Public Lab respectfully draws on multiple rich lineages of organizing focused on site-specific kn...
Public Lab is an open community which collaboratively develops accessible, open source, Do-It-Yourself technologies for investigating local environmental health and justice issues.
13 CURRENT | liz |
September 15, 2021 20:32
| over 3 years ago
Public Lab respectfully draws on multiple rich lineages of organizing focused on site-specific knowledge production towards community self-determination:
Public Lab's community science projects are place-based and led by local residents. This is for several reasons, including that: 1) people living and working near the site over time possess priceless lived experience; 2) governmental environmental regulation and the likelihood of it being reinforced varies geographically by zoning, administrative boundaries such as polity or electoral district, and specific landform qualities such as type of surface water or viewshed; and that 3) place offers a framework for multiple standpoints to co-locate and test each other for coherence. Stand for what you stand on! This page is a place to collect and organize resources on organizing. Visit the organizing tag page to see the latest community posts about organizing on Public Lab, and get updates on this topic by following: Lead image from the Appalachia Barnraising in 2017
On this page you can:
Learn about different methods for community organizing, including tactics for place-based organizing and organizing-related activities Join the conversation
Read stories from organizers doing community science Find further reading and resources on organizing Methods for community organizingOrganize around placeWe recommend this sequence of steps, even if you skip a few, for attracting and organizing a group of people around place-based research. Tour the areaMove through the area together
Image: Emmett Institute at UCLA School of Law, CC BY NC Mental mappingInvite each person to draw a mental map of landmarks, personal situated memories, infrastructure Historical land use mappingStart investigating what's happened previously on this site as the best way to focus future study designs Image: Manitoba Historical Maps, CC BY Aerial mappingCapture a portrait of the landscape with you and the group in it. Bonus, this is really fun! Annotating aerial mapsAdd the points that emerged from touring the site, drawing mental maps, and overlaying the historical maps Image: by @eustatic
Now you've got a base upon which to explain how you see the environment to others and invite them to "see alongside" as well.
This content will likely elicit the next round of questioning, which will provide some direction for your group to:
More methods for organizing
Methods published on Public Lab and tagged with ActivitiesActivities on Public Lab that have been tagged with [activities:organizing] Join the conversationQuestions from the community
Questions tagged with [questions:organizing] Post an Issue BriefShare information about a local environmental health concern and get support from the Public Lab community by writing and posting an Issue Brief. Visit “Write an Issue Brief” to find information on what an issue brief is, see examples, and learn how to write one. Stories from community organizers
Further reading and resources
|
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12 | liz |
September 07, 2021 17:14
| over 3 years ago
Public Lab respectfully draws on multiple rich lineages of organizing focused on site-specific knowledge production towards community self-determination:
Public Lab's community science projects are place-based and led by local residents. This is for several reasons, including that: 1) people living and working near the site over time possess priceless lived experience; 2) governmental environmental regulation and the likelihood of it being reinforced varies geographically by zoning, administrative boundaries such as polity or electoral district, and specific landform qualities such as type of surface water or viewshed; and that 3) place offers a framework for multiple standpoints to co-locate and test each other for coherence. Stand for what you stand on! This page is a place to collect and organize resources on organizing. Visit the organizing tag page to see the latest community posts about organizing on Public Lab, and get updates on this topic by following: Lead image from the Appalachia Barnraising in 2017
On this page you can:
Learn about different methods for community organizing, including tactics for place-based organizing and organizing-related activities Join the conversation
Read stories from organizers doing community science Find further reading and resources on organizing Methods for community organizingTactics for place-based organizingWe recommend this sequence of steps, even if you skip a few, for attracting and organizing a group of people around place-based research. Tour the areaMove through the area together
Image: Emmett Institute at UCLA School of Law, CC BY NC Mental mappingInvite each person to draw a mental map of landmarks, personal situated memories, infrastructure Historical land use mappingStart investigating what's happened previously on this site as the best way to focus future study designs Image: Manitoba Historical Maps, CC BY Aerial mappingCapture a portrait of the landscape with you and the group in it. Bonus, this is really fun! Annotating aerial mapsAdd the points that emerged from touring the site, drawing mental maps, and overlaying the historical maps Image: by @eustatic
Now you've got a base upon which to explain how you see the environment to others and invite them to "see alongside" as well.
