Data Quality from Citizen Science Jan Brus Palacký University Olomouc

15:40 – 16:00 | Discussion and 16:00 – 16:30 | Break

Session 4: Keynote Introduction and Moderator: Eric Mijts

16:30 – 16:45 GIS4C Judith Stratmann

16:45 – 17:30 Mapping Our Islands: Geospatial Developments for Nature Research and Management Erik Houtepen CARMABI Foundation

Weds January 28th, 2026, Follow-up discussions and high-level agenda-setting meeting with government and community members to discuss the role of cartography for sustainable development with a focus on small island contexts. In the afternoon, there will be a session for brainstorming and planning the formation and publication of a Research Agenda for Cartography and Sustainable Development based on what was learned from this workshop (email Britta Ricker b.a.ricker <at>uu.nl if you plan to participate).

In addition to all the local and international scholars who will be presenting and attending this workshop, we are pleased to announce our keynote speaker, Erik Houtepen (LinkedIn). His presentation titled Mapping our Islands: Geospatial developments and applications for nature research and management will be held at 16:30 on January 27th. Erik is the head of the Consultancy department at the Carmabi foundation, based on Curaçao. His work is aimed at understanding the natural world of the islands of Curaçao, Aruba, and Bonaire with a focus on landscape ecology, vegetation, and faunistic aspects. Through different activities of the foundation, scientific research is integrated with nature management and education to advance nature conservation.

Please review the agenda below and then sign up to participate. We look forward to meeting you at the University of Aruba. Full abstracts are coming online soon!

Please sign up no later than January 16th if you will be joining us on Tuesday, January 27th by filling out this form online here https://forms.gle/q46J4Cb61mHthGpZA. 

Again, Monday, January 26th is an Island Sustainability Tour led by Eric Mijts – there is a small fee for this excursion – please email Britta Ricker directly at b.a.ricker <at>uu.nl to confirm your participation and so that she may contact you directly about costs, times, and other information about this event. On Wednesday Jan 28th, we will be meeting with the Aruba SDG task force and other community members to discuss the role of cartography for sustainable development. In the afternoon, there will be a session for brainstorming and planning the development and publication of a Research Agenda for Cartography and Sustainable Development, based on the insights gained from this workshop.

Special thank you to our sponsors, the ICA and GIS4C

We look forward to learning together at this workshop at the University of Aruba.

Cartography and Sustainable Development Workshop in Aruba

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Monday Jan 26th- Wed Jan 28th 2026

University of Aruba

The First Cartography and Sustainable Development Workshop in Aruba
Dates: Monday, January 26 – Wednesday, January 28, 2026
Location: University of Aruba, Oranjestad, Aruba


Invitation

Join us in Aruba for the First ICA Workshop on Cartography and Sustainable Development, This event brings together cartographers, local experts, sustainability experts, policymakers, to explore how maps can illuminate sustainability challenges and solutions—especially in small-island contexts.

This event is hosted by the University of Aruba, the International Cartographic Association,  ICA Commission of Cartography and Sustainable Development, UX Commission, Working Group on Participatory Mapping, Utrecht University, and GIS4C

This event will be held at the University of Aruba.

See the full agenda for the workshop here.

There is no fee for day two of the workshop – please sign up here.


Why Sustainable Development and Cartography?

Sustainable Development, defined in the Brundtland Report (WCED 1987) as “development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs”, is a global challenge requiring local solutions.

  • Cartography’s role: Maps are pivotal for recognizing global and local trends and identifying areas where interventions are needed.
  • Small-island focus: Islands like Aruba face magnified sustainability challenges due to size, limited resources, and geographic isolation. “Island metabolism” makes these challenges more visible—such as resource management, waste, and tourism impacts. Cartography can help identify and communicate these issues.
  • Our aim: To create a space for dialogue, knowledge exchange, and collaborative problem-solving through cartography.

