The challenges of building research partnerships around community mapping are critically reviewed in reference to the politics of heritage and identity among Indigenous Maya communities in highland Guatemala. This paper discusses how the goals and interests of archaeologists meshed with those of indigenous mappers in five communities that chose to participate in the mapping program. Based on responses to a survey about the mapping project, participants report joining in order to enhance self-determination, gain cartographic literacy, and improve life opportunities. Community authority over the project and a broad base of participation (including young and old, male and female) proved essential to the program, which combined traditional prac...
The World Bank reports, “indigenous peoples in Guatemala are the poorest of the poor” (O’Kane, 1999)...
The World Bank reports, “indigenous peoples in Guatemala are the poorest of the poor” (O’Kane, 1999)...
The World Bank reports, “indigenous peoples in Guatemala are the poorest of the poor” (O’Kane, 1999)...
The challenges of building research partnerships around community mapping are critically reviewed in...
The challenges of building research partnerships around community mapping are critically reviewed in...
The challenges of building research partnerships around community mapping are critically reviewed in...
The challenges of building research partnerships around community mapping are critically reviewed in...
The attention given to indigenous peoples' use of maps to make claims to land and rights of self-gov...
textMap-making is viewed among many planners, geographers, and anthropologists as a necessary first ...
The Proyecto Arqueológico Chocolá in Chocolá, Guatemala had been successful for three seasons until ...
The Proyecto Arqueológico Chocolá in Chocolá, Guatemala had been successful for three seasons until ...
Interactions with Indigenous populations around the world have been, and continue to be, riddled wit...
Indigenous communities have been involved in participatory mapping projects to protect their territo...
The attention given to indigenous peoples' use of maps to make claims to land and rights of self-gov...
The World Bank reports, “indigenous peoples in Guatemala are the poorest of the poor” (O’Kane, 1999)...
The World Bank reports, “indigenous peoples in Guatemala are the poorest of the poor” (O’Kane, 1999)...
The World Bank reports, “indigenous peoples in Guatemala are the poorest of the poor” (O’Kane, 1999)...
The World Bank reports, “indigenous peoples in Guatemala are the poorest of the poor” (O’Kane, 1999)...
The challenges of building research partnerships around community mapping are critically reviewed in...
The challenges of building research partnerships around community mapping are critically reviewed in...
The challenges of building research partnerships around community mapping are critically reviewed in...
The challenges of building research partnerships around community mapping are critically reviewed in...
The attention given to indigenous peoples' use of maps to make claims to land and rights of self-gov...
textMap-making is viewed among many planners, geographers, and anthropologists as a necessary first ...
The Proyecto Arqueológico Chocolá in Chocolá, Guatemala had been successful for three seasons until ...
The Proyecto Arqueológico Chocolá in Chocolá, Guatemala had been successful for three seasons until ...
Interactions with Indigenous populations around the world have been, and continue to be, riddled wit...
Indigenous communities have been involved in participatory mapping projects to protect their territo...
The attention given to indigenous peoples' use of maps to make claims to land and rights of self-gov...
The World Bank reports, “indigenous peoples in Guatemala are the poorest of the poor” (O’Kane, 1999)...
The World Bank reports, “indigenous peoples in Guatemala are the poorest of the poor” (O’Kane, 1999)...
The World Bank reports, “indigenous peoples in Guatemala are the poorest of the poor” (O’Kane, 1999)...
The World Bank reports, “indigenous peoples in Guatemala are the poorest of the poor” (O’Kane, 1999)...