This content will likely elicit the next round of questioning, which will provide some direction for your group to:
More methods for organizing
Methods published on Public Lab and tagged with ActivitiesActivities on Public Lab that have been tagged with [activities:organizing] Join the conversationQuestions from the community
Questions tagged with [questions:organizing] Post an Issue BriefShare information about a local environmental health concern and get support from the Public Lab community by writing and posting an Issue Brief. Visit “Write an Issue Brief” to find information on what an issue brief is, see examples, and learn how to write one. Stories from community organizers
Further reading and resources
|
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11 | liz |
September 07, 2021 15:12
| over 3 years ago
Public Lab respectfully draws on multiple rich lineages of organizing focused on site-specific knowledge production towards community self-determination:
Public Lab's community science projects are place-based and led by local residents. This is for several reasons, including that: 1) people living and working near the site over time possess priceless lived experience; 2) governmental environmental regulation and the likelihood of it being reinforced varies geographically by zoning, administrative boundaries such as polity or electoral district, and specific landform qualities such as type of surface water or viewshed; and that 3) place offers a framework for multiple standpoints to co-locate and test each other for coherence. Stand for what you stand on! This page is a place to collect and organize resources on organizing. Visit the organizing tag page to see the latest community posts about organizing on Public Lab, and get updates on this topic by following: Lead image from the Appalachia Barnraising in 2017
On this page you can:
Learn about different methods for community organizing, including tactics for place-based organizing and organizing-related activities Join the conversation
Read stories from organizers doing community science Find further reading and resources on organizing Methods for community organizingTactics for place-based organizingWe recommend this sequence of steps, even if you skip a few, for attracting and organizing a group of people around place-based research. Tour the areaMove through the area together
Image: Emmett Institute at UCLA School of Law, CC BY NC Mental mappingInvite each person to draw a mental map of landmarks, personal situated memories, infrastructure Historical land use mappingStart investigating what's happened previously on this site as the best way to focus future study designs Image: Manitoba Historical Maps, CC BY Aerial mappingCapture a portrait of the landscape with you and the group in it. Bonus, this is really fun! Annotating aerial mapsAdd the points that emerged from touring the site, drawing mental maps, and overlaying the historical maps Image: by @eustatic
Now you've got a base upon which to explain how you see the environment to others and invite them to "see alongside" as well.
This content will likely elicit the next round of questioning, which will provide some direction for your group to:
More methods for organizing
Methods published on Public Lab and tagged with ActivitiesActivities on Public Lab that have been tagged with [activities:organizing] Join the conversationQuestions from the community
Questions tagged with [questions:organizing] Post an Issue BriefShare information about a local environmental health concern and get support from the Public Lab community by writing and posting an Issue Brief. Visit “Write an Issue Brief” to find information on what an issue brief is, see examples, and learn how to write one. Stories from community organizers
Further reading and resources
|
Revert | |
10 | liz |
September 07, 2021 14:56
| over 3 years ago
Public Lab respectfully draws on multiple rich lineages of organizing with a site-specific focus for community self-determination.
Public Lab's community science projects are place-based and led by local residents. This is for several reasons, including: 1) people near the site through time have priceless lived experience; 2) governance is geographic by what environmental regulations are in effect and which electoral district you're a constituent in; and 3) place offers a container for multiple standpoints to offer views on the same place. Stand for what you stand on! This page is a place to collect and organize resources on organizing. Visit the organizing tag page to see the latest community posts about organizing on Public Lab, and get updates on this topic by following: Lead image from the Appalachia Barnraising in 2017
On this page you can:
Learn about different methods for community organizing, including tactics for place-based organizing and organizing-related activities Join the conversation
Read stories from organizers doing community science Find further reading and resources on organizing Methods for community organizingTactics for place-based organizingWe recommend this sequence of steps, even if you skip a few, for attracting and organizing a group of people around place-based research. Tour the areaMove through the area together
Image: Emmett Institute at UCLA School of Law, CC BY NC Mental mappingInvite each person to draw a mental map of landmarks, personal situated memories, infrastructure Historical land use mappingStart investigating what's happened previously on this site as the best way to focus future study designs Image: Manitoba Historical Maps, CC BY Aerial mappingCapture a portrait of the landscape with you and the group in it. Bonus, this is really fun! Annotating aerial mapsAdd the points that emerged from touring the site, drawing mental maps, and overlaying the historical maps Image: by @eustatic
Now you've got a base upon which to explain how you see the environment to others and invite them to "see alongside" as well.
This content will likely elicit the next round of questioning, which will provide some direction for your group to:
More methods for organizing
Methods published on Public Lab and tagged with ActivitiesActivities on Public Lab that have been tagged with [activities:organizing] Join the conversationQuestions from the community
Questions tagged with [questions:organizing] Post an Issue BriefShare information about a local environmental health concern and get support from the Public Lab community by writing and posting an Issue Brief. Visit “Write an Issue Brief” to find information on what an issue brief is, see examples, and learn how to write one. Stories from community organizers
Further reading and resources
|
Revert | |
9 | liz |
September 07, 2021 14:43
| over 3 years ago
Public Lab respectfully draws on multiple rich lineages of organizing with a site-specific focus for community self-determination.
