• #Palestine_Open_Maps (#POM)

    Tell us about your project. What time(s), place(s), and topic(s) does your work/project cover?


    Palestine Open Maps (POM) (https://palopenmaps.org) is a platform that allows users to explore, search and download historical maps and spatial data on Palestine in English and Arabic. The platform includes historical maps with layers that piece together hundreds of detailed British maps of Palestine from the 1870s up to the mid-1940s. Most importantly, this allows users to see hundreds of towns and villages immediately before the Nakba, and to view this side-by-side with present day mapping and aerial photography.

    How did you come to develop your project? What sources and/or analytics did you draw upon?

    The initial idea for POM was inspired by our discovery that hundreds of 1:20,000 scale British Mandate era maps of Palestine had been digitised and made available through an online document viewer by the Israeli National Library. The maps within the viewer could not be downloaded at a high resolution, and were not connected to the spatial data that would allow people to search for specific locations or navigate between the individual map sheets in a meaningful way. However, we immediately saw the potential to scrape the maps at a high resolution, stitch them together and open source them to the public.

    Having scraped the maps, our opportunity to realize the project came about through Impact Data Lab, a data hackathon event co-curated by Visualizing Palestine and Studio-X Amman in early 2018. Over four days, we were able to georeference the maps and cross-reference population data for over a thousand localities from sources, including Palestine Remembered and the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, to build an initial proof-of-concept map viewer.

    The development of the initial POM website was supported by Visualizing Palestine and launched roughly two months later on Nakba Day 2018. We have continued to develop the site largely as a hobby project since that time, adding features including map sheet downloads, split-screen view, vector map overlays, links to other platforms, and an experimental 3D mode.

    What is your aim for the project? For example, who do you hope to reach? How do you hope people will engage with the work?

    Aside from a historical archive, we view POM as a critical component of a larger project of reimagining the space and politics of the region through a geographic lens. The genocide in Gaza has reminded us of the urgency of building a political future for Palestine, beyond genocide and apartheid. We believe that identifying such a political future requires deep study of the history of the region, and thoughtful engagement with archival materials that tell that history.

    Through an open approach that models custodianship principles, we actively encourage other projects to utilize the maps and data that POM has helped to open source. Numerous people have told us that they are independently using POM and its maps and data, and are able to do so because of our open approach to managing the project.

    If you visit the Wikipedia pages of the depopulated villages of Palestine, you will find that most of them include excerpts of maps downloaded from POM. POM’s approach to historical maps has inspired projects such as the Palestinian Museum’s Interactive Encyclopedia of the Palestine Question as a way to visualize their database of places in Palestine, and have been used as a source for investigations and reports by Forensic Architecture and the Financial Times.

    Individuals such as Tarek Bakri rely on POM as one of their essential tools for their investigations to find the homes of Palestinian refugees returning to visit their villages of their grandparents. In fact, the usage data for the website suggests that it is more used in historic Palestine — and particularly within the territory occupied since 1948 — than in any other country.

    We ourselves have also made use of POM maps and data in a range of other projects. For example, Ahmad used POM map layers as a base for the Palestinian Oral History Map (https://libraries.aub.edu.lb/poha-viewer/map/en) developed with the American University of Beirut. He also utilized the maps as a basis for the A National Monument exhibit in collaboration with Marwan Rechmaoui at Dar El Nimr in Beirut, and the One Map, Multiple Mediums follow up exhibit at Jameel Arts Centre in Dubai.

    We hope that, by elevating the visibility and utility of these maps, we have been able to contribute in a small way to transforming narratives of the past, present and future of Palestine.

    How do you see this work, or mapping in general, contributing to academic and/or popular conversations on Palestine?

    The driving principle of POM has always been to open source the maps and data that it contains, and to provide a rich resource for present and future generations of Palestinians, contextualizing the geographic knowledge in time and narrative. Further, beyond being a repository of map data, to us POM also represents an infrastructure for a wider community of people engaged with the question of Palestine through land, memory, and future imaginaries. We run events called “mapathons,” where people help us to extract data from the historical maps using easy to learn GIS tools based on the open source OpenStreetMap infrastructure.

