Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful...

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Survey Setup https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/KJGP5TN

Transcript of Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful...

Page 1: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Survey Setup

https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/KJGP5TN

Page 2: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Ethical Dilemmas for the GIS Analyst

PresentorsKelly Alfaro HaugenScott CarteElizabeth DonovanJanene MichaelisGary MontgomerySarah Smith

Page 3: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Are ethics well defined in the GIS Community?

How do we as a GIS community define ethical behavior?

Is there even a problem with GIS’ers behaving unethically?

Who do you talk to when you run into an ethical dilemma?

Who is responsible for “policing” GIS Ethics?

Why Are We Even Here?

Knowing where “the line” is so you know when you’ve crossed it.

Page 4: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

IntroNot much written on GIS Ethics.

Ethics: a. A set of principles of right conduct.b. A theory or a system of moral values:

2. ethics(used with a sing. verb) The study of the general nature of morals and of the specific moral choices to be made by a person; moral philosophy.3. ethics(used with a sing. or pl. verb) The rules or standards governing the conduct of a person or the members of a profession: medical ethics.

Evolving Debate: Kantianism/ DeontologyHedonic Utilitarianism

No one answer!

Page 5: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

AgendaTake Survey on Ethical Dilemmas

For Each Scenario we will:● Panelist discuss their answers, reasoning and approach● Reveal Audience Results● Audience Discussion

Discussion on:● Ethical Training● GISP ● What comes next?

Page 6: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

SCENARIOS- WHAT WOULD YOU DO?

We will be sharing a # of generalized scenarios. Personalize it to your current/past experience.

I.E. Crime Data -> Soil Data or Water Data or Road DataI.E. Edit City Boundary -> Edit any official/important layer

I.E. Elected Official -> Employer, Person of Extreme Importance

Answers will remain anonymous (double blind). Answer quickly. We are looking for your “gut reaction”.

Should take 15 minutes to complete.You can stop answering at any time.

Page 7: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Ethical Spectrum

Bright Sunny Day

Worst Thing Imaginable

Ethical Decision

Unethical Decision

1 106 7 8 92 3 4 5

Rank the Scenarios on the

Page 8: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Survey Setup

https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/KJGP5TN

Page 9: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

SCENARIO ONEAn official is up for re-election. Their platform included getting “tough on crime”. They ask you to create a hotspot map of before and after to showcase their accomplishment while in office.

You do, but the maps don’t have the “Wow factor” the official is looking for. They ask you to re-categorize the ramp on one of them to “highlight” the difference. The map is still labeled correctly. You know this opposes common convention.

Page 10: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

You are a GIS professional (not a licensed surveyor), in charge of mapping the legal annexations in your jurisdiction to give guidance to the leadership.You have been asked to label the map as “survey accurate”.

SCENARIO Two

Survey

Accurate

Page 11: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

You have been asked to create three election sub regions for a Fire District which recently merged with two other districts.

Project Rules:• Must use Fire Annexation Area• Approximately equal population• Approximately equal geographic area

SCENARIO Three – PART A

Page 12: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

You have been asked to create three election sub regions for a Fire District which recently merged with two other districts.

Project Rules:• Must use Fire Annexation Area• Approximately equal population• Approximately equal geographic area

SCENARIO Three – PART B

Additional Info:You work for one of the fire districts

Page 13: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

You have been asked to create three election sub regions for a Fire District which recently merged with two other districts.

Project Rules:• Must use Fire Annexation Area• Approximately equal population• Approximately equal geographic area

SCENARIO Three – PART C

Additional Info:Chief Halligan gives you a list of three addresses and said they should not fall into the same sub region.

You recognize the addresses as being the homes of Halligan’s current fire commissioners.

Page 14: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

SCENARIO FourYour large urban county has applied for a grant for new LiDAR. Your last flight was 8 years ago. You have some new derivatives you would like to obtain for proposed future projects. However no formal plan.

You learn that one other county has applied. They are a small rural county, that have no previous LiDAR flights. Have less overall funds and a well documented plan of how they would use the data.

If you could make the decision:● Do you step aside so the other county gets it?● Do you take the funding for your county?

Who do you pick?

Page 15: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

SCENARIO Five

• You intervene and ask to speak to the jurisdiction.

• The jurisdiction asks for a specific dataset. Your coworker offers to send it to them.

