International Cartographic Association The mission of the International Cartographic Association (ICA) is to promote the discipline and profession of cartography and GIScience in an international context. International Cartographic Association
Welcome to the International Cartographic Association
Welcome to the website of the International Cartographic AssociationGet to know the new ICA Executive Committee for the term 2023-2027Get to know the ICA Commissions for the term 2023-2027
Welcome to the website of the International Cartographic Association
Get to know the new ICA Executive Committee for the term 2023-2027
Get to know the ICA Commissions for the term 2023-2027

eCARTO News July 2024

eCARTO News captures the latest cartographic news and developments from around the world. If you have any general cartography items of interest then please email them to David Fraser, editor of eCARTO News.

Mapping the Environment

  • Colorado’s released wolves move away from Rocky Mountain National Park – coloradoan.com
  • Council launches interactive bushfire hazard zones map – newsofthearea.com.au
  • Mapping the great outdoors – nationalobserver.com
  • Ecology upgrades Washington air quality map in time for wildfire smoke season – ecology.wa.gov
  • How much will the ground shake? Scientists creating first detailed maps of Metro Vancouver’s earthquake hazards – vancouversun.com
  • Map: Northern lights could shine in some states amid minor geomagnetic storm – thehill.com

Citizen Mapping

  • Minnesota drivers help map out the hottest neighborhoods across the United States – kstp.com/kstp-news
  • Looking for input on Dolores Canyon National Conservation Area map – kkco11news.com
  • Advocates hope digital map makes Toronto art more accessible – cbc.ca
  • Who Maps the World? – bloomberg.com

Applications of Mapping

  • Collaboration To Push Boundaries Of Cosmos Mapping – miragenews.com
  • Map Shows Which States Produce the Most Olympians – newsweek.com
  • PhilSA releases map of possible oil spill extent in Bataan – manilastandard.net
  • Shocking map shows UK’s shoplifting hotspots – check where you live – express.co.uk
  • Tunisia to Pilot GIS Mapping for Public Health – africacdc.org
  • Map project compiles, geolocates Jasper wildfire footage – fitzhugh.ca
  • Map Shows States With the Tallest Men in the U.S. – newsweek.com
  • Map Shows Which States Drink the Most Beer – newsweek.com
  • Map shows “ice cream trail” in Massachusetts with more than 100 destinations – cbsnews.com

Industry

  • Google Maps vs. Apple Maps: Which is the better app in 2024? – fastcompany.com
  • Microsoft, Meta, and others release free global map data for developers – neowin.net
  • Apple Maps on the web launches in beta – apple.com
  • Microsoft-backed foundation releases open map data sets to rival Google – newsbytesapp.com
  • Progress in high-resolution vegetation mapping: China’s leap toward advanced environmental monitoring – phys.org

Gatherings

Maps as a record of what was

  • First map of Earth’s lost continent has been published – msn.com
  • Scientists Discovered An Ancient Map That Proves Antarctica Was A JUNGLE – msn.com
  • Olympics Opening Ceremony 2024: Epic no-fly zone across Paris for hours – news.com.au
  • 15 Years On: Lunar Orbiter Starts Moon Mapping Mission – miragenews.com
  • Houstonians can track debris pickup progress on new interactive map – chron.com

Opinion

  • Climate Change Causing You Decision Fatigue? Try a Map | Opinion – newsweek.com
  • The Crunch: Paris then and now, an Extremely Detailed Election Map and your brain after mushrooms – theguardian.com
  • Photomaps of Jasper townsite not official incident maps: Jasper National Park – fitzhugh.ca
  • ‘Straight line’: Mind-boggling map goes viral – news.com.au
  • Fears Oxford University is ‘dominating map’ of the city – oxfordmail.co.uk

Maps, Atlases and Globes

  • NEW MAP: Muir Creek Fire in Glacier National Park measures 84 acres – nbcmontana.com
  • Map shows high-speed rail connecting major US cities across the nation: ‘Nationwide access remains our goal’ – yahoo.com

Publications

Related

 

Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed by the weblink authors are their own and do not represent the official position of the ICA. The links are assembled for information and education purposes only.