    We have conducted mapathons in places such as Baddawi Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon, Birzeit University in Palestine, Milano Design Week in Italy, and even the British Library in the UK. In each of these mapathons, participants contribute to our public dataset of historical geographic information, and contribute to the reappropriation of the maps from their colonial origins, transforming them into a collectively owned, continuously expanding and evolving digital resource.

    Each mapathon is an engagement with a new section of the community, with a wide variety of different motivations to contribute to the project. Whereas in the camps in Lebanon, we were typically greeted by young Palestinian refugees interested to find and explore their own towns and villages in Palestine, in other communities we found people with a general interest in historical maps and digital mapping technologies, and many others simply trying to find their own small, meaningful way to contribute to the Palestinian struggle for liberation and return.

    https://www.jadaliyya.com/Details/46592
    #cartographie #Palestine #visualisation #données_spatiales #données #histoire #cartes_historiques #photographies_aériennes #Palestine #génocide #destruction #histoire_orale #récit #mapathons #archive #effacement #historicisation
    via @fil

    • Palestinian oral history map

      This platform allows you to navigate geographically and chronologically through the #Palestinian_Oral_History_Archive (#POHA), an archive of over one thousand hours of interviews with Palestinians who lived through the Nakba, hosted by the American University of Beirut (AUB).

      https://libraries.aub.edu.lb/poha-viewer/map/en

    • Counter-Mapping the Archive

      Tell us about your project. What times, places, and topics does your work cover?

      My research concerns mapping and counter-mapping in Palestine, from British and Zionist (later Israeli) mapping to Palestinian and anti-Zionist counter-mapping. I have two main objectives in my work: to analyze the relationship of mapping and power in (and of) Palestine; and to assess the potential of counter-mapping as part of a project of decolonization.

      The Palestinian condition is such that any map is treated by Palestinians as a dubious object, capable of deceit. Maps represent more than just a physical image of place. They possess agency and should be read as texts just like paintings, theatre, film, television, and music; they speak of the world, disclosing and realising manifold spatial relations.[1] It follows, then, that a range of approaches are needed to make sense of maps. My work, as a policy fellow at Al-Shabaka; the Palestinian Policy Network, as an artist and filmmaker, and currently as a doctoral candidate at Newcastle University, has been to interrogate the possibilities and limitations of cartography in the land between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea between 1870 and 1967. I begin in 1870 because the first large-scale survey of this region was produced by the British-led Palestine Exploration Fund (PEF) between 1871-1877. The PEF produced by far the most precise and technologically sophisticated maps of the region to that point and paved the way for the British to assume colonial control over Palestine during the First World War, fifty years later. I stop at the Naksa of 1967 (the “setback,” or Six Day War as it’s known outside of Palestine) and the extension of the Israeli occupation to the entirety of historic Palestine as well as the Syrian Golan and the Egyptian Sinai.

      Simultaneously, I analyze (and produce) counter-cartographies of Palestine. Often termed “counter-maps,” these are alternative maps which attempt to recognize the past, critique the present and (re)imagine the future. As such, they are not bound by a timeframe. I include “traditional” and digital maps as well oral or memory maps, literature and poetry, tatreez (Palestinian embroidery) and visual and performance art. The nature of this work means that I have combined traditional approaches such as archival research with the deliberate subversion of colonial artifacts. This includes my own counter-mapping efforts through poetry, visual art, and documentary film – such as my 2021 experimental short, The Place That is Ours, co-directed with Dorothy Allen-Pickard (figure 1).

      The ongoing genocide in Gaza has, in different ways, transformed the goals of my research, not least since many of the geographies depicted in historical maps of Gaza have been annihilated. But it has also called the specificity of decolonization in Palestine into question, because discourses around what constitutes decolonization in Palestine have irrevocably altered since October 2023.[2] Just as I seek to interrogate the archive – the ways it evades and conceals – so too have I found that my own research has become an archive of sorts: a survey of a landscape which has since been hit by a devastating earthquake. Making sense of this research, both the maps and the contextual frames that surround them, and asking what value (if any) they have is a painful preoccupation. These reflections are intended to contribute to a broader, more urgent, conversation around the politics of mapping Palestine and its role in the work of liberation in this current moment, when the very existence of Gaza is under threat.