• Your coworker recommends a dataset. You know it has severe limitations. Your coworker doesn’t.

• The coworker then offers another dataset that would be completely inappropriate for the jurisdiction’s project.

• You do not intervene as the request went to your coworker.

You work for the state, you and your coworker have access to all the GIS data for your agency. You overhear another jurisdiction requesting a dataset from your coworker. You are very familiar with the data and its limitations however your coworker is not.

Where, if at all, do you intervene?

Page 16: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

End of Survey

Page 17: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Discussion of Results...Things to think about...

Why did you vote a certain way?

What factors did you consider?

How did you decide?● Randomly Picked● Gut decision ● Policy/Procedure● Upbringing (My momma raised me right)● Training- Formal/Informal Ethical Training● Other?

Page 18: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

SCENARIO ONEAn official is up for re-election. Their platform included getting “tough on crime”. They ask you to create a hotspot map of before and after to showcase their accomplishment while in office.

You do, but the maps don’t have the “Wow factor” the official is looking for. They ask you to re-categorize the ramp on one of them to “highlight” the difference.The map is still labeled correctly. You know this opposes common convention.

Page 19: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Scenario One

Minimum 3

Average 6.27Maximum 8

Page 20: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

You are a GIS professional (not a licensed surveyor), in charge of mapping the legal annexations in your jurisdiction to give guidance to the leadership.You have been asked to label the map as “survey accurate”.

SCENARIO Two

Survey

Accurate

Page 21: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Scenario Two

Minimum 3

Average 7.45Maximum 9

Survey

Accurate

Page 22: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

CHIEF HALLIGAN… REMINISCENT OF

"The events depicted in this scenario are fictitious. Any similarity to any person living or dead is merely coincidental."

Halligan Bar AKA. Halligan Tool n. a forcible entry tool used by firefighters and law enforcement.

Page 23: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

You have been asked to create three election sub regions for a Fire District which recently merged with two other districts.

Project Rules:• Must use Fire Annexation Area• Approximately equal population• Approximately equal geographic area

SCENARIO Three – PART A

Page 24: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Scenario Three - A

Minimum 1

Average 2.18Maximum 6

Page 25: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

You have been asked to create three election sub regions for a Fire District which recently merged with two other districts.

Project Rules:• Must use Fire Annexation Area• Approximately equal population• Approximately equal geographic area

SCENARIO Three – PART B

Additional Info:You work for one of the fire districts

Page 26: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Scenario Three - B

Minimum 1

Average 3.91Maximum 7

Page 27: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

You have been asked to create three election sub regions for a Fire District which recently merged with two other districts.

Project Rules:• Must use Fire Annexation Area• Approximately equal population• Approximately equal geographic area

SCENARIO Three – PART C

Additional Info:Chief Halligan gives you a list of three addresses and said they should not fall into the same sub region.

You recognize the addresses as being the homes of Halligan’s current fire commissioners.

Page 28: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Scenario Three - C

Minimum 3

Average 7.27Maximum 9

Page 29: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Scenario Three - All

Scenario Average Ranking

Part A: Analysis 2.18

Part B: You Work for the District 3.91

Part C: Addresses of Current Fire Chiefs 7.27

Page 30: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

SCENARIO FourYour large urban county has applied for a grant for new LiDAR. Your last flight was 8 years ago. You have some new derivatives you would like to obtain for proposed future projects. However no formal plan.

You learn that one other county has applied. They are a small rural county, that have no previous LiDAR flights. Have less overall funds and a well documented plan of how they would use the data.

If you could make the decision:● Do you step aside so the other county gets it?● Do you take the funding for your county? Who do you pick?

Page 31: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Scenario Four

County A 60%

County B 40%

Page 32: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

SCENARIO Five

• You intervene and ask to speak to the jurisdiction.

• The jurisdiction asks for a specific dataset. Your coworker offers to send it to them.

• Your coworker recommends a dataset. You know it has severe limitations. Your coworker doesn’t.

• The coworker then offers another dataset that would be completely inappropriate for the jurisdiction’s project.

• You do not intervene as the request went to your coworker.

You work for the state, you and your coworker have access to all the GIS data for your agency. You overhear another jurisdiction requesting a dataset from your coworker. You are very familiar with the data and its limitations however your coworker is not.