Public Lab's community science projects are place-based and led by local residents. This is for several reasons, including: 1) people near the site through time have priceless lived experience; 2) governance is geographic by what environmental regulations are in effect and which electoral district you're a constituent in; and 3) place offers a container for multiple standpoints to offer views on the same place. Stand for what you stand on! This page is a place to collect and organize resources on organizing. Visit the organizing tag page to see the latest community posts about organizing on Public Lab, and get updates on this topic by following: Lead image from the Appalachia Barnraising in 2017
On this page you can:
Learn about different methods for community organizing, including tactics for place-based organizing and organizing-related activities Join the conversation
Read stories from organizers doing community science Find further reading and resources on organizing Methods for community organizingTactics for place-based organizingWe recommend this sequence of steps, even if you skip a few, for attracting and organizing a group of people around place-based research. Tour the areaMove through the area together
Image: Emmett Institute at UCLA School of Law, CC BY NC Mental mappingInvite each person to draw a mental map of landmarks, personal situated memories, infrastructure Historical land use mappingStart investigating what's happened previously on this site as the best way to focus future study designs Image: Manitoba Historical Maps, CC BY Aerial mappingCapture a portrait of the landscape with you and the group in it. Bonus, this is really fun! Annotating aerial mapsAdd the points that emerged from touring the site, drawing mental maps, and overlaying the historical maps Image: by @eustatic
Now you've got a base upon which to explain how you see the environment to others and invite them to "see alongside" as well.
This content will likely elicit the next round of questioning, which will provide some direction for your group to:
More methods for organizing
Methods published on Public Lab and tagged with ActivitiesActivities on Public Lab that have been tagged with [activities:organizing] Join the conversationQuestions from the community
Questions tagged with [questions:organizing] Post an Issue BriefShare information about a local environmental health concern and get support from the Public Lab community by writing and posting an Issue Brief. Visit “Write an Issue Brief” to find information on what an issue brief is, see examples, and learn how to write one. Stories from community organizers
Further reading and resources
|
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8 | bhamster |
June 14, 2021 21:18
| over 3 years ago
Public Lab respectfully draws on multiple rich lineages of organizing with a site-specific focus for community self-determination.
Public Lab's community science projects are place-based and led by local residents. This is for several reasons, including: 1) people near the site through time have priceless lived experience; 2) governance is geographic by what environmental regulations are in effect and which electoral district you're a constituent in; and 3) place offers a container for multiple standpoints to offer views on the same place. Stand for what you stand on! This page is a place to collect and organize resources on organizing. Visit the organizing tag page to see the latest community posts about organizing on Public Lab, and get updates on this topic by following:
On this page you can:
Learn about different methods for community organizing, including tactics for place-based organizing and organizing-related activities Join the conversation
Read stories from organizers doing community science Find further reading and resources on organizing Methods for community organizingTactics for place-based organizingWe recommend this sequence of steps, even if you skip a few, for attracting and organizing a group of people around place-based research. Tour the areaMove through the area together
Image: Emmett Institute at UCLA School of Law, CC BY NC Mental mappingInvite each person to draw a mental map of landmarks, personal situated memories, infrastructure Historical land use mappingStart investigating what's happened previously on this site as the best way to focus future study designs Image: Manitoba Historical Maps, CC BY Aerial mappingCapture a portrait of the landscape with you and the group in it. Bonus, this is really fun! Annotating aerial mapsAdd the points that emerged from touring the site, drawing mental maps, and overlaying the historical maps Image: by @eustatic
Now you've got a base upon which to explain how you see the environment to others and invite them to "see alongside" as well.