      How did you come to develop your project? What sources and analytics did you draw upon?

      My interest in maps was sparked in 2017 when I used the iNakba app (since renamed iReturn) developed by Israeli anti-Zionist organisation Zochrot to find my destroyed village in the Tiberius region. The app’s interactive map has pins in the locations of 600 Palestinian villages destroyed in the Nakba of 1947-48 with otherwise obscure Google Maps and Waze coordinates. It also includes demographic information on each village (for instance settlement before and after 1948; what military operation, if any, destroyed it, and so on) in Hebrew, Arabic, and English – information synthesised from Walid Khalidi’s 1992 seminal work All that Remains.[3] I used the only image the app had–a grainy picture of the landscape with rolling hills and palm trees–to check we were in the right place (figure 2). The land did not lie, even after seven decades.

      In the years since, I have contemplated the clandestine cartographic practices I had to resort to in order to re-discover this place. Israeli maps deliberately obfuscate, omit, and ignore Palestinian localities, both populated and depopulated. Just as the Israeli state has been built on the ruins of Palestinian villages, towns, and cities, the Israeli map has been drawn to negate any Palestinian presence.[4] A map is well-suited for this task. The “duplicity” of maps, what critical cartographer J.B Harley calls their “slipperiness,” is the essence of cartographic representation.[5] This is in large part because mapmakers were, and in many ways, still are, presumed to be engaged in an “objective” or “scientific” project of knowledge creation.[6] From this perspective, maps are perfect, scaled representations of the world, based upon unbiased factual information and accurate measurements.[7] Scientific positivism has created the perception that maps are detached, neutral, and above all, accurate graphic representations of space.

      But how does empiricism (and its discontents) apply to Palestine as a site of contemporary colonialism, where indigenous land is confiscated and contested, where any map is out of date almost as soon as it is issued, and where the map acts as a prophecy for colonial intent? Most significantly, in what ways does debunking cartographic myths act as an important case for any designs on material change towards a decolonized world? These questions are the backbone of my work. My hope is that this research produces new knowledge on historical and contemporary practices of mapping in Palestine and will make conceptual and empirical contributions to debates in critical cartography, settler colonialism and decolonization.

      Can you tell us a bit about your methodology? What do you include in your maps and what do you leave out? Why? How do you see your methodological choices in connection with analytic and political questions?

      The archive features prominently in my research; in many ways it acts as my point of departure, not because of what it contains, but because of what it does not. I have carried out research in eight archives across the UK and US including state, public, university, and personal collections and have found many overlaps, contradictions, and silences. But most maps of Palestine (along with their ephemera – explanatory notes, special volumes, sketches, registers, census data, field guides etc.) are held in archives broadly inaccessible to Palestinians. Whether in the colonial archives of London, New York, Washington DC, Tel Aviv, or Jerusalem, Palestinians have limited access to large parts of the history of their land and people, particularly as seen through the colonizer’s eyes.

      The importance of archiving cannot be overstated, as Jaques Derrida and Eric Prenowitz remind us: “There is no political power without control of the archive, if not of memory. Effective democratization can always be measured by this essential criterion: the participation and the access to the archive, its constitution, and its interpretation.”[8] How can Palestinians understand their relationship to the land and imagine return without full access to the archive?