(no longer accepting calls for presentations) Call for Presentations: Mapping for Sustainable Development

We invite contributions in three formats:

1. Extended Abstract (20 min presentation + 5 min discussion)

2. Lightning Talk (5 min presentation + 5 min discussion)

  • Up to 250 words
  • Research in progress, policy ideas, or technical demos

3. Poster Presentation

  • Student and research posters encouraged

Submission Timeline

  • Register your attendance here by: October 31, 2025
  • Submit abstracts by: October 18, 2025  October 31, 2025
  • Notification of acceptance will be sent to you no later than November 6th.
  • Accepted abstracts will be open access, published by the International Cartographic Association

Registration
Please sign up to


Workshop Program Highlights

Each day combines research sessions with field excursions. The workshop emphasizes sustainable tourism, supporting local restaurants, hotels, and operators.

  • Day 1 (Mon, Jan 26): Island sustainability bus tour
  • Day 2 (Tue, Jan 27): Welcome, keynote, Research talks
  • Day 3 (Wed, Jan 28): Brainstorm session for setting a research agenda

Featured activities include:

  • Guided island sustainability tour by Eric Mijts, Director of Research at the University of Aruba and Founding Director of SISSTEM
  • Keynote Lecture by Eric Houtpen from Carmabi
  • Welcome Lecture by the International Cartographic Association President Georg Gartner
  • Presentations by local and international scholars

sneak peek of Eric’s island tour

Costs

There is no fee for day two of the workshop – please sign up here.

See the full agenda for the workshop here.

Accommodation in Oranjestad

Participants are encouraged to book accommodations early, as January is a busy season in Aruba. Options include:

Hotels within or near Oranjestad:

  • Wonders Boutique Hotel: A small eco-friendly boutique hotel in a quiet neighborhood near Oranjestad.
  • Renaissance Wind Creek Aruba Resort (Downtown Oranjestad): A full-service resort with private island access, walking distance to the University of Aruba.
  • Talk of the Town Hotel & Beach Club: Mid-range option across from Surfside Beach, convenient to both the airport and downtown.

Budget-friendly guesthouses and apartments:

  • Airbnb and small guesthouses are widely available in Oranjestad and nearby neighborhoods.
  • Studio apartments and B&Bs provide affordable options for longer stays.

Palm Beach / Eagle Beach (15 min drive):
For those preferring a traditional beach resort setting, Hilton Aruba Caribbean Resort, Hyatt Regency Aruba, and Barcelo Aruba are available.


We look forward to your participation!

This workshop is both an academic and cultural exchange. Together, we will discuss, document, and reflect on how cartography can support sustainable development—and experience firsthand how Aruba is shaping its own sustainable future.

Thank you to our sponsors

Mangroves and baby Mangroves in Aruba – Mangroves are highly protected ecosystem as they provide erosion control, biodiversity and habitat for many different species, and they are an important carbon sink. Mangoves are linked to SDG 15.1.1 and SDG indicator 6.6.1
One of many beautiful murals in San Nicolas, Aruba which will be viewed on the island tourn on day 2.

ICA Workshop on Multiscale Cartography and Sustainability

17th August, 2025 from 8:00 to 11:30 PST (UTC-8)

Vancouver, Canada (and possibly online)

The ICA Commissions on Cartography and Sustainable Development, and Multiscale Cartography, invite contributions to a joint workshop on the role of multiscale cartography in advancing sustainability. Together in this workshop we will explore how cartographic methods and data management can support Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by addressing challenges across multiple spatial scales, emphasizing design, production, and data gaps. Special attention will be given to sustainability in terms of energy use and computational efficiency, following recent advancements in green cartography.

Sustainable development seeks to meet present needs without compromising future generations (United Nations). To achieve global SDGs, local action is essential. Mapping at multiple scales is key for localizing global objectives, coordinating actions, and addressing complex sustainability challenges.

The workshop will focus on the intersection of multiscale cartography, sustainability, and data quality, highlighting advancements in AI-driven techniques for generalization and automated quality assessments for both original and generalized data. As geospatial data grows in volume and resolution, developing robust methods to ensure accuracy and fitness for use remains a priority.

