2022-08-19 –, Workshops and Loop-Cinema - Room 103
Join the Local Chapters Congress to learn about what other chapters are doing. Even if you are not on a Chapter but are a local organizer, feel free to join!
We will focus on:
- how to turn actions that work locally in projects that can be ran globally
- how local groups can best help each other
Join the Local Chapters Congress to learn about what other chapters are doing. Even if you are not on a Chapter but are a local organizer, feel free to join!
This session is organized by the Local Chapters and Communities Working Group, which is is tasked with finding and implementing ways for the Foundation to support the growth of local communities and potentially encourage established communities to further organise themselves and eventually formally affiliate with the Foundation as one of its Local Chapters. Aside from that, the LCCWG facilitates a global exchange of ideas and support among Local Chapters and communities and review and suggest improvements to the Local Chapters affiliation scheme.
Local Chapters are not-for-profit legal entities to be established within different territories around the world which can act as official local representatives of the Foundation when dealing with local government, business and media.
OSMF is an organisation is incorporated in Great Britain. It wants to support the OpenStreetMap project (and other free mapping projects, where applicable) in the whole world. But it can't be everywhere and reach everybody, especially people speaking languages other than English. Local chapters can extend the reach of OSMF, foster local communities, help with legal and financial matters in their respective countries and generally promote OSM in their local areas.
Some of these goals (such as handling financial matters or providing a point of contact for government or media) can also be handled by totally independent organisations supporting OSM but not associated with OSMF in any way. But working together helps OSM and makes it clear that we are all part of the same community.
For more about Local Chapters, check out the wiki. https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Foundation/Local_Chapters
local chapters, community building
Workshop requirements –None
Affiliation –OpenStreetMap Foundation
The Local Chapters and Communities Working Group (LCCWG) is tasked with finding and implementing ways for the Foundation to support the growth of local communities and potentially encourage established communities to further organise themselves and eventually formally affiliate with the Foundation as one of its Local Chapters. Aside from that, the LCCWG will also facilitate a global exchange of ideas and support among Local Chapters and communities and review and suggest improvements to the Local Chapters affiliation scheme.
Maggie has been spending her time volunteering with OpenStreetMap for almost a decade. She spent 10 years as a geospatial consultant and urban planner. Maggie currently serves as the Executive Director for OpenStreetMap US where she works to engage, support and grow the OpenStreetMap project and community across the United States through programs, advocacy, and the annual State of the Map US conference.
FLOSS contributor involved in many projects (OpenStreetMap, Wikimedia projects, Gnome)
Currently OpenStreetMap Project Manager for Wikimedia Italia (Italian OpenStreetMap Local Chapter), part of the Local Chapters and Communities Working Group of the OpenStreetMap Foundation and member of cOSMopolIT, group dedicated in Diversity and Inclusion within the italian OpenStreetMap Community.
Local organizing committee for SotM 2022.
Geoffrey Kateregga is the Community Manager at the Open Mapping Hub for Eastern and Southern Africa. He is an active member of the OpenStreetMap Africa community - a network of local OpenStreetMap communities from all over Africa organizing the State of the Map Africa conference and joining hands to share resources and collaborate to grow and produce a complete and well-detailed map of Africa on OpenStreetMap in order to advance the quality, completeness and sustainability of geospatial data in Africa.