This content will likely elicit the next round of questioning, which will provide some direction for your group to:
More methods for organizing
Methods published on Public Lab and tagged with ActivitiesActivities on Public Lab that have been tagged with [activities:organizing] Join the conversationQuestions from the community
Questions tagged with [questions:organizing] Post an Issue BriefShare information about a local environmental health concern and get support from the Public Lab community by writing and posting an Issue Brief. Visit “Write an Issue Brief” to find information on what an issue brief is, see examples, and learn how to write one. Stories from community organizers
Further reading and resources
Join us for a training on the Sand Sentinel Program! Have you seen sand blowing off a frac sand pile? A stream cloudy with sediment coming off a mine? These are potential permit violations that need to be reported. The Sand Sentinel program was created to make identifying and filing suspected permit violations easier to do. Reporting environmental concerns when you see them is an important part of the accountability process for any industry. Permits are required for operating any industry including frac sand mines. They are in effect both when the industry is operating, and when they are closed. However, permit violations often go unchecked if no one reports them. Learning how to identify potential permit violations will help our communities to ensure pollution events are caught and dealt with! Join us for an online training on the The Sand Sentinel program on Thursday, February 18, at 1pm CT.At this training you will:
Where:Online, the link to the event will be sent to those who register ahead of time When:Wednesday February 18, 1pm to 3pm CT Who should join:Anyone with interest in reporting observable environmental permit violations, specifically those in Wisconsin in regards to the fracing industry. RegistrationRegister by February 8 to ensure there's enough time for us to mail you the training packet! Please include an address we can ship the training materials to in your registration. Sponsored by Frac Sand Sentinel: Project Outreach and Public Lab Informational Materials will be available. |
Revert | |
7 | bhamster |
June 14, 2021 21:09
| over 3 years ago
Public Lab respectfully draws on multiple rich lineages of organizing with a site-specific focus for community self-determination.
Public Lab's community science projects are place-based and led by local residents. This is for several reasons, including: 1) people near the site through time have priceless lived experience; 2) governance is geographic by what environmental regulations are in effect and which electoral district you're a constituent in; and 3) place offers a container for multiple standpoints to offer views on the same place. Stand for what you stand on! This page is a place to collect and organize resources on organizing. Visit the organizing tag page to see the latest community posts about organizing on Public Lab, and get updates on this topic by following:
On this page you can:
Learn about different methods for community organizing, including tactics for place-based organizing and organizing-related activities Join the conversation
Read stories from organizers doing community science Find further reading and resources on organizing Methods for community organizingTactics for place-based organizingWe recommend this sequence of steps, even if you skip a few, for attracting and organizing a group of people around place-based research. Tour the areaMove through the area together
Image: Emmett Institute at UCLA School of Law, CC BY NC Mental mappingInvite each person to draw a mental map of landmarks, personal situated memories, infrastructure Historical land use mappingStart investigating what's happened previously on this site as the best way to focus future study designs Image: Manitoba Historical Maps, CC BY Aerial mappingCapture a portrait of the landscape with you and the group in it. Bonus, this is really fun! Annotating aerial mapsAdd the points that emerged from touring the site, drawing mental maps, and overlaying the historical maps Image: by @eustatic
Now you've got a base upon which to explain how you see the environment to others and invite them to "see alongside" as well.
This content will likely elicit the next round of questioning, which will provide some direction for your group to:
More methods for organizing
Methods published on Public Lab and tagged with ActivitiesActivities on Public Lab that have been tagged with [activities:organizing] Join the conversationQuestions from the community
Questions tagged with [questions:organizing] Post an Issue BriefShare information about a local environmental health concern and get support from the Public Lab community by writing and posting an Issue Brief. Visit “Write an Issue Brief” to find information on what an issue brief is, see examples, and learn how to write one. Stories from community organizers
Further reading and resources
Join us for a training on the Sand Sentinel Program! Have you seen sand blowing off a frac sand pile? A stream cloudy with sediment coming off a mine? These are potential permit violations that need to be reported. The Sand Sentinel program was created to make identifying and filing suspected permit violations easier to do. Reporting environmental concerns when you see them is an important part of the accountability process for any industry. Permits are required for operating any industry including frac sand mines. They are in effect both when the industry is operating, and when they are closed. However, permit violations often go unchecked if no one reports them. Learning how to identify potential permit violations will help our communities to ensure pollution events are caught and dealt with! Join us for an online training on the The Sand Sentinel program on Thursday, February 18, at 1pm CT.At this training you will:
Where:Online, the link to the event will be sent to those who register ahead of time When:Wednesday February 18, 1pm to 3pm CT Who should join:Anyone with interest in reporting observable environmental permit violations, specifically those in Wisconsin in regards to the fracing industry. RegistrationRegister by February 8 to ensure there's enough time for us to mail you the training packet! Please include an address we can ship the training materials to in your registration. Sponsored by Frac Sand Sentinel: Project Outreach and Public Lab Informational Materials will be available. |
Revert | |
6 | bhamster |
June 10, 2021 23:23
| over 3 years ago
Public Lab respectfully draws on multiple rich lineages of organizing with a site-specific focus for community self-determination.
