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Proceedings of the Second Annual UW GIS Symposium: Affordable Housing

Proceedings of the Second Annual UW GIS Symposium
Affordable Housing
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Contributors
  4. Contents
  5. Preface
  6. Keynote
  7. Lightning Talks
    1. Using GIS to Support Reentry Planning for Youth Exiting the Juvenile Justice System
    2. Safe Consumption Site Suitability Map
    3. Mapping Our Realities in the Pacific Northwest Natives Geodatabase
    4. Arctic Science with GIS
    5. Affordable Housing
    6. Two Geospatial Data Resources @ Your Library That You Need to Know
    7. Spatial Literacy and Ocean Science and Technology
    8. Determining Park Level of Service in the City of Lake Forest Park
  8. Posters
    1. Remote Sensing
    2. Transit Oriented Development in the Palm Beaches
    3. Rental Real Estate for Commuters
    4. China Linpan Landscape Ecology Assessment
    5. Stronger Communities, Healthier People
    6. Farm to School Site Suitability Analysis in Minneapolis, MN
    7. Opportunity Index – King & Pierce Counties
    8. Evaluating King County Population’s Cardiovascular Mortality Risk Factors: A GIS-based Approach
    9. Topography Changes of the University of Washington Bothell Campus
    10. Zoning in Seattle

Affordable Housing

Michael Monroe, Community, Environment & Planning

In the Northwest Arctic of Alaska, engagement and motivation around wildlife conservation and natural resource use is growing alongside the need to protect healthy population dynamics for key subsistence species. Over the millennia that Native communities have occupied this landscape, they have accumulated acutely accurate place-based natural history knowledge that complements the information collected by, and available to, natural resource managers and land use planners. The Northwest Arctic Borough Subsistence Mapping Project is a prime example of how geographic information systems can bridge Indigenous knowledge and western science in constructing models for species’ distributions, migration patterns, and other ecosystem dynamics both spatially and temporally for use in conservation and land use planning.

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