Updates on EuroCarto 2024

The International Cartographic Association (ICA), the Vienna University of Technology (TU Wien), the Austrian (ÖKK), German (DGfK), Swiss (SGK), British (BCS) and Czech (ČKS) Cartographic Societies are pleased to invite you to the European Cartographic Conference – EuroCarto 2024, 9–11 September 2024 at TU Wien, Austria.

We aim to bring together cartographers and those working in related disciplines to offer a platform for discussion, exchange and stimulation of research and joined projects.

Preliminary Program

The preliminary conference program is now available online at eurocarto2024.org/program.

Please note that changes are still possible.

Pre-conference workshops

We also invite you to visit complimentary workshops preceding the conference.

As all workshops have a limited capacity, please register on time. For more details, visit eurocarto2024.org/workshop-programme

Side activities

In addition to the scientific program, we offer side activities (see eurocarto2024.org/side-events/), an Opening and Icebreaker on Sunday, September 8th, at 6:30pm and a Gala Dinner at Badeschiff Wien on Tuesday, September 10th, at 7pm.

For comprehensive, up-to-date information, please visit our conference website: eurocarto2024.org.

 

We look forward to welcoming you to Vienna soon and celebrating cartography!

Georg Gartner and the EuroCarto2024 organizing team

Category: Member News
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President’s Blog: A gathering of the ICA people – the ICA Retreat in Vienna

Many persons are involved in our organization. They have different roles, different background and different ideas. In order to learn to know each other better, to synchronize our understanding of “our” ICA and to allow for taking on board all those rich ideas, perspectives and thoughts all Executive Committee Members, Commission Chairs and Co-Chairs, Working Group Chairs and further ICA officers met at the Technische Universität Wien in Vienna, Austria from 22.3.2024 to 24.3.2024 for an intense working meeting.

The agenda included several information presentations on issues of mutual concern, several group-works and workshops and simply time to meet, discuss and be part of ICA.

In the unique venue of the “Kuppelsaal” of the Technical University of Vienna we found enough space and inspiration to gather and work together.

At the ICA retreat at TU Wien Kuppelsaal, Vienna, Austria 2024

At the ICA retreat at TU Wien Kuppelsaal, Vienna, Austria 2024

The meeting started with an introduction from President Georg Gartner on the nature, aims and scope and mission of the International Cartographic Association. It is really the global voice for Cartography and GIScience and the motto “We love maps” is a common nominator for all of us.

In order to learn to know each other better we performed a group work, where we paired in two to be able to introduce always the other person accordingly.

We then collected ideas about the questions:

  • What would you like to give to the ICA community?
  • What would you like to get from ICA?

which resulted in a long and rich list of relevant items.

Dusan Petrovic, Pyry Kettunen and Francis Harvey working hard and having fun at the retreat at TU Wien Kuppelsaal, Vienna, Austria 2024

Dusan Petrovic, Pyry Kettunen and Francis Harvey working hard and having fun at the retreat at TU Wien Kuppelsaal, Vienna, Austria 2024

Having set the tone for the meeting with this we then dived into several existing structures, instruments and elements of ICA, such as the ICA Webservices (presented by Webmaster Manuela Schmidt), the International Journal of Cartography (presented online from the Editors Anne Ruas and William Cartwright), the ICA Publication Regime (presented online from Publication Committee Chair Menno-Jan Kraak), the ICA Executive Committee (presented by President Georg Gartner and Secretary-General Thomas Schulz), the ICA Commissions and their Administration (presented by Secretary-General Thomas Schulz), the ICA Conferences (presented by Vice-President Serena Coetzee), the ICA memberships, MoUs and relations to other organisations (presented by Past-President Tim Trainor), the ICA Research Agenda (presented by Vice-President Haosheng Huang), the ICA Body of Knowledge (presented by Working Group Chair Terje Mitbo).

Inbetween further group interventions took place, refering to the idea of synchronizing our understanding of the core concept of our organization (What is a map?), identifying and presenting commission and working group plans and synergies (led by Vice-President Dusan Petrovic), a SWOT (Strengths-Weaknesses-Opportunities-Threads) – Analysis of ICA (led by Vice-President Alex Kent), a open mic session on ideas and visions (led by Vice-Presidents Amy Griffin, Jiping Liu and Dariusz Dukaczewski).