Public Lab's community science projects are place-based and led by local residents. This is for several reasons, including: 1) people near the site through time have priceless lived experience; 2) governance is geographic by what environmental regulations are in effect and which electoral district you're a constituent in; and 3) place offers a container for multiple standpoints to offer views on the same place. Stand for what you stand on! This page is a place to collect and organize resources on organizing. Visit the organizing tag page to see the latest community posts about organizing on Public Lab, and get updates on this topic by following:
On this page you can:
Learn about different methods for community organizing, including tactics for place-based organizing and organizing-related activities Join the conversation
Read stories from organizers doing community science Find further reading and resources on organizing Methods for community organizingTactics for place-based organizingWe recommend this sequence of steps, even if you skip a few, for attracting and organizing a group of people around place-based research. Tour the areaMove through the area together
Image: Emmett Institute at UCLA School of Law, CC BY NC Mental mappingInvite each person to draw a mental map of landmarks, personal situated memories, infrastructure Historical land use mappingStart investigating what's happened previously on this site as the best way to focus future study designs Image: Manitoba Historical Maps, CC BY Aerial mappingCapture a portrait of the landscape with you and the group in it. Bonus, this is really fun! Annotating aerial mapsAdd the points that emerged from touring the site, drawing mental maps, and overlaying the historical maps Image: by @eustatic
Now you've got a base upon which to explain how you see the environment to others and invite them to "see alongside" as well.
This content will likely elicit the next round of questioning, which will provide some direction for your group to:
More methods for organizing
Methods published on Public Lab and tagged with ActivitiesActivities on Public Lab that have been tagged with [activities:organizing] Join the conversationQuestions from the community
Questions tagged with [questions:organizing] Post an Issue BriefShare information about a local environmental health concern and get support from the Public Lab community by writing and posting an Issue Brief. Visit “Write an Issue Brief” to find information on what an issue brief is, see examples, and learn how to write one. Stories from community organizers
Further reading and resources
Join us for a training on the Sand Sentinel Program! Have you seen sand blowing off a frac sand pile? A stream cloudy with sediment coming off a mine? These are potential permit violations that need to be reported. The Sand Sentinel program was created to make identifying and filing suspected permit violations easier to do. Reporting environmental concerns when you see them is an important part of the accountability process for any industry. Permits are required for operating any industry including frac sand mines. They are in effect both when the industry is operating, and when they are closed. However, permit violations often go unchecked if no one reports them. Learning how to identify potential permit violations will help our communities to ensure pollution events are caught and dealt with! Join us for an online training on the The Sand Sentinel program on Thursday, February 18, at 1pm CT.At this training you will:
Where:Online, the link to the event will be sent to those who register ahead of time When:Wednesday February 18, 1pm to 3pm CT Who should join:Anyone with interest in reporting observable environmental permit violations, specifically those in Wisconsin in regards to the fracing industry. RegistrationRegister by February 8 to ensure there's enough time for us to mail you the training packet! Please include an address we can ship the training materials to in your registration. Sponsored by Frac Sand Sentinel: Project Outreach and Public Lab Informational Materials will be available. |
Revert | |
5 | bhamster |
June 03, 2021 22:34
| over 3 years ago
Public Lab respectfully draws on multiple rich lineages of organizing with a site-specific focus for community self-determination.
Public Lab's community science projects are place-based and led by local residents. This is for several reasons, including: 1) people near the site through time have priceless lived experience; 2) governance is geographic by what environmental regulations are in effect and which electoral district you're a constituent in; and 3) place offers a container for multiple standpoints to offer views on the same place. Stand for what you stand on! This page is a place to collect and organize resources on organizing. Visit the organizing tag page to see the latest community posts about organizing on Public Lab, and get updates on this topic by following:
On this page you can:
Learn about different methods for community organizing, including tactics for place-based organizing and organizing-related activities Join the conversation
Read stories from organizers doing community science Find further reading and resources on organizing Methods for community organizingTactics for place-based organizingWe recommend this sequence of steps, even if you skip a few, for attracting and organizing a group of people around place-based research. Tour the areaMove through the area together
Mental mappingInvite each person to draw a mental map of landmarks, personal situated memories, infrastructure
Historical land use mappingStart investigating what's happened previously on this site as the best way to focus future study designs
Aerial mappingCapture a portrait of the landscape with you and the group in it. Bonus, this is really fun!
