Title: The Centre for AIDS Research
1The Centre for AIDS Research
- The Geography of HIV/AIDS
- Looking beyond the maps
Mike Clark and Emma Treby
University of Bournemouth
University of Southampton
2Information, suffocation or application?
3Looking beyond the maps
- Geography as a driver of understanding versus
Geography as a tool for intervention (behavioural
or non-behavioural) - Geography as distributions of attributes
(choropleth maps!) versus geography as synthesis
and spatiality - The geography behind the maps
- Information, action, behaviour
- Information and communication (governance)
- Information and management
4Looking beyond the maps
- A typology of HIV/AIDS mapping
- Geography and governance a role for GIS?
- Issues of caution
- Participation, adaptivity and AIDS response
5A typology of HIV/AIDS mapping
- HIV, AIDS and response
- A working typology of mapping
- Policy-influencing (informing and attitudinal)
- Strategic (targets and monitoring)
- Operational (support and supervision)
- Community participation
61. Policy-influencing attitudinal
7(No Transcript)
8Simplistic policy-influence concepts
If you do that, this is what will happen to you
OK, in that case I wont
9Adding realism to map influence
102. Strategic (targets monitoring)
113. Operational (support supervision)
124. Community participation
13A typology of HIV/AIDS mapping
ACCURACY
- A working typology of mapping
- Policy-influencing (informing and attitudinal)
- Strategic (targets and monitoring)
- Operational (support and supervision)
- Community participation
Focus on synthesis, aggregation association
Focus on location and sampling
HOW DOES GIS RELATE TO ORGANISATIONS?
PRECISION
14Warning essential but not sufficient
15Warning essential but not sufficient
16A model of regional governance
17A model of regional governance
18A role for information
19A model of national governance
20A model of national governance
Flow of management syntheses / maps / models
?
21A model multi-level organisation
Policy informing
GIS
Flow of management maps / models
Operational feedback
22A model multi-level organisation
Synthesis, aggregation association
Location and sampling
23Spatial organisation in practice
24Applying the model CHW
25CHW information structure
26A spatial structure for CHWs
27KwaZulu Natal example
Mapping The Valley Trust
28The multi-facilitator model
29The multi-clinic model
Applicable to mobile clinics or health posts
30Geography and governance
Spatial and organisational structure are
inherently and operationally linked
Information drives the organisation through these
structures
31Mapping, culture élitism
32Information Ethics?
33(No Transcript)
34The intellectual/moral contradiction
35The intellectual/moral challenge
36Maps, participation adaptivity
37What kind of GIS (e.g. for CHW)?
Theorist/Consultant
Manager/User
Politician/Policy
38BASELINE Status prediction
Adaptive management
MODELS/PROCEDURES Prediction/scenario/review
TARGETS Where do we want to get
MEASURES Needed to achieve target
39STAKEHOLDER PARTICIPATION TOOLS
ENABLING TECHNOLOGIES
DECISION SUPPORT TOOLS
40VISUALISATION SCENARIOS Options Appraisal
NETWORKING ENABLEMENT SOLUT WEB ENABLEMENT
SOLUTIONS IMPLEMENTATION PROCEDURES
DECISION TREE ANALYSIS RULE-BASED /
MULTICRITERIA STATISTICAL / GEOSTATISTICAL MATHEMA
TICAL MODELLING FUZZY MODELLING BAYESIAN MODELLING
41Operational GIS
VISUALISATION SCENARIOS Options Appraisal
NETWORKING ENABLEMENT SOLUT WEB ENABLEMENT
SOLUTIONS IONSIMPLEMENTATION OROCEDURES
Policy GIS
DECISION TREE ANALYSIS RULE-BASED /
MULTICRITERIA STATISTICAL / GEOSTATISTICAL MATHEMA
TICAL MODELLING FUZZY MODELLING BAYESIAN MODELLING
Strategic GIS
42Operational GIS
VISUALISATION SCENARIOS Options Appraisal
Policy GIS
Strategic GIS
43Operational GIS
Policy GIS
Strategic GIS
44The Centre for AIDS Research
- The geography of HIV/AIDS looking beyond the maps