Where, if at all, do you intervene?

Page 33: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Scenario Five

When Do You Do Something Different

Beginning: Ask to Handle the Request 27%

Specific Dataset: No questions 55%

Severe Limitations: Only you know 18%

Wrong Dataset: completely led astray 0%

You Don’t Intervene: not your request 0%

Page 34: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Have you received Ethical Training?

Yes 9No 2

GIS Specific 0Other 9

Page 35: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

If you had Ethical Training, what did it consist of?

● Curriculum & Formal Training● Articles & Papers● How to Lie with Maps

Page 36: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

How to Lie with Maps

“Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.”

Mark Monmonier

• Frequently quoted in ethical papers and articles• Commonly found as a tool in GIS courses• Presents questions & scenarios

Mark Monmonier, How to Lie with Maps (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1996, 2nd Edition

Page 37: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Articles & Papers

“In Short, for many map-makers ethics remains a gray area, lost somewhere in the abyss that separates logic

from the swamp of subjective opinion.” J.B. Harley

https://www.directionsmag.com/article/1075http://www.cartographicperspectives.org/index.php/journal/article/view/1053

Page 38: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Curriculum & Training

“Students develop ethical awareness and moral reasoning skills through methodical analysis and discussion of case studies.”

Penn State

https://www.e-education.psu.edu/research/projects/gisethicsproducts

Page 39: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Certification“GIS certification (such as the GISP) have incorporated

ethics; however, often this is a simple signature that promises to abide by ethical guidelines, rather than any formal education on the use of GIS within ethical limits.”

MARK ALTAWEEL

https://www.gislounge.com/need-ethics-gis/#_ftn4

Do you have a GISP?

# %Yes 4 36%

No 7 64%

Page 40: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

GISP CODE OF ETHICS

“This code is based on the ethical principle of always treating others with respect and never merely as means to an end: i.e. deontology. It requires us to consider the impact of our actions on other persons and to modify our actions to reflect the respect and concern we have for them. It emphasizes our obligations to other persons, to our colleagues and the profession, to our employers, and to society as a whole. Those obligations provide

the organizing structure for these guidelines.“

Have you read it?

Page 41: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Haven’t had any previous

ethical training?

Page 42: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?

Should there be more training?Should ethics training be required?

Who’s responsibility is it? Are we good? Non-issue?

https://www.pinterest.com/jamesh20/photojournalism-ethics/

Page 43: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Share your Dilemmas!Please email Elizabeth or Kelly with any dilemmas you have experienced, heard of or can think of.

Not here to judge. We will change names and protect the innocent/guilty.

https://lifeisntthatcomplicated.wordpress.com/2015/06/02/advice-on-advice/

Page 44: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

GIS SPECIFIC RESOURCESGISP Code of Ethics:

https://www.gisci.org/Ethics/CodeofEthics.aspx Books:

Mark Monmonier, How to Lie with Maps (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1996, 2nd EditionJohn Pickles, Ground Truth- The Social Implications of Geographic Information Systems

Articles: https://www.directionsmag.com/article/1075http://www.cartographicperspectives.org/index.php/journal/article/view/1053 https://www.directionsmag.com/article/6923https://www.directionsmag.com/article/6727

Other GIS Specific Ethical Scenarios: White Paper on Surveyors vs GIS Professionals:

https://www.urisa.org/clientuploads/directory/Documents/Advocacy/DefiningBoundaries_WhitePaper1.pdfhttps://www.e-education.psu.edu/research/projects/gisethicsproducts

Page 45: Survey Setup...How to Lie with Maps “Cartographic paradox: to present a useful and truthful picture, an accurate map must tell white lies.” Mark Monmonier • Frequently quoted

Panelist Bio’sPanel Coordinators

Kelly Alfaro Haugen - [email protected] Thurston County GeoData Center; GIS Analyst II

Elizabeth Donovan - [email protected] Thurston County Sheriff’s Office; Crime Analyst

Janene Michaelis - [email protected] County Community Planning; GIS Analyst II

Panelist MembersScott Carte - [email protected]

Thurston Regional Planning Council; GIS Coordinator

Gary Montgomery - [email protected] of Lacey; GIS Coordinator

Sarah Smith - [email protected] Thurston County GeoData Center; GIS Analyst II