{"@context":{"aiiso":"http:\/\/purl.org\/vocab\/aiiso\/schema#","arm":"https:\/\/ld4p.github.io\/arm\/core\/ontology\/0.1\/","bf":"http:\/\/id.loc.gov\/ontologies\/bibframe\/","bib":"https:\/\/bibliotek-o.org\/","bibo":"http:\/\/purl.org\/ontology\/bibo\/","cito":"http:\/\/purl.org\/spar\/cito\/","classSchemes":"http:\/\/id.loc.gov\/vocabulary\/classSchemes","dbo":"http:\/\/dbpedia.org\/ontology\/","dce":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/","dcmitype":"http:\/\/dublincore.org\/documents\/2000\/07\/11\/dcmi-type-vocabulary\/#","dcterms":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/","ebucore":"http:\/\/www.ebu.ch\/metadata\/ontologies\/ebucore\/ebucore","edm":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/","foaf":"http:\/\/xmlns.com\/foaf\/spec\/#","frap":"http:\/\/purl.org\/cerif\/frapo","identifiers":"http:\/\/id.loc.gov\/vocabulary\/identifiers","ids":"http:\/\/id.loc.gov\/vocabulary\/identifiers\/","opaque":"http:\/\/opaquenamespace.org\/","pcdm":"http:\/\/pcdm.org\/models#","phaidra":"https:\/\/phaidra.org\/ontology\/","rdam":"http:\/\/rdaregistry.info\/Elements\/m\/","rdau":"http:\/\/rdaregistry.info\/Elements\/u\/","rdax":"http:\/\/rdaregistry.info\/Elements\/x\/","rdf":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/1999\/02\/22-rdf-syntax-ns#","rdfs":"https:\/\/www.w3.org\/TR\/rdf-schema\/","relators":"http:\/\/id.loc.gov\/vocabulary\/relators","role":{"@context":{"advisor":{"@container":"@list","@id":"http:\/\/id.loc.gov\/vocabulary\/relators\/advisor"},"aut":{"@container":"@list","@id":"http:\/\/id.loc.gov\/vocabulary\/relators\/aut"}}},"schema":"http:\/\/schema.org\/","skos":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2004\/02\/skos\/core#","skosxl":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2008\/05\/skos-xl"},"@id":"https:\/\/door.donau-uni.ac.at\/o:5730","bf:note":[{"@type":"bf:Note","skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"As climate change continues to reshape livelihoods and territories, disaster risk\nreduction and resilience-building programs have expanded, often relying on large-scale data\napparatuses such as early warning systems and impact assessments. Decolonial disaster\nstudies have reflected on how these data systems can overlook historical and power\nhierarchies, reproduce colonial and neoliberal knowledge frameworks, and become\ndetached from the land relations of the communities they intend to serve. In contrast,\ncommunity-led and NGO-driven initiatives across Latin America are advancing alternative\ndata practices grounded in Indigenous knowledge, participatory methods, and local\nsovereignty. However, limited attention has been paid to how these communitarian data\nsystems contribute to—or challenge—principles of data justice.\nAddressing this gap, this thesis explores three case studies from Guatemala,\nBolivia, and Ecuador that mobilise art-based methods, citizen science, bioindicators, and\nopen data to foster resilience. Drawing on decolonial disaster studies, Indigenous data\nsovereignty, and critical data studies, the research analyses how these initiatives align with\nor challenge the procedural, rights-based, instrumental, and structural dimensions of data\njustice, as framed by Heeks and Shekhar (2019). The analysis contributes three insights.\nData Territories highlights the need to acknowledge the interconnectedness between land,\nbody, and data when crafting risk and resilience programs by emphasizing land’s agency,\nrelational capacities, and transformation amid colonialism. Data in Place underscores the\nimportance of localized and situated resilience and identifies the case studies as forms of\ndata activism or counter-data actions. Data Material\/Epistemologies stresses the\nsignificance of interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary approaches for advancing Southern\nepistemologies that bridge, on equal footing, Indigenous and scientific ways of knowing\nwithin Latin America."}]}],"dce:subject":[{"@type":"skos:Concept","skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"decolonial resilience"}]},{"@type":"skos:Concept","skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"disasters"}]},{"@type":"skos:Concept","skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"data justice"}]},{"@type":"skos:Concept","skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"data assemblages"}]},{"@type":"skos:Concept","skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"indigenous knowledge"}]},{"@type":"skos:Concept","skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"land relations"}]},{"@type":"skos:Concept","skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"Latin America"}]}],"dce:title":[{"@type":"bf:Title","bf:mainTitle":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"Resilience Otherwise: Situated Risk Knowledge and Data Justice in Guatemala, Bolivia, and Ecuador"}]}],"dcterms:created":["2025"],"dcterms:language":["eng"],"dcterms:type":[{"@type":"skos:Concept","skos:exactMatch":["https:\/\/pid.phaidra.org\/vocabulary\/69ZZ-2KGX"],"skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"Text"},{"@language":"deu","@value":"Text"},{"@language":"ita","@value":"Testo"}]}],"ebucore:filename":["Andrea Forero_Master thesis.pdf"],"ebucore:hasMimeType":["application\/pdf"],"edm:hasType":[{"@type":"skos:Concept","skos:exactMatch":["https:\/\/pid.phaidra.org\/vocabulary\/P2YP-BMND"],"skos:prefLabel":[{"@language":"eng","@value":"Master theses"},{"@language":"deu","@value":"Masterarbeit"},{"@language":"ita","@value":"Tesi di master"}]}],"edm:rights":["http:\/\/rightsstatements.org\/vocab\/InC\/1.0\/"],"role:advisor":[{"@type":"schema:Person","schema:affiliation":[{"@type":"schema:Organization","schema:name":[{"@value":"University College Dublin"}],"skos:exactMatch":["https:\/\/ror.org\/05m7pjf47"]}],"schema:familyName":[{"@value":"Brodie"}],"schema:givenName":[{"@value":"Patrick"}],"skos:exactMatch":[{"@type":"ids:orcid","@value":"0000-0001-5359-754X"}]},{"@type":"schema:Person","schema:affiliation":[{"@type":"schema:Organization","schema:name":[{"@value":"Universidade Nova de Lisboa"}],"skos:exactMatch":["https:\/\/ror.org\/02xankh89"]}],"schema:familyName":[{"@value":"Ferreira"}],"schema:givenName":[{"@value":"Ana"}]}],"role:aut":[{"@type":"schema:Person","schema:familyName":[{"@value":"Cañizares"}],"schema:givenName":[{"@value":"Andrea Forero"}]}]}