Annotating aerial mapsAdd the points that emerged from touring the site, drawing mental maps, and overlaying the historical maps
Now you've got a base upon which to explain how you see the environment to others and invite them to "see alongside" as well. This content will likely elicit the next round of questioning, which will provide some direction for your group to design future studies. See https://publiclab.org/wiki/study-design. More methods for organizingMethods published on Public Lab and tagged with ActivitiesActivities on Public Lab that have been tagged with [activities:organizing] Join the conversationQuestions from the community
Questions tagged with [questions:organizing] Post an Issue BriefShare information about a local environmental health concern and get support from the Public Lab community by writing and posting an Issue Brief. Visit “Write an Issue Brief” to find information on what an issue brief is, see examples, and learn how to write one. Stories from community organizers
Further reading and resources
Join us for a training on the Sand Sentinel Program! Have you seen sand blowing off a frac sand pile? A stream cloudy with sediment coming off a mine? These are potential permit violations that need to be reported. The Sand Sentinel program was created to make identifying and filing suspected permit violations easier to do. Reporting environmental concerns when you see them is an important part of the accountability process for any industry. Permits are required for operating any industry including frac sand mines. They are in effect both when the industry is operating, and when they are closed. However, permit violations often go unchecked if no one reports them. Learning how to identify potential permit violations will help our communities to ensure pollution events are caught and dealt with! Join us for an online training on the The Sand Sentinel program on Thursday, February 18, at 1pm CT.At this training you will:
Where:Online, the link to the event will be sent to those who register ahead of time When:Wednesday February 18, 1pm to 3pm CT Who should join:Anyone with interest in reporting observable environmental permit violations, specifically those in Wisconsin in regards to the fracing industry. RegistrationRegister by February 8 to ensure there's enough time for us to mail you the training packet! Please include an address we can ship the training materials to in your registration. Sponsored by Frac Sand Sentinel: Project Outreach and Public Lab Informational Materials will be available. |
Revert | |
4 | bhamster |
June 03, 2021 22:29
| over 3 years ago
Public Lab respectfully draws on multiple rich lineages of organizing with a site-specific focus for community self-determination.
Public Lab's community science projects are place-based and led by local residents. This is for several reasons, including: 1) people near the site through time have priceless lived experience; 2) governance is geographic by what environmental regulations are in effect and which electoral district you're a constituent in; and 3) place offers a container for multiple standpoints to offer views on the same place. Stand for what you stand on! This page is a place to collect and organize resources on organizing. Visit the organizing tag page to see the latest community posts about organizing on Public Lab, and get updates on this topic by following:
On this page you can:
Learn about different methods for community organizing, including tactics for place-based organizing and organizing-related activities
Join the conversation
Methods for community organizingTactics for place-based organizingWe recommend this sequence of steps, even if you skip a few, for attracting and organizing a group of people around place-based research. Tour the areaMove through the area together
Mental mappingInvite each person to draw a mental map of landmarks, personal situated memories, infrastructure
Historical land use mappingStart investigating what's happened previously on this site as the best way to focus future study designs
Aerial mappingCapture a portrait of the landscape with you and the group in it. Bonus, this is really fun!
Annotating aerial mapsAdd the points that emerged from touring the site, drawing mental maps, and overlaying the historical maps
Now you've got a base upon which to explain how you see the environment to others and invite them to "see alongside" as well. This content will likely elicit the next round of questioning, which will provide some direction for your group to design future studies. See https://publiclab.org/wiki/study-design. More methods for organizing
Methods published on Public Lab and tagged with ActivitiesActivities on Public Lab that have been tagged with [activities:organizing] Join the conversationQuestions from the community
Questions tagged with [questions:organizing] Post an Issue BriefShare information about a local environmental health concern and get support from the Public Lab community by writing and posting an Issue Brief. Visit “Write an Issue Brief” to find information on what an issue brief is, see examples, and learn how to write one. Stories from community organizers
Further reading and resources
Join us for a training on the Sand Sentinel Program! Have you seen sand blowing off a frac sand pile? A stream cloudy with sediment coming off a mine? These are potential permit violations that need to be reported. The Sand Sentinel program was created to make identifying and filing suspected permit violations easier to do. Reporting environmental concerns when you see them is an important part of the accountability process for any industry. Permits are required for operating any industry including frac sand mines. They are in effect both when the industry is operating, and when they are closed. However, permit violations often go unchecked if no one reports them. Learning how to identify potential permit violations will help our communities to ensure pollution events are caught and dealt with! Join us for an online training on the The Sand Sentinel program on Thursday, February 18, at 1pm CT.At this training you will:
Where:Online, the link to the event will be sent to those who register ahead of time When:Wednesday February 18, 1pm to 3pm CT Who should join:Anyone with interest in reporting observable environmental permit violations, specifically those in Wisconsin in regards to the fracing industry. RegistrationRegister by February 8 to ensure there's enough time for us to mail you the training packet! Please include an address we can ship the training materials to in your registration. Sponsored by Frac Sand Sentinel: Project Outreach and Public Lab Informational Materials will be available. |
Revert | |
3 | bhamster |
June 03, 2021 22:25
| over 3 years ago
Public Lab respectfully draws on multiple rich lineages of organizing with a site-specific focus for community self-determination.
