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GIS / Mapping Working Group

The Geographic Information Systems (GIS) / Mapping working group is a network of CUNY students, faculty and staff who are interested in sharing methods and techniques, and finding support from others about ways GIS can be used to further research and teaching.

The GIS/Mapping working group is part of a GC Digital Initiatives program designed to create collaborative communities of Digital Fellows, CUNY-wide graduate students, staff, and faculty to meet regularly and share their areas of interest. The working groups provide a sustained, supportive environment to learn new skills, share familiar skills, and collaborate with both the Digital Fellows and the CUNY digital community.

If you are using Geographic Information Systems or other mapping technologies in your teaching and/or research, or if you are interested in mapping your data, or using GIS technology to analyze/visualize your data, we invite you to join the GIS/Mapping working group.

Peruse our mapping resource bank here: https://commons.gc.cuny.edu/groups/gis-working-group/docs/gis-mapping-resources/

For the Spring 2024 semester, the GIS/Mapping working group will meet in the Digital Scholarship Lab, Room 7414, every other Tuesday from 2-4 p.m. Check out our event calendar for the specific meeting dates. Please stop by!

Event (04/03/19): Mapping Contagion at New York Public Library

  • Hello all, thought this event could be of interest to you. And our fellow Stefano Morello will be part of the panel!

    Best,

    Javier

     

    Wed, Apr 3, 2019, 03:30 PM – 06:00 PM
    Margaret Liebman Berger Forum, Stephen A. Schwarzman Building, NYPL, 476 Fifth Avenue at 42nd Street

    About the research methods workshop

    How have researchers used or created maps as objects of study? Join us for a research methods event with a distinctly cartographic focus. Through the unifying lens of infectious disease, each presentation will start by looking at one item from the Lionel Pincus and Princess Firyal Map Division before expanding out to reveal the role of mapping in their given research field. Scholars and curators from the worlds of public history, medicine, and sociology will discuss the variety of methodologies they use, and there will be time to visit the exhibition Mapping Contagion: Representing Infectious Disease in New York City, currently on display in Room 117 at the New York Public Library. The event will bring together the core partner organizations from the Wellcome’s Contagious Cities project, including the New York Public Library’s Maps Division, Tenement Museum, New York Academy of Medicine, Museum of the City of New York, and the Center for the Humanities at the Graduate Center, CUNY, as well as introducing researchers working on related themes.

    This event is free and open to the public, but RSVP is required to attend, please click here to RSVP.

    Schedule:

    3:30-4:30pm: Panel 1

    Anne Garner, Curator of Rare Books and Manuscripts at The New York Academy of Medicine Library, “Swill milk, fever-nests, and insalubrious quarters: Mapping nineteenth-century New York’s nuisances”

    David Favaloro, Director of Curatorial Affairs and Hebrew Technical Institute Research Fellow, Lower East Side Tenement Museum,“Mapping the Intersections of Race, Ethnicity, and Disease with the Tenement House Commission”

    Gergely Baics, Associate Professor of History and BPH Endowed Faculty Chair of Urban Studies, Barnard College,“Mapping Density and Crowding as Indicators of Public Health: Exploiting the 1852-54 Perris Atlas of New York City”

    4:30-5:00pm: Break

    5:00-6:00pm: Panel 2

    Ian Fowler, Curator and Geospatial Librarian for the Lionel Pincus and Princess Firyal Map Division, New York Public Library, “Curating Mapping Contagion at NYPL”

    Kerri Culhane/Stefano Morello, co-curators of The Lung Block: A New York City Slum & Its Forgotten Italian Immigrant Community (NYC Dept of Records, April-October 2019)“Putting the Lung Block on the Map”

    Rebecca Hayes Jacobs, Mellon Postdoctoral Curatorial Fellow, Museum of the City of New York, “Mapping the Meanings of Contagion in Germ City

    Co-hosted by the New York Public Library and the Center for the Humanities at the Graduate Center, CUNY.

    Sponsored by Wellcome, as part of Contagious Cities.

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