The ICA “people” in front of the Karlskirche during the ICA retreat, Vienna 2024

The ICA “people” in front of the Karlskirche during the ICA retreat, Vienna 2024

Socializing opportunities despite the amical, fruitful and constructive working atmosphere have been taken on a joined short “CartoWalk” around Karlsplatz and joined meals.

Participants of the ICA retreat in front of the Technische Universität Wien, Vienna 2024

Participants of the ICA retreat in front of the Technische Universität Wien, Vienna 2024

The event proofs my feeling right again, that ICA is really more like a family – it is such a privilege to be able to cooperate with so many bright, motivated, enthusiastic, fantastic scholars and persons!

List of Participants

Executive Committee

  • President: Georg Gartner
  • Past President: Timothy Trainor
  • Secretary-General and Treasurer: Thomas Schulz
  • Vice President: Serena Coetzee
  • Vice President: Dariusz Dukaczewski
  • Vice President: Amy Griffin
  • Vice President: Dusan Petrovic
  • Vice President: Haosheng Huang
  • Vice President: Alexander Kent
  • Vice President: Jiping Liu

Commission Chairs and Co-Chairs

  • Art and Cartography: Taien Ng-Chan
  • Atlases: Vitek Vozenilek, Eric Losang
  • Cartographic Heritage into the Digital: Matyas Gede
  • Cartography and Children: Silvia Marinova
  • Cartography and Sustainable Development: Britta Ricker
  • Cartography in Early Warning and Crisis Mgmt: Christophe Lienert, Jie Shen
  • Cognitive Issues: Tumasch Reichenbacher, Pyry Kettunen, Petr Kubicek
  • Digital Transformation of Mapping Agencies: Bin Jiang
  • Education and Training: Tao Wang
  • Ethics in Cartography: Aileen Buckley
  • GeoAI: Samantha Arundel
  • Geospatial Analysis and Modelling: Xintao Liu
  • Geospatial Semantics and Ontology: Francis Harvey
  • Geovisualization: Florian Ledermann, Arzu Cöltekin
  • High-Definition Maps: Qingyun Du
  • Integrated Geospatial Information: Anja Hopfstock, Kathryn Arnold
  • Location Based Services: Jukka Krisp
  • Map Design: Ian Muehlenhaus
  • Map Projections: Krisztian Kerkovits
  • Maps and the Internet: Otakar Cerba
  • Marine Cartography: Ron Furness, Lysandros Tsoulos
  • Mountain Cartography: Patrick Kennelly
  • Multi-scale Cartography: Guillaume Touya, Izabela Karsznia
  • Topographic Mapping: David Forrest, Lukas Halik
  • Toponomy: Matjaz Gersic
  • Ubiquitious Mapping: Toru Ishikawa, Angela Schwering, Armand Kapaj
  • User Experiences: Robert Roth

Working Group Chairs and Co-Chairs

  • Next Generation Cartographers: Katarzyna Slomska-Przech, Chelsea Nestel
  • Inclusive Cartography: Jakub Wabinski, Vincent van Altena
  • Body of Knowledge: Terje Mitbo

Old maps in geography and cartography: A special issue of Acta geographica Slovenica

The Slovenian scientific journal Acta geographica Slovenica has published a special issue entitled Old maps in geography and cartography. This special issue (volume 63, issue 2) in five articles deals with historical cartography, and sheds light on the production, use and significance of old maps of Slovenian territory and Central Europe since the 16th century. These maps provide valuable resources for geographical research and are a visual parallel for understanding the history of the region.

Acta geographica Slovenica is a research journal for geography and related disciplines published by the Anton Melik Geographical Institute of the Scientific Research Centre of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts. It has been published since 1952 and is the highest-ranking SCI- and Scopus-indexed geographical journal in Slovenia with an impact factor. Acta geographica Slovenica publishes original research articles from all fields of geography and related disciplines (such as history, cartography, climatology, hydrology, and geology). The journal provides an excellent forum for the discussion of new aspects of theory, methods and research results, especially in Central, Eastern and South-eastern Europe.

We recommend this special issue of Acta geographica Slovenica to researchers studying ancient maps, students of cartography, history and geography, and anyone interested in the historical, geographical, and societal insights that cartographic data provides. The special issue of the journal can be accessed at the following link: https://ojs.zrc-sazu.si/ags/issue/view/958

Category: Member News

President’s Blog: AutoCarto became CaGIS + UCGIS Conference

The Cartography and Geographic Information Society (CaGIS) has joined forces with the University Consortium for Geographic Information Society (UCGIS) to organize a joint CaGIS and UCGIS conference in Columbus, Ohio, on June 3-6, 2024, replacing the traditional and popular AutoCarto Conferences. The theme of the meeting was Climate Smart GIScience: Mapping a Sustainable Future.