We invite contributions on topics including, but not limited to:

  • Cartographic generalization for sustainability and SDGs
  • Mapping service accessibility and data gaps
  • Green cartography and energy-efficient mapping
  • Development and dissemination of multiscale data for sustainability
  • Quality assessment techniques for generalized geospatial data
  • Addressing the Modifiable Areal Unit Problem (MAUP)
  • AI/ML applications in map generalization and sustainability

Program

To be announced…based on your submissions 🙂

Registration

Registration is done via the ICC conference registration system. Please visit the ICC 2025 website

If you only plan to attend online, you just need to use the link above, no need for registration.

Submissions

You are invited to submit a 2-page paper, on ongoing research or position papers, following the general guidelines of the ICA conference abstracts.

The proceedings of the workshop will be published online with the CC-BY licence, on this page. Papers should be submitted to EasyChair.

As the workshop promotes open science, we strongly encourage that the datasets used in the presented research are made available, as well as the code. The code can be deposited in a platform such as Github, while the datasets can be uploaded to Zenodo.org or similar repositories, and the DOI should be mentioned in the paper.

The proceedings will be published openly on this website (CC-BY licence).

The workshop will be open to researchers and practitioners interested in cartography for sustainability, map generalisation and multiple representation, regardless of submission or acceptance of an abstract.

Important dates

  • Submission deadline: 15th April 2025, submitted to EasyChair.
  • Notification of acceptance: by 9th May, 2025
  • Workshop: Sunday, 17th August, 2025

Organizing and Scientific Committee

  • Carolyn Fish, University of Oregon, USA
  • Izabela Karsznia, University of Warsaw, Poland
  • Nicolas Regnauld, Esri, France
  • Britta Ricker, Utrecht University, Netherlands
  • Timofey Samsonov, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russia
  • Lawrence V. Stanislawski, USGS, USA
  • Guillaume Touya, LASTIG, IGN-ENSG, Univ. Gustave Eiffel, France.

Commission News: Autumn 2024

Welcome to the first newsletter Commission for Cartography and Sustainable Development of the International Cartographic Association where we invite ideas for action, upcoming events, and report of recent activities:

Ideas for action

  • On our Commission Website https://carto-sd.icaci.org/ we would like to add a place for members. If you would like your name to be added to the website as a member of this commission, please add your name to the form found here – there is also a place for you to add ideas for commission on this form too. https://forms.gle/CscjKxF5apfwuG698 .

Upcoming Events

AsiaCarto 2024

  • The first AsiaCarto will be held in Hong Kong 8-10 December https://asiacarto.org/2024/ 
  • Representing our Commission – PhD Candidate Cara Flores will be presenting work about Participatory Mapping for Sustainable Development titled “Weaving participatory and artistic approaches into generating spatial data in mapping for a sustainable world”.
  • If you will be at AsiaCarto please let me (Britta) know so we can advertise your participation!

International Cartographic Conference (ICC) 2025

  • The next International Cartographic Conference (ICC) will be held in Vancouver in August 2025 https://icc2025.com/ The theme is Mapping the Future: Innovation, Inclusion, and Sustainability
  • Call for papers and abstracts for the Vancouver ICC is out! Read it in English or in French:
  • Our commission is planning to do a pre-conference workshop in Vancouver, stay tuned!
  • Do you have an idea for a commission-sponsored workshop? Please share your ideas here https://forms.gle/qwMxdYKeVrm7oqyc7

