Agency managers, analysts, and project managers who work with GIS in public and private organizations. Serves as a core text in GIS courses within programs in public policy, business administration, geography, forestry, planning, and engineering.
Autorentext
Nancy J. Obermeyer, PhD, is Associate Professor of Geography at Indiana State University. Her research interests include GIS implementation issues, public-participation GIS, professionalism, and ethics. Dr. Obermeyer began her professional life in several Illinois state agencies, working as an analyst in the Office of Planning, an energy planner in the Department of Energy and Natural Resources, and a project manager in the Department of Transportation. She was a member of the founding Board of Directors of the GIS Certification Institution (GISCI), and currently serves on GISCI's Ethics Committee.
Jeffrey K. Pinto, PhD, is Professor of Management at Penn State Erie, The Behrend College. His research interests include project management, information system implementation, power and political processes in organizations, and the diffusion of innovations. Dr. Pinto holds the Andrew Morrow and Elizabeth Lee Black Chair in Management of Technology, has received the Distinguished Contribution Award from the Project Management Institute and the Behrend Council of Fellows Research Award, and has consulting experience with a number of major organizations.
Inhalt
1. The Continuing Need for a Management Focus in GIS
2. Geographic Information Science: Evolution of a Profession
3. The Role of Geographic Information within an Organization's IT
4. Keeping the G in GIS: Why Geography Still Matters
5. GIS and the Strategic Planning Process
6. Implementing a GIS: Theories and Practice
7. Organizational Politics and GIS Implementation
8. Economic Justification for GIS Implementation
9. Sharing Geographic Information across Organizational Boundaries
10. Metadata for Geographic Information
11. Policy Conflicts and the Role of GIS: Public Participation and GIS
12. Ensuring the Qualifications of GIS Professionals
13. Legal Issues in GIS
14. Ethics for the GIS Professional
15. Envisioning a Future