The final program offered 13 research papers, 3 vision statements, 21 lightning talks and 18 posters, two fantastic plenary speakers (Derek Arndt, Director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) and Dr. Virginia Burkett, Chief Scientist for Climate and Land Use Change, International Programs, U.S. Geological Survey), highlighting the necessity to be aware of the role of cartography and GIScience for climate change awareness and actions.

By participating in a panel on “Climate Smart Growth for Organisations” I was able to discuss and identify issues of responsibility for sustainable actions in an organization like ICA with Kari Craun (CAGIS), Aaron Addison (WGIC), Harvey Miller (UCGIS) and Patricia Carbajales (UCGIS). Ideas included discussion on quantity and quality of meetings, differentiated understanding of the functions of meetings and which format (online, in-person) matches with those functions, attributes of venues (accessibility) and governance of organization in general. ICA is taking its responsibility in this respect serious and will follow this up accordingly.

Georg Gartner giving a keynote at the CAGIS-UCGIS Conference, Columbus, Ohio 2024

As ICA is endorsing this conference as a Regional Cartographic Conference it is of imminent importance, to have the ICA aims and scope being reflected and visible in the program and activities. Also, young scholars have been entitled to apply for an ICA scholarship. A record number of 24 young scholars have benefited from this ICA instrument!

ICA Scholarship Winners on the stage at the CAGIS-UCGIS Conference, Columbus, Ohio 2024 after receiving their awards from Past President Tim Trainor and President Georg Gartner

President’s Blog: A landmark conference in Eastern Europe

The already 9th International Conference on Cartography and GIS has taken place in Bulgaria this time in Nessebar from 16-21 June 2024. The ICCGIS is a biannual conference that started in 2006 and had attracted attendees from more than 60 countries and has published more than 700 scientific papers in its proceedings.

The event has been organized by the Bulgarian Cartographic Association and the University of Architecture, Civil Engineering and Geodesy of Sofia, namely by Silvia Marinova and Temenoujka Bandrova. ICA is endorsing this conference, as it gives Cartography an international platform and allows to collect knowledge and share experiences about the latest achievements of Cartography and GIS.

Despite more than 100 presentations and  31 poster presentations four ICA Commission held their meetings at Nessebar, the Commission on Cartography and Children chaired by Silvia Marinova, the Commission on Cartography in Early Warning and Crisis Management with co-chairs Shen Jie and Christophe Lienert the Commission on Maps and the Internet chaired by Otakar Čerba and the Commission on Map Projections, chaired by Krisztian Kerkovits.

The organisers managed to have the presidents of ISDE (Alessandro Annoni), ISPRS (Lena Halounova) and ICA (Georg Gartner) being present, identifying the mutual interests of those societies and associations to contribute to global challenges by the means of cartography, GIScience and the wider geospatial industries.

Group picture

Participants of the 9th International Conference on Cartography and GIS, 18.6.2024, Nessebar (Bulgaria)

ISPRS President Lena Haounova and ICA President Georg Gartner

ISPRS President Lena Haounova and ICA President Georg Gartner at the 9th International Conference on Cartography and GIS, 18.6.2024, Nessebar (Bulgaria)

Otakar Cerba, Chair of the ICA Commission on Maps and the Internet, reporting on the commisson work

Otakar Cerba, Chair of the ICA Commission on Maps and the Internet, reporting on the commisson work and plans at the 9th International Conference on Cartography and GIS, 18.6.2024, Nessebar (Bulgaria)

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President’s Blog: Get your hands on! Check out what the pre-conference workshops of EuroCarto 2024 have to offer

The EuroCarto 2024 conference will take place from 9—11.9.2024 at Vienna, Austria. This conference will again see more then 180 contributions in oral presentations, posters and exhibitions demonstrating the wide range and contemporary character of cartography.

A number of pre-conference workshops are offered on Sunday, September 8, 2024 at TU Wien for the conference participants, covering a wide range of contemporary and highly relevant topics of cartography to be discussed in an interactive manner. I am sure there is something interesting for every cartographer included!

