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Cartography and Everyday Struggles Over Material Resources in Latin America

Time and date: April 19th, 6pm

Venue: Development Planning Unit at UCL, 34 Tavistock Square, London WC1H
9EZ (map <http://www.ucl.ac.uk/maps/34-tavistock-square>)

Book online: http://bit.ly/2odtPP1

Price: £5 / £10

Chair: Phil Cohen

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Cartography plays a critical role in struggles over the means of existence
in the global South. The intersection of map and territory can be a matter
of life and death for whole communities.

In this session, two members of the Development Planning Unit at UCL
present case studies of how different cartographies are mobilised around
struggles over material resources, including access to land, water and
housing.

Rita Lambert: Cartographic calculation and urbanization in risk in Lima

In her presentation, Rita will explore the deep entanglement of spatial
knowledge production and circulation in the planning of informal
settlements in Lima where maps are indispensable for the identification and
occupation of land. In this context, maps/plans are also compulsory for
claiming recognition and acquiring basic services from local municipalities
and service providers.

Rita will provide a critical overview of how a particular form of
cartographic calculation comes to be installed in the informal settlements
at the periphery of Lima, and identifies the main actants brought from the
past, present and future to structure a form of planning which intensifies
 risk for the inhabitants of the area.

Cristian Olmos: The struggle for autonomy and the daily practices of water
use in the Atacama Desert, Chile

Everyday practices in relation to the use of water in the Atacama Desert in
Northern Chile are deeply embedded in the local culture and traditions of
the regions’ rural communities. Cristian’s presentation will explore daily
activities surrounding community management of water through canals and
irrigation schemes and how these practices are threatened by  the efforts
of mining companies through their corporate social responsibility programs.

Participatory mapping, GPS walks, semi-structured interviews and drawings
are used to illustrate the different frameworks through which  power
relations and the discursive narratives of the Atacama territory and the
communities´ water management.

About the speakers

Rita Lambert <https://iris.ucl.ac.uk/iris/browse/profile?upi=RCLAM63> is an
architect and urban development planner originally from Ethiopia. She is
currently a Teaching Fellow at The Bartlett Development Planning Unit - UCL
and a co-investigator on several research projects in Africa and Latin
America. Her current research focuses on the relationship between planning
and spatial knowledge production, manipulation and circulation, as well as
the development of tools which can be adopted by ordinary citizens to
navigate institutional barriers and expand the room for manoeuvre towards
socio-environmentally just urbanisation.

Cristian Olmos <https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Cristian_Olmos> is a
Chilean architect and urban designer with more than ten years of experience
in the public sector, in the field of improvement of urban spaces, housing
projects, reconstruction, recovery programs and policies in the context of
isolated, rural and aboriginal communities.

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