      This is not unique to Palestinians. Indigenous peoples rarely have access to or exercise power over state archives, spaces often filled with documents and histories that instrumentalize the past to ensure settler presents and futures. Despite this marginalization of indigenous people and their relegation to a spectral presence in archival spaces, there has been a recent surge in the exploration and reclamation of archiving in indigenous, especially Palestinian, movements, many of these in the form of counter-cartographies. This might be understood as a reaction to the condition of exile. Beshara Doumani offers this interpretation: “I mention the attraction of archiving the present, not just the past, because Palestinians are still incapable of stopping the continued and accelerating erasure of the two greatest archives of all: the physical landscape, and the bonds of daily life that constitute an organic social formation.”[9]

      It is perhaps for this reason that I find myself perennially drawn to the archive. The lacunae of the archive call for its subversion and reclamation. The archive has become a springboard for counter-mapping and alternative imaginaries. Saidiya Hartman, through her revolutionary “critical fabulations,” summarises this elegantly: “every historian of the multitude, the dispossessed, the subaltern, and the enslaved is forced to grapple with the power and authority of the archive and the limit it sets on what can be known, whose perspective matters, and who is endowed with the gravity and authority of historical actor.”[10]

      In many cases, these limits are not only to be found in the contents of the archive – in my case, maps – but, importantly, also in the physical edifice of the archive itself. For instance, all maps of Palestine before and after the creation of the Israeli state in 1948, some dating back centuries, are labelled “Israel” in the vast collection of the Library of Congress in Washington D.C. (a practice shared with the Royal Geographical Society archives in London). It is not uncommon to find a folder initially labelled “Palestine” crossed out and replaced with “Israel” (figure 3).

      Such a brash overwrite acts as a synecdoche of the broader Zionist imperial project and its logic of elimination. As Patrick Wolf reminds us, the settler’s impulse is first to erase and eliminate the native, and second, to erect a new colonial society on the stolen land.[11] The archive facilitates the former, the state (and its allies) execute the latter.

      And yet, Palestinians insist on imagining and creating a reality beyond the present. Whether in Palestine or in exile, academics, mapmakers, organizers, and artists have learned to destabilize the archive to conceptualize alternative realities. In my own case, I have used technologies and practices including Photoshop, Risoprint (best described as digital screen printing), collage, embroidery and Geographic Information Systems (GIS) software to reinscribe Palestine in cartographic terms. For instance, I geo-referenced a British colonial map from 1935 to depict villages destroyed in the Nakba (figure 4) and the location of Palestinian refugee camps across the region (figure 5).

      Since 1948, Palestinians have held onto the memory of destroyed homes and villages through the creation of atlases, maps, memoirs, visual art, books, oral histories, and websites. The right of return for Palestinian refugees and internally displaced people is not just a political solution but also the first step in a process of decolonization. Decolonizing maps involves acknowledging the experience of the colonial subjects (Palestinians) on the one hand, and documenting and exposing the colonial systems and structures (Zionist expansionism) on the other. It requires what David Harvey calls “the geographical imagination” – linking social imagination with a spatial-material consciousness.[12]

      While there is valid criticism that counter-maps reproduce or embed existing exclusionary territorial and spatial practices, ongoing counter-mapping efforts demonstrate how Palestinians and their allies are creating a decolonizing cartography beyond simply (re)asserting lines on an existing map.[13] Rather, these efforts put personal and collective memories in spatial terms and incorporate them into a legal and political framework. This includes initiatives and projects such as Palestine Open Maps in 2018, the first open-source mapping project based around historical maps from the British Mandate period, as well as Decolonizing Art and Architecture Residency and Forensic Architecture. This is largely thanks to technological advances in GPS and GIS, which provide a foundation upon which to play, imagine and (re)build in spatial-cartographic terms.

      Moreover, the work of artists enables Palestinians to oppose and subvert the hegemonic discourse and assert an alternative vision of liberation and return. Examples include works by Mona Hatoum (“Present Tense” 1996, “Bukhara” 2007), Larissa Sansour (“Nation Estate” 2012, “In the Future They Ate from the Finest Porcelain” 2015) and Amir Zuabi (“Cold Floors” 2021). The current onslaught has seen a wealth of incisive work from younger artists and architects who are creating despite intense repression; see for instance Mariam Tolba (“Map of Palestinian Displacement: Behind Every Infographic is a Million Stories” 2024), Omar El Amine (“The Shahada of the Olive Tree” 2024), Zain Al-Sharaf Wahbeh (“The Image as an Archive” 2024), Tessnim Tolba (“Saharan Winds” 2024) and Nadine Fattaleh (“Materials of Solidarity” 2024 – image 6).