Public Lab's community science projects are place-based and led by local residents. This is for several reasons, including: 1) people near the site through time have priceless lived experience; 2) governance is geographic by what environmental regulations are in effect and which electoral district you're a constituent in; and 3) place offers a container for multiple standpoints to offer views on the same place. Stand for what you stand on! This page is a place to collect and organize resources on organizing. Visit the organizing tag page to see the latest community posts about organizing on Public Lab, and get updates on this topic by following:
On this page you can:
Learn about different methods for community organizing, including tactics for place-based organizing and organizing-related activities Join the conversation
Read stories from organizers doing community science Find further reading and resources on organizing Methods for community organizingTactics for place-based organizingWe recommend this sequence of steps, even if you skip a few, for attracting and organizing a group of people around place-based research. Tour the areaMove through the area together
Mental mappingInvite each person to draw a mental map of landmarks, personal situated memories, infrastructure
Historical land use mappingStart investigating what's happened previously on this site as the best way to focus future study designs
Aerial mappingCapture a portrait of the landscape with you and the group in it. Bonus, this is really fun!
Annotating aerial mapsAdd the points that emerged from touring the site, drawing mental maps, and overlaying the historical maps
Now you've got a base upon which to explain how you see the environment to others and invite them to "see alongside" as well. This content will likely elicit the next round of questioning, which will provide some direction for your group to design future studies. See https://publiclab.org/wiki/study-design. More methods for organizing
Methods published on Public Lab and tagged with ActivitiesActivities on Public Lab that have been tagged with [activities:organizing] Join the conversationQuestions from the community
Questions tagged with [questions:organizing] Post an Issue BriefShare information about a local environmental health concern and get support from the Public Lab community by writing and posting an Issue Brief. Visit “Write an Issue Brief” to find information on what an issue brief is, see examples, and learn how to write one. Stories from community organizers
Further reading and resources
Join us for a training on the Sand Sentinel Program! Have you seen sand blowing off a frac sand pile? A stream cloudy with sediment coming off a mine? These are potential permit violations that need to be reported. The Sand Sentinel program was created to make identifying and filing suspected permit violations easier to do. Reporting environmental concerns when you see them is an important part of the accountability process for any industry. Permits are required for operating any industry including frac sand mines. They are in effect both when the industry is operating, and when they are closed. However, permit violations often go unchecked if no one reports them. Learning how to identify potential permit violations will help our communities to ensure pollution events are caught and dealt with! Join us for an online training on the The Sand Sentinel program on Thursday, February 18, at 1pm CT.At this training you will:
Where:Online, the link to the event will be sent to those who register ahead of time When:Wednesday February 18, 1pm to 3pm CT Who should join:Anyone with interest in reporting observable environmental permit violations, specifically those in Wisconsin in regards to the fracing industry. RegistrationRegister by February 8 to ensure there's enough time for us to mail you the training packet! Please include an address we can ship the training materials to in your registration. Sponsored by Frac Sand Sentinel: Project Outreach and Public Lab Informational Materials will be available. |
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2 | bhamster |
May 26, 2021 22:07
| over 3 years ago
Public Lab respectfully draws on multiple rich lineages of organizing with a site-specific focus for community self-determination.
Public Lab's community science projects are place-based and led by local residents. This is for several reasons, including: 1) people near the site through time have priceless lived experience; 2) governance is geographic by what environmental regulations are in effect and which electoral district you're a constituent in; and 3) place offers a container for multiple standpoints to offer views on the same place. Stand for what you stand on! This page is a place to collect and organize resources on organizing. Visit the organizing tag page to see the latest community posts about organizing on Public Lab, and get updates on this topic by following:
On this page you can:
Learn about different methods for community organizing, including tactics for place-based organizing and organizing-related activities Join the conversation
Read stories from organizers doing community science Find further reading and resources on organizing Methods for community organizingTactics for place-based organizingWe recommend this sequence of steps, even if you skip a few, for attracting and organizing a group of people around place-based research. Tour the areaMove through the area together (UPDATE with a how-to on choosing edges/boundaries, transects, or other) https://www.canr.msu.edu/news/how-to-organize-walking-tours (UPDATE) https://www.canr.msu.edu/news/benefits-of-a-community-bus-tour Mental mappingInvite each person to draw a mental map of landmarks, personal situated memories, infrastructure https://publiclab.org/notes/liz/04-05-2017/host-an-event-to-draw-a-picture-of-your-place-as-a-group Historical land use mappingStart investigating what's happened previously on this site as the best way to focus future study designs https://publiclab.org/notes/bhamster/02-19-2021/how-to-find-out-past-and-current-uses-for-an-area-of-land Aerial mappingCapture a portrait of the landscape with you and the group in it. Bonus, this is really fun! Choose a method: https://publiclab.org/notes/stevie/04-26-2019/how-to-decide-on-a-tool-for-mapping Balloon mapping: https://publiclab.org/notes/liz/03-15-2017/host-a-balloon-mapping-workshop Annotating aerial mapsAdd the points that emerged from touring the site, drawing mental maps, overlaying the historical maps https://publiclab.org/notes/mathew/12-13-2011/grassroots-mapping-butte-goes-analog Now you've got a base upon which to explain how you see the environment to others and invite them to "see alongside" as well. This content will likely elicit the next round of questioning, which will provide some direction for your group to design future studies. See https://publiclab.org/wiki/study-design. More methods for organizing