Cartography and Sustainable Development Workshop in Aruba 2026

Recent Activities

EuroCarto – Vienna September 2024

  • Together with with the ICA Commission on Integrated Geospatial Information for Cartography and the ICA Commission on Topographic Mapping Anja Hopfstock Markus Jobst Kathryn Arnold David Forest and Lukasz Halik we co-hosted the Workshop “Building the Road to AI; How cartography links data integration, meaning and geospatial knowledge transmission” This workshop fostered rich discussion about experiences trying to reach the goal of mapping for a sustainable world. Speakers included:
  • James Norris presented and explained the United Nations Integrated Geospatial Information Framework and his perspective about how it can be useful.
  • Gwendolin Seidner shared a presentation titled “Solving the Puzzle: A Country-level Action Plan for Germany – How geospatial supports the UN-IGIF” with examples that countries can learn from while trying to implement geospatial technology for sustainable development. There were some entertaining and exciting examples of using old maps to answer contemporary spatial questions.
  • David Forest and Lukasz Halik talked about investigating openly available data to support SDG mapping and topographic mapping which fostered great discussions among the participants about worldwide data availability.
  • Mark Jobst led a tutorial about how to make choropleth SDG maps using an online tool.
  • I, Britta, presented about what I learned about writing the Book Mapping for a Sustainable World and my current research initiatives – some of the ideas are shared on the Geoholics Podcast.
  • During the main conference there was a session on Sustainability and Cartography – see the full program here https://eurocarto2024.org/program/ chaired by Florian Ledermann which included the following presentations:
    • Luca Gaia, Lorenz Hurni, Andreas Neumann, René Sieber: “Cartographic visualization of the effects of climate change: a practical application for the Atlas of Switzerland”
    • Britta Ricker, Maarten Eppinga, Sharona Jurgens, Eric Mijts: “Mapping for Sustainable Development: Comparing different techniques for mapping and monitoring mangroves in Aruba”
    • Yi Zhen Chew, Ekaterina Chuprikova, Holger Kumke, Abraham Mejia-Aguilar, Liqiu Meng, Nikolaus Obojes: “From Leaves to Forests: How to Map Stress in Plants due to Climate Change”
    • Ayako Kagawa: “What’s geographical names got to do with Climate Action?”
    • Zdeněk Stachoň, Petr Kubíček, Lukáš Dolák, Radim Štampach, Jan Řehoř: “Drought, Heatwaves, and Fire Weather and its Cartographic Visualization”

NACIS Tacoma October 2024

  • Commission vice-chair Carolyn Fish attended the North American Cartographic Information Society conference in Tacoma this month. There were great presentations and discussion all around. See the full program here: https://nacis2024.sched.com/
  • Next year’s NACIS will be in Louisville, KY in October 2025 and typically abstracts are due in May.

Intergeo and the German Cartography Conference – Deutsche Kartographie Kongress (DKK) 

Britta presented commission work related to mapping SDG global to local in the session Kartographie für eine smarte Welt on Sept 25, 2024. It was great to learn about the research and ideas happening in Germany at the cartography conference. At the Intergeo ExpoCenter, it was completely inspiring to see and touch all of the latest mapping hardware and software.

Thank you for reading. Looking forward to hearing from you all.

Commission work shared at two invited UN presentations – available to view online

At the United Nations Datathon Training Webinar: Integration of Geospatial Information and Statistics for the SDGs in the context of Big Data held on Oct 4, 2023 Hosted by UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs Statistics Division – ICA Cartography and Sustainable Development Commission Chair, Britta Ricker was invited to present her talk titled  “Understanding, analyzing and visualizing big data: A geospatial approach for the SDGs” you may watch the full presentation here.

The IAEG-SDGs Working Group on Geospatial Information: Rescuing the SDGs with Geospatial Information hosted by the Working Group on Geospatial Information (WGGI) of the Inter-Agency and Expert Group on SDG Indicators (IAEG-SDGs) This event titled: Rescuing the SDGs with Geospatial Information UN55SC was held on February 19, 2024.Britta Ricker was Invited to Present Commission work in her talk titled “How can… or how does academia help with the SDG indicators? Academic research for sustainable development” Watch Dr. Ricker talk here This event was formally hosted by United Nations Committee of Experts on Global Geospatial Information Management (UN GGIM), and well organized by Mark Iliffe.