      Crucially, these initiatives are often reinforced by, or juxtaposed with, Palestinian efforts to return to destroyed villages in reality. For instance, the internally displaced inhabitants of villages including Iqrit, Al-Walaja, and Al-Araqib returned decades after their initial expulsion despite the risk of state violence and demolition, in addition to more coordinated events such as the Great March of Return in Gaza from 2018, the Unity Uprising in May 2021 or Operation Al-Aqsa Flood in October 2023. These actions lend credence to Edward Said’s assertion that geography may be “the art of war but can also be the art of resistance if there is a counter-map and a counter-strategy.”[14]

      My work both within and beyond the archive examines maps not solely as visual artifacts of a bygone era; rather it is part of a search for blueprints. Clues remain for what a decolonized and liberated future for Palestine and its people could look like – and what beauty there is to find along the way.

      https://www.jadaliyya.com/Details/46572/Counter-Mapping-the-Archive
      #contre-cartographie

  • Guerre au Proche-Orient : à #Beyrouth, #Mona_Fawaz résiste par la #cartographie

    Professeure d’urbanisme et cofondatrice du #Beirut_Urban_Lab, la chercheuse cartographie le conflit à la frontière entre le #Liban et Israël. Et montre ainsi le « déséquilibre profond » entre les attaques visant le territoire libanais et celles ciblant le sol israélien.

    « Je suis entrée dans le centre de recherche ; tous mes collègues avaient les yeux rivés sur les nouvelles, l’air horrifié. C’est là que nous nous sommes dit que nous ne pouvions pas simplement regarder : il fallait agir, et le faire du mieux possible », se rappelle Mona Fawaz, professeure d’urbanisme à l’Université américaine de Beyrouth (AUB) et cofondatrice du Beirut Urban Lab, un laboratoire de recherche interdisciplinaire créé en 2018 et spécialisé dans les questions d’#urbanisme et d’#inclusivité.

    Lundi 4 décembre, dans ce centre de recherche logé à l’AUB, près de deux mois après l’attaque sans précédent du groupe militant palestinien Hamas en Israël et le début des bombardements intensifs de l’armée israélienne sur la bande de Gaza, elle revoit l’élan impérieux qui a alors saisi ses collègues du Beirut Urban Lab, celui de cartographier, documenter et analyser.

    « Certains ont commencé à cartographier les dommages à #Gaza à partir de #photographies_aériennes. Personnellement, j’étais intéressée par la dimension régionale du conflit, afin de montrer comment le projet colonial israélien a déstabilisé l’ensemble de la zone », y compris le Liban.

    La frontière sud du pays est en effet le théâtre d’affrontements violents depuis le 8 octobre entre #Israël et des groupes alliés au #Hamas emmenés par le #Hezbollah, une puissante milice soutenue par l’#Iran. Qualifiés de « #front_de_pression » par le chef du Hezbollah, Hassan Nasrallah, les #combats sur le #front_libanais, qui visent notamment à détourner l’effort militaire israélien contre Gaza, ont tué au moins 107 personnes du côté libanais, dont 14 civils. Du côté israélien, six soldats et trois civils ont été tués.

    C’est ainsi que l’initiative « Cartographier l’escalade de violence à la frontière sud du Liban » est née. Le projet répertorie le nombre de #frappes quotidiennes et leur distance moyenne par rapport à la frontière depuis le début du conflit, en s’appuyant sur les données collectées par l’ONG Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project (Acled : https://acleddata.com). Sur son écran d’ordinateur, Mona Fawaz montre une #carte_interactive, une des seules en son genre, qui révèle un déséquilibre saisissant entre les attaques revendiquées par Israël, au nombre de 985 depuis le début du conflit, et celles menées depuis le Liban : 270 frappes répertoriées sur le sol israélien.