ActivitiesActivities on Public Lab that have been tagged with [activities:organizing] Join the conversationQuestions from the community
Questions tagged with [questions:organizing] Post an Issue BriefShare information about a local environmental health concern and get support from the Public Lab community by writing and posting an Issue Brief. Visit “Write an Issue Brief” to find information on what an issue brief is, see examples, and learn how to write one. Stories from community organizersFurther reading and resourcesJoin us for a training on the Sand Sentinel Program! Have you seen sand blowing off a frac sand pile? A stream cloudy with sediment coming off a mine? These are potential permit violations that need to be reported. The Sand Sentinel program was created to make identifying and filing suspected permit violations easier to do. Reporting environmental concerns when you see them is an important part of the accountability process for any industry. Permits are required for operating any industry including frac sand mines. They are in effect both when the industry is operating, and when they are closed. However, permit violations often go unchecked if no one reports them. Learning how to identify potential permit violations will help our communities to ensure pollution events are caught and dealt with! Join us for an online training on the The Sand Sentinel program on Thursday, February 18, at 1pm CT.At this training you will:
Where:Online, the link to the event will be sent to those who register ahead of time When:Wednesday February 18, 1pm to 3pm CT Who should join:Anyone with interest in reporting observable environmental permit violations, specifically those in Wisconsin in regards to the fracing industry. RegistrationRegister by February 8 to ensure there's enough time for us to mail you the training packet! Please include an address we can ship the training materials to in your registration. Sponsored by Frac Sand Sentinel: Project Outreach and Public Lab Informational Materials will be available. |
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1 | stevie |
January 19, 2021 21:17
| almost 4 years ago
Join us for a training on the Sand Sentinel Program! Have you seen sand blowing off a frac sand pile? A stream cloudy with sediment coming off a mine? These are potential permit violations that need to be reported. The Sand Sentinel program was created to make identifying and filing suspected permit violations easier to do. Reporting environmental concerns when you see them is an important part of the accountability process for any industry. Permits are required for operating any industry including frac sand mines. They are in effect both when the industry is operating, and when they are closed. However, permit violations often go unchecked if no one reports them. Learning how to identify potential permit violations will help our communities to ensure pollution events are caught and dealt with! Join us for an online training on the The Sand Sentinel program on Thursday, February 18, at 1pm CT.At this training you will:
Where:Online, the link to the event will be sent to those who register ahead of time When:Wednesday February 18, 1pm to 3pm CT Who should join:Anyone with interest in reporting observable environmental permit violations, specifically those in Wisconsin in regards to the fracing industry. RegistrationRegister by February 8 to ensure there's enough time for us to mail you the training packet! Please include an address we can ship the training materials to in your registration. Sponsored by Frac Sand Sentinel: Project Outreach and Public Lab Informational Materials will be available. |
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0 | stevie |
January 19, 2021 21:16
| almost 4 years ago
Join us for a training on the Sand Sentinel Program! Have you seen sand blowing off a frac sand pile? A stream cloudy with sediment coming off a mine? These are potential permit violations that need to be reported. The Sand Sentinel program was created to make identifying and filing suspected permit violations easier to do. Reporting environmental concerns when you see them is an important part of the accountability process for any industry. Permits are required for operating any industry including frac sand mines. They are in effect both when the industry is operating, and when they are closed. However, permit violations often go unchecked if no one reports them. Learning how to identify potential permit violations will help our communities to ensure pollution events are caught and dealt with! Join us for an online training on the The Sand Sentinel program on Thursday, February 18, at 1pm CT. At this training you will:
Where:Online, the link to the event will be sent to those who register ahead of time When:Wednesday February 18, 1pm to 3pm CT Who should join:Anyone with interest in reporting observable environmental permit violations, specifically those in Wisconsin in regards to the fracing industry. RegistrationRegister by February 8 to ensure there's enough time for us to mail you the training packet! Please include an address we can ship the training materials to in your registration. Sponsored by Frac Sand Sentinel: Project Outreach and Public Lab Informational Materials will be available. |
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