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The Namunyak App, the Samburu and a Story About Collaboration

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The Namunyak App, the Samburu and a Story About Collaboration
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CC Attribution 3.0 Unported:
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Indigenous-led mapping has become an indispensable tool in the struggle of Indigenous peoples to claim their rights to land and resources. In this presentation I will give an overview of the Namunyak App project (a winner from the 2020 GEO Hack4Covid) and emphasise on the importance of the active participation of Indigenous people in the mapping process itself in order to fully move beyond the colonial cartographic frame. The Namunyak App encodes real geographical coordinates into four symbols. We believe that the app would allow the Samburu from northern Kenya to visualise and document their land in a dynamic, accessible and culturally relevant way. What we offer is to rethink the conventional, Western projections of maps, and combine it with local knowledge and understandings of land. Secondly, the app will be also an educational tool as it will introduce and advance the use of maps within the Samburu community. Finally, the Namunyak App is a communication tool that will improve the communication between Samburu community members, the local park rangers, and policy makers. Please see the abstract above. Authors and Affiliations – Yoanna Dimitrova, University of East Anglia Track – Transition to FOSS4G Topic – FOSS4G implementations in strategic application domains: land management, crisis/disaster response, smart cities, population mapping, climate change, ocean and marine monitoring, etc. Level – 1 - Principiants. No required specific knowledge is needed. Language of the Presentation – English