    L’occasion pour Mona Fawaz de questionner les expressions répétées dans les médias, qui façonnent la compréhension du conflit sans remettre en cause leurs présupposés. « On parle de tirs transfrontaliers, par exemple, alors même qu’il y a un déséquilibre profond entre les deux parties impliquées », souligne-t-elle. « Une distorsion médiatique » que la chercheuse dénonce aussi dans la couverture de l’offensive israélienne contre l’enclave palestinienne.

    Une « lutte partagée » avec les Palestiniens

    Pour Mona Fawaz, il est important de documenter un conflit dont les racines vont au-delà des affrontements présents. « La création de l’État d’Israël en 1948 a provoqué une perturbation majeure au sud du Liban, brisant [ses] liens historiques, sociaux, politiques et économiques » avec la Galilée, explique-t-elle.

    Des bouleversements que la chercheuse, originaire du village de Tibnine, dans le sud du pays, connaît bien, puisqu’ils ont marqué son histoire familiale et personnelle. Elle explique que la proximité entre les populations était telle qu’au cours de la « #Nakba » (la « catastrophe », en arabe) en 1948 – l’exode massif de plus de 700 000 Palestinien·nes après la création de l’État d’Israël –, sa mère a été évacuée de son village aux côtés de Palestinien·nes chassés de leurs terres. « Les déplacés ne savaient pas où s’arrêteraient les Israéliens, raconte-t-elle. Dans cette région du Liban, on a grandi sans sentir de différences avec les Palestiniens : il y a une lutte partagée entre nous. »

    En 1982, Mona Fawaz, qui avait alors à peine 9 ans, vit plusieurs mois dans son village sous l’occupation de l’armée israélienne, qui a envahi le pays en pleine guerre civile (1975-1990) afin de chasser du Liban l’Organisation de libération de la Palestine (OLP). Elle se souvient des scènes d’#humiliation, des crosses des fusils israéliens défonçant le mobilier chez son grand-père. « Ce n’est rien par rapport à ce que Gaza vit, mais il y a définitivement un effet d’association pour moi avec cette période », explique-t-elle.

    Dans le petit pays multiconfessionnel et extrêmement polarisé qu’est le Liban, l’expérience de la chercheuse n’est cependant pas générale. Si une partie des Libanais·es, notamment dans le sud, est marquée par la mémoire des guerres contre Israël et de l’occupation encore relativement récente de la région – les troupes israéliennes se sont retirées en 2000 du Sud-Liban –, une autre maintient une défiance tenace contre la #résistance_palestinienne au Liban, notamment tenue responsable de la guerre civile.

    Celle qui a ensuite étudié au Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), à Boston (États-Unis), pour y faire son doctorat en aménagement urbain à la fin des années 1990, explique ensuite qu’il a fallu des années aux États-Unis pour réaliser que « même le soldat qui est entré dans notre maison avait été conditionné pour commettre des atrocités ». Si l’ouverture à d’autres réalités est une étape indispensable pour construire la paix, c’est aussi un « luxe », reconnaît la chercheuse, qui semble hors de portée aujourd’hui. « L’horreur des massacres à Gaza a clos toute possibilité d’un avenir juste et pacifique », soupire-t-elle.

    Le tournant de la guerre de 2006

    Peu après son retour au Liban en 2004, Mona Fawaz se concentre sur les questions de l’informalité et de la justice sociale. Un événement majeur vient bouleverser ses recherches : le conflit israélo-libanais de 2006. Les combats entre Israël et le Hezbollah ont causé la mort de plus de 1 200 personnes du côté libanais, principalement des civil·es, en seulement un mois de combat.

    Du côté israélien, plus de 160 personnes, principalement des militaires, ont été tuées. Cette guerre va être une expérience fondatrice pour le Beirut Urban Lab. C’est à ce moment que ses quatre cofondateurs, Mona Fawaz, Ahmad Gharbieh, Howayda Al-Harithy et Mona Harb, chercheurs et chercheuses à l’AUB, commencent leurs premières collaborations sur une série de projets visant à analyser l’#impact de la guerre. L’initiative actuelle de cartographie s’inscrit en continuité directe avec les cartes quotidiennes produites notamment par #Ahmad_Gharbieh en 2006. « Le but était de rendre visible au monde entier le caractère asymétrique et violent des attaques israéliennes contre le Liban », explique Mona Fawaz.