 

Barrier-Free Cartography

The ICA’s Working Group on Inclusive Cartography was established earlier this year to continue and extend the work of the former Commission on Maps and Graphics for Blind and Partially Sighted People. The primary objective of this working group is to advance the accessibility of cartographic products to all users and communities.

The idea is that special needs are not strictly related to physical aspects, and can also be related to social and educational aspects. These are also reflected in the UN’s SDGs that aim to “…ensuring that no one is left behind…”. Individuals with special needs remain underrepresented in the field of cartography. This underrepresentation may stem from the intricate and nuanced nature of their requirements, coupled with the need for highly tailored solutions. But what exactly are their needs? How can we define, develop, and promote barrier-free cartography, and who are the users that will benefit from accessible maps? We aim to provide a forum to address these questions and provide answers during the barrier-free cartography workshop.

 

Building the road to AI – how cartography links data integration, meaning and geospatial knowledge transmission

All countries need geospatial information to address their national strategic priorities. However, all countries have different levels of geospatial maturity. The United Nations Integrated Geospatial Information Framework (UN-IGIF) provides a basis and guide for developing, integrating and strengthening national arrangements in geospatial information management.

In this workshop, hosted by the ICA Commission on Integrated Geospatial Information for Cartography and Commission on Topographic Mapping, you will learn more about the development and activities of the UN-GGIM and UN-IGIF, how countries across Europe can adopt and implement the framework, how data can be provided via national Geoportals and how cartography builds the road to AI.

 

Collaborative mapping of commissions beyond the International Cartographic Association (ICA)

This workshop will allow participants to critically evaluate a landscape of map conceptions shaped by the ICA commissions. Drawing upon the work of the Iconoclasistas collective, the conception of a map as a collaborative practice will be explored. Through participatory methods, this workshop will reveal cartographic spaces where the ICA has yet to venture, both geographically and epistemologically.

 

Indoor location-based services (Indoor LBS)

The research on indoor LBS is not trivial. On the one hand, its design closely depends on both indoor themes (e.g., airports, shopping malls) and target users (e.g., passengers under time pressure, visually impaired customers). Therefore, there is a huge need to investigate the indoor LBS requirements and guarantee its usability. On the other hand, the emergence of agents, such as air drones and service robots, results in more diverse indoor LBS with various indoor map formats, including floor plans, BIM models, depth images, and point clouds. However, this is also challenging to communicate indoor spatial information among different agents and collaboratively provide indoor LBS for human users as well as other agents. The workshop is organized by the ICA Commission on Location Based Services.

 

Mapping Future Courses: Bridging Old and New in Cartographic Education for Europe

The ICA Commission on Education and Training, the ICA WG on Cartographic Body of Knowledge, and the ICA Commission on Digital Transformation of National Mapping Agencies are organizing a workshop, Mapping Future Courses: Bridging Old and New in Cartographic Education for Europe. The workshop brings together experts to share their latest thoughts and best practices on how to include new digital technologies and tools in cartographic education, including GIS, remote sensing and geomatics education. It will be a combination of oral presentations and live discussions.

 

Multiperspective Cartography in Conflict Visualisation

This workshop explores approaches, potentials and limitations of visualising multiple perspectives in peace and conflict cartography. It addresses complexities and uncertainties in how maps politicise space, and challenges in integrating critical perspectives in day-to-day cartographic research and practice. The engagement of maps with multiple perspectives is expected to enable discussions on scientific authority, transparency, and trustworthiness, as well as inclusion of bottom up and personal perspectives. The workshop takes up a reflective practice approach, starting from discussing existing examples of multiperspectivity in maps and visualisations (via short presentations). From there, participants work in groups on collecting and reviewing cartographic practices that engage with multiple perspectives in terms of both map analysis and production. The workshop aims to deliver an outline of a multiperspective approach to visualising peace and conflict, with the ambition of gathering a cartographic community around the topic.

 

Online User Experiments: Seeing What Map Users See without Seeing Them

This workshop is designed for researchers, practitioners, and students interested in conducting online user experiments in cartography with a special focus on webcam eye tracking to study map users’ behavior. Building up from a previous ICA workshop on “Workshop on Adaptable Research Methods For Empirical Research with Map Users”, we aim to collaboratively explore the possibilities and boundaries of the current state of conducting online experiments to inform cartographic practice and map use. This workshop represents the joint efforts of the ICA Commissions on Geovisualization and User Experience (UX).

