Record Details

The GIS Professional Ethics Project: Practical Ethics Education for GIS Professionals

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title The GIS Professional Ethics Project: Practical Ethics Education for GIS Professionals
Names DiBiase, David (creator)
Harvey, Francis (creator)
Goranson, Christopher (creator)
Wright, Dawn (creator)
Date Issued 2011-12 (iso8601)
Note This is an author's manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published chapter [14] is copyrighted by John Wiley & Sons, Inc..
Abstract Teaching GIS involves teaching ethical and moral thinking as a distinct engagement with
the use, applications, and responsibilities of GIS professionals. Over the past 20 years
scholars (particularly those affiliated with the discipline of Geography) have contributed
critiques of the instrumental nature of GIS as well as reflective case studies that seek to
demonstrate how the technology can be used to promote social justice. During the same
period a profession of GIS developed as governmental and private use of GIS burgeoned;
a marker for the professionalization of GIS in the United States can be found in the
observation that by mid-2009 over 4,500 individuals had earned certification as GIS
professionals. Requirements for professional certification in the U.S. include
practitioners’ commitment to adhere with a formal Code of Ethics and Rules of Conduct.
Meanwhile, U.S. higher education institutions have rushed to develop practice-oriented
certificate and degree programs in response to the increasing demand for qualified GIS
professionals in industry and government. Professional programs differ from academic
degree programs in that most are designed to produce practitioners rather than scholars.
In general, the rich literature in GIS and Society and Critical GIS is more useful to
students and instructors in academic programs than those in professional programs. The
objective of the National Science Foundation-funded GIS Professional Ethics Project
(http://gisprofessionalethics.org) we describe in this chapter is to provide pedagogical
practice and resources for American students and academics. The project combines the
perspectives and experience of GIS educators and applied ethicists. The project has
produced open educational resources (especially formal case studies with explicit
linkages to the Code and Rules) to help professional GIS higher education programs
prepare current and future practitioners to recognize and engage ethical problems.
Genre Book chapter
Identifier DiBiase, D., Harvey, F., Wright, D., and Goranson, C. The GIS professional ethics project: Practical ethics education for GIS professionals, in Unwin, D., Foote, K., Tate, N., and DiBiase, D. (eds.), Teaching Geographic Information Science and Technology in Higher Education, London: Wiley and Sons, 199-210, 2012.

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