    Dans les années qui suivent, les chercheurs participent à plusieurs projets en commun, notamment sur la militarisation de l’#espace_public, le rôle des réfugié·es en tant que créateurs de la ville ou la #privatisation des #biens_publics_urbains, avec pour objectif de faire de la « donnée un bien public », explique Mona Fawaz, dans un « pays où la collectivité n’existe pas ». « Nos recherches s’inscrivent toujours en réponse à la réalité dans laquelle nous vivons », ajoute-t-elle. Une réalité qui, aujourd’hui dans la région, est de nouveau envahie par la guerre et les destructions.

    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/121223/guerre-au-proche-orient-beyrouth-mona-fawaz-resiste-par-la-cartographie

    #résistance

    ping @visionscarto @reka

    • #Beirut_Urban_Lab

      The Beirut Urban Lab is a collaborative and interdisciplinary research space. The Lab produces scholarship on urbanization by documenting and analyzing ongoing transformation processes in Lebanon and its region’s natural and built environments. It intervenes as an interlocutor and contributor to academic debates about historical and contemporary urbanization from its position in the Global South. We work towards materializing our vision of an ecosystem of change empowered by critical inquiry and engaged research, and driven by committed urban citizens and collectives aspiring to just, inclusive, and viable cities.

      https://beiruturbanlab.com

      –—

      Mapping Escalation Along Lebanon’s Southern Border Since October 7

      Since October 7, the Middle East has occupied center stage in global media attention. Already rife with uncertainty, subjected to episodic bouts of violence, and severely affected by an ongoing project of ethnic cleansing for 75 years in Historic Palestine, our region is again bearing the weight of global, regional, and local violence. As we witness genocide unfolding and forceful population transfers in Gaza, along with an intensification of settler attacks in the West Bank and Jerusalem and the silencing of Palestinians everywhere, the conflict is also taking critical regional dimensions.

      As part of its effort to contribute to more just tomorrows through the production and dissemination of knowledge, the Beirut Urban Lab is producing a series of maps that document and provide analytical insights to the unfolding events. Our first intervention comes at a time in which bombs are raining on South Lebanon. Titled Escalation along Lebanon’s Southern Border since October 7, the platform monitors military activity between the Israeli Armed Forces and Lebanese factions. Two indicators reflect the varying intensity of the conflict: the number of daily strikes and the average distance of strikes from the border.

      The map uses data from the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data (ACLED) crisis mapping project, which draws upon local reporting to build its dataset. Since ACLED updates their dataset on Mondays, site visitors can expect updates to our mapping and analysis to be released on Tuesday afternoons. Please refer to ACLED’s methodology for questions about data sources and collection.

      As of November 14, the frequency and distribution of strikes reveals a clear asymmetry, with northward aggression far outweighing strikes by Lebanese factions. The dataset also indicates a clear escalation, with the number of incidents increasing day by day, particularly on the Lebanese side of the border.

      We see this contribution as an extension of our previous experiences in mapping conflicts in Lebanon and the region, specifically the 2006 Israeli assault on Lebanon.

      https://beiruturbanlab.com/en/Details/1958/escalation-along-lebanon%E2%80%99s-southern-border-since-october-7
      #cartographie_radicale #cartographie_critique #visualisationi

  • National Geographic’s 2018 photo contest winner shows stunning aerial view of the desert
    https://www.nationalgeographic.com/photography/proof/2018/12/grand-prize-winner-photo-contest-environment-cars-mojave-desert-

    thousands of Volkswagen and Audi cars sitting idle in the Mojave Desert near Victorville, California.

    #photograph by Jassen Todorov, 2018 National Geographic photo contest

    #ghost #dieselgate