 

Participatory mapping – new approaches and technologies

Participatory mapping, a widely employed geographical method across disciplines, remains relatively underexplored within the International Cartographic Association. This workshop seeks to introduce three distinct participatory mapping apps/approaches: an in-situ participatory mobile app, a web-based participatory mapping tool, and a paper-based “paper2GIS” style app. Each method has the potential to target diverse groups and serve different mapping purposes.

 

Storytelling with Geographical Visualization

This workshop explores how we express and communicate a current issue to a wide audience by visualizing geographical data. After an introductory talk on the implementation of cartographic design principles in data journalism (20 min), groups of participants will be given the task of devising a method for mapping a current issue using datasets, contextual maps, and drawing materials provided (70 min). After the activity, participants will be encouraged to feedback on their approach and discuss their decisions over the methods of representation chosen (30 min). The workshop provides an opportunity to discuss ways of visualizing data within the context of a current issue and by deliberately eliminating the need for technical skills in particular software. The workshop is therefore designed to maximise inclusivity (encouraging multinational and transgenerational participation) and to allow a greater focus on the process of creativity in exploring approaches to cartographic representation.

 

The Future of Atlases

In this workshop, hosted by the ICA Commission on Atlases, we want to rethink atlases and develop new approaches to both atlas production and atlas research – focal points of the Atlas Commission’s work. We believe it’s about recombining content structures, technical developments, geographical information and the re-organisation of knowledge. We would like to approach this by answering the following questions:

  • What will be the elements (or aspects) of an atlas of the future?
  • How will atlases of the future be technically realised?
  • What other aspects need to be taken into account in the future?
  • What research topics need to be focused to scientifically support these points?

 

Web Cartography Education in the Age of Artificial Intelligence

The main goal of the workshop is to promote knowledge sharing and collaboration among experts and stakeholders in the field of AI-enabled web cartography, to inspire participants to develop innovative solutions and projects in the field and to promote advancement in web cartography education through the responsible use of AI. During the interactive workshop, we will share experiences, challenges and examples of good practice in this dynamically developing field. The workshop will take the form of an interactive discussion to encourage active participation of all participants.

This workshop is organized by the Chair of the ICA Commission on Maps and the Internet.

 

One workshop will already take place on Saturday, Septemer 7 in Warsaw, Poland:

ICA Workshop on AI, Geovisualization, and Analytical Reasoning

This workshop is intended to relate to supporting geovisualization and analytical reasoning, including approaches that leverage AI methods applied at various stages: data processing, analysis, visualization generation and interpretation, as well as support in user perception interpretation.

For more details on the workshop in Warsaw, visit the CartoVis24 website.

 

For more details on all EuroCarto 2024 workshops, visit eurocarto2024.org/workshop-programme 

International Journal of Cartography – Issue 10.2, 2024 published online

Cover International Journal of CartographyThis Special Issue of the International Journal of Cartography – A Sense of Impending Doom and emotional or critical cartography – PART 1 – has been recently published online.

This Special Issue, and Part II of the Special Issue, Issue 10.3 2024 (published later this year) is an initiative of the Commission on Art and Cartography.

Guest editors for this Issue are Taien Ng-ChanNick Lally and Sharon Hayashi. Joanna Gardener and Glenn Finley contributed to the initial conversations and thinking around these special issues.

A list of papers published in the issue is provided below:

Papers can be viewed via the Journal website.

Bill Cartwright and Anne Ruas
Editors, International Journal of Cartography

Category: General News

Report of the 13th Mountain Cartography Workshop

The 13th ICA Mountain Cartography Workshop, organized by the Commission on Mountain Cartography (CMC), was held April 3-7, 2024 at the base of Poland’s Tatra Mountains.

Workshops are usually held biennially, alternating with the International Cartographic Conferences (ICC). This year, CMC workshop got back on this traditional schedule, after the 12th ICA CMC Workshop in the Colorado Rockies needed to be rescheduled twice due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It was originally scheduled for April 2020, then initially rescheduled to April 2022, and finally convened in April of 2023.

The workshop organizer was Rafał Jońca of AMG Maps. CMC Chair Patrick Kennelly supported the team in preparation of the workshop, and previous workshop organizer Tom Patterson and ICC liaison Dušan Petrovič provided plenty of logistical support. Tom Patterson was especially helpful in building the web site for the workshop, as well as answering numerous questions about how we could recreate the success of the Colorado 2022 ICA CMC workshop.  We selected Limba Grand & Resort as the workshop venue because of its proximity to Krakow, Poland (about three hours away by train or car), and for its beautiful mountain setting. Limba Grand & Resort is near the city of Zakopane and within easy reach of the Tatra Mountains that serve as the southern border of Poland with Slovakia.

The workshop had 36 participants from Poland, Austria, France, Germany, Greece, Croatia, India, New Zealand, Portugal, Romania, Slovenia, Switzerland, and the United States. Five of the participants were female and five were students.

The theme of this year’s workshop was “Mapping Mountains in a New Era” to focus on how we approach mapping mountains, and how this focus may change in the coming years. The workshop featured 23 presentations grouped into 7 sessions. Rafał Jońca organized the program and was flexible in accommodating the needs of speakers both before and during the workshop. He asked several younger participants to chair sessions with the goal of making them feel welcome and involved.

The workshop began on Wednesday evening with welcoming remarks from Rafał Jońca and Patrick Kennelly.

This was followed by a social time in our spacious dining room, which the Limba Grand & Resort allowed us to use in addition to our meeting and recreation rooms. A downstairs great room provided access to pool, ping pong, and foosball tables for evening recreation. Nearby was a third room we had available to us for social gathering. Our meeting room had all the needed equipment for presentations, and also served as a map and poster gallery.

Thursday and Saturday were devoted to presentations covering a variety of topics related to mountain cartography. Presentations were either 10 or 20 minutes in length. Thursday evening after dinner opened with shorter Avalanche Talks by presenters who discussed their poster contributions. This year, all five Avalanche Talks were given by undergraduate students from Middlebury College in Vermont, USA who completed their posters as part of a Senior Seminar with their professor, Jeff Howarth, who unfortunately was not able to attend. Many participants noted these beautifully designed and thought-provoking posters, along with the interesting and engaging overviews from the students’ Avalanche Talks, as a highlight of the conference. This session was followed by the CMC business meeting which was run by CMC Chair Patrick Kennelly.

Friday was the Field Study Day. The purpose is for participants to get to know both the beautiful mountain setting of the Tatras and one another better in a more informal manner. Participants had three options. Rafał Jońca led a cultural tour of Zakopane and its environs, including city center of Zakopane, with a focus on local wooden architecture in Zakopane’s style and an old cemetery of Zakopane. The tour also included a funicular to a stunning view of the Tatras and Zakopane. After organizing transportation to the nearby Tatra National Park for all interested participants, Dušan Petrovič led a field study to the iconic Morskie Oko, while Charly Kriz led other participants on a hike to a spectacular viewpoint of the Tatras.

Upon returning to the Grand Limba & Resort, the last activity on Friday was the always challenging mountain trivia quiz hosted by Tom Patterson. The winning team (Alex Fries, Karel Kriz, Dušan Petrovič, Ondrej Prochazka, and Silviu Bumbak) scored 20 out of 27 possible points.

The workshop continued on Saturday with additional presentations. Also, Dušan Petrovič, our liaison on the ICA Executive Committee, provided an overview of the ICA and other items that were of interest to the CMC attendees. He also presented two attendees with Young Scientist Scholarships to assist in their travel costs, Madeline Grubb from the United States and Shekhar Kumar from India.

ICA scholarship awardee Madeline Grubb from the US

ICA scholarship awardee Madeline Grubb from the US

ICA scholarship awardee Shekhar Kumar from India

ICA scholarship awardee Shekhar Kumar from India

The workshop concluded Saturday evening with a night out in Zakopane at the Góralski Browar, a fun and festive conclusion to the workshop.

The workshop program, CMC business meeting notes, and other information are available on the CMC website at https://mountaincartography.icaci.org, and all photos in this report are courtesy of Charly Kriz and Dušan Petrovič.

