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In 2011, USAID established
the position of the Chief Geographer and the GeoCenter, a team
of geographers and data analysts, to serve the Agency’s geospatial
needs. Since then, the GeoCenter has established the Agency’s
Geospatial Community of Practice (CoP) and supported 75 USAID
field Missions and every Bureau in Washington, D.C. Across
the Agency, there are now more than 30 dedicated Geographic
Information System (GIS) Specialists embedded directly in USAID
Missions. Complementing this internal expertise, the implementing partner
community acts as an extension to the Agency’s workforce.
p. 8
The Agency and its Geospatial CoP rely on three categories
of geographic data layers to make programmatic and operational decisions:
• Activity location data, which illuminate the locations where USAID-funded activities are implemented
and the places that are intended to benefit.
• Geographically disaggregated indicator data,
which illuminate the geographic distribution of USAID
activity performance indicators.
• Thematic data, which illuminate the geographic
distribution of specific foundational layers such as road
and river networks, as well as descriptive layers such as
population density and poverty rates.
p. 13
The GeoCenter, USAID’s Geospatial CoP,
PLR, and M/CIO will collaborate to design, develop,
and deploy policy guidance and tools for the USAID
workforce to view, capture, store, access, analyze, visualize, and publish geospatial data.
The GeoCenter and USAID’s Geospatial CoP will
coordinate with the Data Administration and Technical
Advisory (DATA) Board, the Digital Sector Council,
M/CIO, PLR, and other key Agency stakeholders to
ensure that any technology and data acquired for the
enterprise geospatial infrastructure meets the needs of
the broader Agency without duplicating efforts, including support for USAID’s Policy Framework, Agency
Learning Agenda, Program Cycle Operational Policy
(ADS 201), and efforts to advance Knowledge Management and Organizational Learning at USAID.
p. 15
Each year, the Geospatial CoP provides at least 15 geospatial capacity
building events for the USAID workforce.
The GeoCenter and USAID’s Geospatial CoP will leverage its capacity
building efforts to monitor and promote the ongoing
implementation of the Geospatial Strategy, advancing
the Agency’s understanding of policies, technologies,
and partnerships that will shape the Agency’s geospatial
landscape.
p. 16
USAID will further strengthen its network of Missionbased GIS Specialists in the Geospatial CoP, already an
invaluable human capacity asset for enhancing Agency
programming. As digital technologies continue to influence international development, the Geospatial CoP is
uniquely positioned to help integrate these tools into
USAID’s work, further advancing the Agency’s efforts to
become more data-driven.
These efforts will expand the geospatial capacity of
USAID’s current workforce. As the demand for geospatial
solutions grows, the Agency’s Chief Geographer, the
GeoCenter, and the Geospatial CoP will continue to
advocate for increased geospatial expertise, employing
more GIS Specialists and other staff with experience using
geospatial and data analysis more generally for international development and humanitarian assistance.
Support USAID’s Geospatial CoP in creating
a culture of data use by engaging USAID
communities (e.g., Program Officers and Youth,
MEL, and Digital Development Advisors) and
sharing best practices
p. 24
The Geospatial CoP, a working-level forum for GIS
Specialists and other Agency geospatial champions,
will share knowledge and best practices for using
geospatial data and information. Members of the
CoP have been essential to the development of the
Geospatial Strategy and will continue to serve as key
advocates for and participants in its implementation.
p. 29
USAID has an active
GIS CoP with robust
technical expertise;
the GeoCenter has a
very good reputation
in the Agency, especially at Missions, and
excels at relationship
management. Many
senior leaders understand the value of
place-based analysis
and programming.
p. 32
USAID’s Geospatial CoP includes GIS Specialists from more than 30 countries around the
world who can incorporate their knowledge of local culture with geospatial analytical skills.
p. 35
Geospatial Community of Practice (CoP): The
human network of GIS Specialists, data scientists, and
non-geospatial staff who champion the geographic
approach to development, work together to address
challenges, and share knowledge and best practices
for using geospatial data and information in USAID’s
programs
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Giant Rock とは
Jono Bacon が People Powered (遠くへ行きたければ、みんなで行け) で言っている big rock と Linux の giant lock を参考に作ったコンセプトで、SMG で頻出するコンセプトを、コンセプトそのものを対象にして取り扱う、比較的永続性の高いイシュー。
@hfu の 2024-02 現在の仮説
地理空間情報専門家は組織や社会で散在する傾向があり、散在するからこそ、非公式な「実践のコミュニティ」というアイディアに親和性を感じており、実際に「実践のコミュニティ」が組織や社会に散在している。
元々実践のコミュニティが潜在的に散在しているこの分野において、実践のコミュニティという表現を明確に与えることで、実践のコミュニティがこの分野で「バズる」可能性があるのではないか。
この仮説を持ったきっかけは、USAID Geospatial Strategy (#377) で再び CoP という表現を見たためである。
Community of Practice の取り扱い
...
UN-GGIM での扱い
USAID Geospatial Strategy (#377) での扱い
p. 7
p. 8
p. 13
p. 15
p. 16
p. 24
p. 29
p. 32
p. 35
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: