GeoChiapas
- It's reported that Latin America ranks second to last of all developing regions in adoption of geospatial technologies. At the same time, geospatial is the 4th ICT4D sector out of 14 that will impact development from now until 2025. Geospatial field is technically demanding, but Latin America's skills gap is the highest worldwide.
- To build the geo-literacy necessary to work in geospatial a workshop program for youth in Chiapas is proposed. The workshops intend to teach geo-concepts, explore the geo-environment and visualize a future geo-scape.
- The program intends to positively change the socioeconomic life of the state and the larger region through increasing the geospatial skills of participants while expanding their geographic awareness. Each day of the workshop functions as a complete module; cumulatively, nascent geodesigners will be formed. Skillsets will grow, bonds between participants will be forged and connections between participants and community members will be cultivated.
The problem to be solved by our solution is geospatial-illiteracy in Chiapas and beyond ...
Geospatial tools are shaping how we interact with our world. The geospatial revolution affects all sectors of society. Organizations and individuals regularly exploit these tools' power. At the same time vast quantities of data generated affect the future of developed and undeveloped landscapes. In April 2019, Catholic Relief Services/Devex predict geospatial/mapping becoming the 4th most impactful information and communications technology for development (ICT4D) sector between 2020-2025. The sector is technically demanding and it's projected to grow over the same period. The CRS/Devex report is unfortunately pessimistic about adoption in our region: Latin America and the Caribbean rank second to last of all twelve developing regions worldwide, ahead only of Oceania.

The Mexican state of Chiapas with 5.25 million residents (median age 23) illustrates this problem. Lack of access to, literacy in and agency with geospatial tools limits these same residents, particularly its young, from their power to analyze and shape historic, anthropological, ecological, economic, political realities in the geographic sphere. The deficiency is doubly painful because it isn't without remedy.
We propose a workshop series.
Each workshop lasts 3-5 days, is offered to socially and economically vulnerable adolescents from the local area, and will achieve the following: 1. Develop grounding in geospatial concepts , 2. Teach low-tech methods of mapping, recording and analyzing qualitative data, 3. Teach the design of policyand project changes.
Project description The GC Workshop is designed to positively influence the socioeconomic life of San Cristobal de las Casas through increasing the geospatial skills of workshop participants while expanding their geographic awareness at the same time. The main goal is to improve the geographic literacy of adolescents in Chiapas through understanding of geographic concepts, through exploration of their personal geographic environment and through imagining a future landscape/cityscape. The workshop propose will fulfill this goal by achieving the following objectives:
1. Study the basics of mapping, cartography and designation (Representation). This objective will be attained within the classroom. A lecture and a presentation will be given to provide a foundation of knowledge on which to build understanding and to prepare for the following days' activities.
2. Learn the skills of observation and documentation of qualitative and quantitative geographic information (Process, Evaluation). This will be achieved by fieldwork in the landscape. Utilizing custom maps that the students will prepare on web applications and publish in 'fieldbooks', we will gather information as teams in the urban and/or undeveloped landscapes. These will be cataloged and analyzed later in the classroom.
3. Develop design skills through the application of geodesign survey tools (Change). We will discuss the 'Change' model of the geodesign framework: the proposal of policy changes (in the form of laws, codes, regulation or customs) or project changes (built changes in the landscape that can include building projects, engineering projects or even demolition and restoration projects).
While each day of the workshop is a complete module, the cumulative effect will be to form participants into nascent geodesigners. The modules will reflect some of the models outlined in the framework for geodesign developed by Harvard GSD faculty.
The workshop will utilize easily accessible, affordable and sometimes free online tools to illustrate the concepts of geodesign. Fieldwork will be a vital part of the workshop experience. Collected impressions, documented observations and empirical data will be analyzed in the classroom, discussed and processed as art of the evaluation and design stages of the workshop.
Many young people we aim to reach begin working on the streets before completing secondary school or earlier.
Many young people we aim to reach begin working on the streets before completing secondary school or earlier. They often live at the outskirts of the urban centers of Chiapas, as the move from ancestral villages is intended to improve their opportunities. However, lack of infrastructure and basic services and substandard housing aggravate education. Poor hygiene in these areas is rampant. Current economic circumstance denies access to education, health and decent housing to hundreds of thousands. Ironically, Chiapas is one of the most natural-resource-rich states in the whole of the republic. Chiapanecos face a profound educational and illiteracy gap. Educational inequality is a reality, decontextualized education compounds this problem, and socioeconomic exclusion results well into adulthood. The National Institute of Statistics and Geography of Mexico (INEGI) reports that Chiapas: has the highest educational deficit nationwide; has the most minors in poverty; is highest in teenage pregnancies nationally. With the aforementioned deficiency in human habitat and the disadvantage in intellectual development opportunities we seek to address the twin dilemmas of environmental and educational deficiency by providing a training that addresses both.
- Offer training and flexible curriculum in hard (technical) and soft (social and interpersonal) skills, preparing people for the work of the future
The problem that we seek to address is geo-spatial illiteracy, certainly a hard (technical) discipline with its component aspects of survey, orienteering, notation, calculation, cartography, etc.. Illiteracy hampers communication necessary to address problems in geographic space, and communication is at the heart of ‘soft’ (social and interpersonal) disciplines.
Our solution (workshop series) can be conducted virtually, in-person, or in some combination of the two. This geospatial workshop program is thus flexible enough to adapt to the public health policies meant to keep our community safe. At the same time, it will be effective in preparing participants for the new digital world in one of its most vital dimensions.
The target population of GeoChiapas is the young of this growing state.
- Prototype: A venture or organization building and testing its product, service, or business model.
We have currently run mock workshops in the target community and within the target geography but have not advanced further.

Geodesign Consultant

Community Development Expert

Developer