Rafał Jońca, Patrick Kennelly, and Dušan Petrovič

President’s Blog: The role of the United Nations for ICA and vice versa

Some weeks before the United Nations calls for the Fourteenth Session of the United Nations Committee of Experts on Global Geospatial Information Management, 7-9 August 2024, UNHQ, New York, I would like to take the opportunity to highlight the mutual connections, cooperation and contributions between UN entities and ICA.

Several entities and institutions of the UN are related to the aims and scope of ICA, this is why we take a great interest and pro-active view on cooperation and mutual interests. Derived from the general need of an international meta organization like the UN for spatial information in reliable manner has become more and more relevant. The saying “everything happens somewhere” can be applied to every global issue or crisis. The need to become aware about “what is happening somewhere”, to get tailored information, to underpin decisions asks very often for maps, cartography and GIScience.

It is therefore not a surprise, that ICA is taking a strong interest in related UN Activities, as the respective UN entities benefit from ICA involvement. The eventually most visible example of this involvement was the joined book publication “Mapping for a sustainable world” of UN and ICA.

Let me introduce some of the main UN bodies, we are cooperating with:

United Nations Committee of Experts on Global Geospatial Information Management (UN-GGIM)

Logo of the United Nations Committee of Experts on Global Geospatial Information ManagementThis is an entity to promote international cooperation in the field of global geospatial information, for consulting governments in the context of making joint decisions and setting directions with regard to the production, availability, and application of geospatial information within national, regional, and global policy frameworks. All member states of the UN can participate, but also “Thematic Networks” are represented, including geospatial societies, academic network, private sector network and the UN Geospatial Network.
ICA is actively participating in UN-GGIM since its inauguration by

  • Participating at the UN-GGIM yearly sessions
  • Participating in some of the so called “High Level Forums of UN-GGIM
  • Taking a strong interest in main outcomes and results of UN-GGIM work, such as the Integrated Geospatial Information Framework (IGIF) or the UN Centres of Excellence

Several ICA-related scholars are actively working with UN-GGIM. I would like to highlight especially the ongoing role of Past President Timothy Trainor, which has and is substantially involved in steering the UN-GGIM agenda in several consultative ways

Academic Network of UN-GGIM

 This is a network of universities and scholars trying to contribute to the agenda of UN-GGIM for an academic perspective, focusing on the role of research and education. ICA is traditionally well presented in the Academic Network, former President Menno-Jan Kraak was a board member, current president Georg Gartner is currently Board Member.

UN-GGIM Geospatial Societies

The UN-GGIM Geospatial Societies is a coalition of the Presidents, Secretaries-General or equivalent office bearers or their nominees that lead recognized international organizations involved in the coordination, development, management, standardization or regulation of geospatial information and related matters, trying to support the agenda of UN-GGIM.

ICA is highly involved in work of this entity, I would like to highlight especially the instrumental role of former president William Cartwright in forming and establishing this group.

Former President Menno-Jan Kraak in a meeting representing ICA at the UN-GGIM Geospatial Societies, New York August 2023 at the 11th UN-GGIM meeting

Former President Menno-Jan Kraak in a meeting representing ICA at the UN-GGIM Geospatial Societies, New York August 2023 at the 11th UN-GGIM meeting

Office of Outer Space Affairs, United Nations (OOSA)

A Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed March 2005 in Vienna by Milan Konecny (ICA President) and Sergio Camacho-Lara (UNOOSA Executive Director) is in place. This has led to mutual contacts e.g presentations and internships for students.

United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO)

ICA is an official partner of UNESCO as recognized Non-governmental organization (NGO) and as such fully included in the communication of UNESCO activities and policies as entitled to participate in UNESCO activities.

United Nations Group of Experts on Geographical Names (UNGEGN)

The objectives of this entity are

  • encourage national and international geographical names standardization;
  • promote the international dissemination of nationally standardized geographical names information; and
  • adopt single romanization systems for the conversion of each non-Roman writing system to the Roman alphabet.

ICA was and is always prominently participating in the work of UNGEGN, I would like to explicitly mention her the significant input of the former secretary-general Ferjan Ormeling or the former Commission Chair Peter Jordan. Currently Matjaž Geršič is the chair from the ICA side of the Joint ICA/IGU Commission on Toponymy, a joint venture of ICA and IGU committed to fostering cartographic and geographical research in toponymy supplementary to UNGEGN.

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