Present: Paul Ell (Chair), David Blundell, Michael
Buckland, Damian Evans, Maggie Exon, Ian Gregory, Ruth Mostern, Jeanette
Zerneke
Reports from Editorial teams
No great activity on GIS front but active projects
with Australian partners to digitize historical reports by British
government officials. Will be continuing work to register historic
maps of South Asia and create GIS datasets for historic boundaries.
South Asia datasets will be transferred to Berkeley due to problems
with storing non-Curtin data on Curtin servers.
Austronesia – David Blundell
The linguistic atlas project now extends from Japanese,
through the Formosan languages, Micronesia, New Guinea, Australia,
to Madagascar and Polynesia. This process has been aided by cooperation
between the Academia Sinica and Larry Crissman at Griffith. The material
is partially in the clearinghouse although Larry’s data has
still to be converted.
David is working on a test project for an area of
the Northern Philippines which will use the atlas data as context
for more detailed information. David believes that workshops are needed
to educate users about the possibilities of such information and reassure
the communities involved that information gathered from them will
not be misused.
There are a number of funded projects and new initiatives
relevant to the British Isles:
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£900,000 from JISC for digitization of
British census reports. Further funding is likely with an interest
in extending this to Commonwealth countries.
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David Bodenhamer is a visiting scholar in Belfast
and cooperating in a number of projects.
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A doctoral student is working on analytical
aspects of the Irish famine.
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Two grants of £75,000, one for a community
information system for Belfast and the other for either a digital
archives for Northern Ireland or a historical GIS for Northern
Ireland with a strong community participation element.
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Ian Gregory is being funded for two years at
Queens, Belfast, through a Leverhulme Fellowship.
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The Gough Map (ca. 1350) at the Bodleian Library
will be imaged, geo-registered and extensively analysed.
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A £100,000 grant will fund the digitization
of medieval crop return data.
Other non-UK projects are:
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Cooperation with the Dutch on a Netherlands
Historical GIS.
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Coordination of a meeting to discuss a European
GIS.
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Digitisation of Indian historical boundaries
for use with Indian census already being digitized.
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Ruth reported on the Religion Atlas of China
and the Himalayas which is mapping Buddhist sacred sites. The second
year of this project will widen the project to other religions.
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There is now a Japanese translation of the clearinghouse.
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The team in Sydney is completing the geo-registration
of the Rumsey map collection. They are also working on a project
to present GIS data from Cambodia, specifically Angkor.
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SSHA – no branded ECAI sessions but ECAI
is strongly represented by affiliates and will continue to be in
future years.
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Five sessions will take place at the Association
of American Geographers (AAG) conference. All sessions will be co-sponsored
by ECAI.
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ECAI members will attend the Society for American
Archaeology (SAA) conference.
2nd. Cultural Atlases Conference, Fudan University, Shanghai.
The focus will be on China, but papers about any area will be welcomed.
There will be ECAI sessions and Paul will send out call for papers.
New publication
The American Missions publication would soon be ready and there were
a couple more publications in the pipeline. CDL was still interested
in the publications although they could offer no funding.