The event was chaired by Ms Mary Smyth, Central Statistics Office, Ireland and is the co-Chair IAEG-SDGs WGGI. Other presenters in this seminar included: Mr Olav Eggers, Agency for Data Supply and Infrastructure, Denmark talk titled: National geospatial information for supporting the SDGs and Mr David Borges, Committee on Earth Observations Satellites (CEOS) and NASA , USA with his talked titled: Global data, national progress, local impact

Read more about the event here The IAEG-SDGs Working Group on Geospatial Information: Rescuing the SDGs with Geospatial Information (un.org)

Call for Papers: International Journal of Cartography

Special Issue – Cartography and Sustainable Development

Guest Editors: Britta Ricker and Carolyn Fish

The International Cartographic Association’s Commission of Cartography and Sustainable Development invites submissions for a Special Issue of the International Journal of Cartography, published by Taylor and Francis. (http://www.tandfonline.com/tica)

The aim of the Journal is to provide a vehicle for publishing key documents from all areas of the ICA research, teaching and professional community’s expertise, and in so doing, to define contemporary cartography and GIScience. The Journal covers a number of areas of endeavour in cartography and GIScience, both traditional and transitional.

Access to resources necessary to sustain life are not accessible to all. The reasons for this are complex and interwoven. Sustainable Development is the process of meeting the necessities of the present without compromising the opportunities of future generations to meet their own needs. Sustainable Development is an inherently interdisciplinary challenge and addresses issues of environmental, social, and economic justice and equity. It requires changes to current understandings of development to improve human wellbeing through environmental preservation, and social equity, and economic opportunity and development. Cartography can help reduce complexity by illustrating both current realities and future possibilities to reveal spatial patterns that might otherwise go unnoticed. Maps and cartographic visualizations can aid in identifying where to employ local solutions to global challenges, indicating where opportunities could be had, illuminating injustice, and guiding informed decision-making processes more broadly. Well-designed maps employing effective cartographic principles can illuminate strategies to reach a sustainable world.

We invite paper submissions that provide pragmatic, conceptual, theoretical, methodological, and/or empirical basis for supporting and advancing Sustainable Development initiatives through cartography and/or geovisualization. We welcome a wide range of topical issues that address sustainable development including (but are not limited to):

  • The use or modification of maps to advance ecological, social, or economic opportunity, development, and/or justice
  • How cartography is an effective tool to illuminate gaps, where sustainable development initiatives are needed
  • How visualizations can be employed to reify or evaluate challenges associated with Sustainable Development
  • Identifying solutions or challenges faced at different (spatial and administrative) scales (or levels of geography and government) in terms of specific variables related to Sustainable Development
  • Addressing Sustainable Development as it related to cartographic design, production and data management
  • Communicating missing data that could advance Sustainable Development action
  • Exploring issues of scale (either geographic or temporal) in Sustainable Development and cartography
  • Investigating the application of participatory approaches to Sustainable Development and cartography
  • Mapping the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals

Timeline:

September 8th, 2023 – Authors Submit Title and short abstract (100-200 words max) (send these expressions of interest to Guest Editors Britta Ricker b.a.ricker@uu.nl and Carolyn Fish cfish11@uoregon.edu

September 15th, 2023 – Notification of selected submissions an invitation to submit a full paper

December 15th, 2023 – Full papers due

All submissions and reviewing for papers submitted to the International Journal of Cartography are handled electronically through the Taylor and Francis on-line facility.  This manages the paper-handling process – from submission, to review and revision to publishing.  All papers are double-blind reviewed.

As soon as papers are accepted, typeset, and approved by the author they are published on-line (and article DOI provided).  This speeds-up the time taken from paper acceptance to publishing.  Once all papers for a particular issue are in-hand the print version of the Journal is published. All papers are published with abstracts in English and French.  Additionally, at the authors’ request, and if the author provides the abstract in their mother tongue, it is possible to include a third abstract, in the Authors’ mother tongue.

Contact:

Please contact Britta Ricker b.a.ricker@uu.nl and/or Carolyn Fish cfish11@uoregon.edu  with any questions and with submissions to the Special Issue

Welcome to the Cartography and Sustainable Development (ICA) Commission Website

Welcome to the International Cartographic Association‘s Commission for Cartography and Sustainable Development website. Here you will find information about our commission, current opportunities, past events, and learning materials.

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