The Seven Cultural Descriptors
Used in Community Assessment and Human
Geographical Mapping |
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| Cultural Descriptors are qualitative ways to depict everyday routines,
current functioning in a community, along with the beliefs, traditions,
and stories that exist in the cultural environment. Collectively, they
describe what is important and unique about a place. These descriptors are
the “markers”
that tell insiders as well as outsiders what is characteristic of
the human activity taking place within the area.
Publics
A public is any segment of the population that can be grouped together because
of some recognized demographic feature or common set of interests. A public
may exist currently or at some future date; it may reside permanently in a
geographic area, or may live elsewhere and have an interest in the area. Sample
publics include ranchers, loggers, tourists, small businesses, industries,
miners, Indian tribes, senior citizens, minorities, homemakers, youth, preservationists,
and governmental bodies. By identifying publics and characterizing each public's
interests, one can understand how segments of a population will be affected
differently by decision making on proposed developments. Also, predictions
can be made about how changing public interests will influence management in
the future.
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Networks
A network is comprised of individuals who support each other
in predictable ways and have a shared commitment to some common purpose.
Networks may be informal arrangements of people tied together for cultural,
survival, or caretaking reasons. Networks may also be formal arrangements
of people who belong to an organization, club or association, which
has a specific charter or organizational goals. Networks may function
in a local geographic area or may influence resource management activities
from regional or national levels. Examples of informal networks include
ranchers who assist each other in times of need, miners who work on
the same shift, grass-roots environmentalists, or families who recreate
together. Examples of formal organizations include a cattlemen's association,
coal mining union, preservationist or snowmobile club. A knowledge
of networks citizens form to express their interests is essential for
identifying public issues relating to management activities and for
monitoring the effectiveness of resource decisionmaking. |
Settlement Patterns
A settlement pattern is any distinguishable distribution of
a population in a geographic area, including the historical cycles
of settlement in an area. This cultural descriptor identifies where
a population is located and the type of settlement categorized by its
centralized/dispersed, permanent/temporary, and year-round cycles and
the reasons for each successive wave of settlement. Knowledge of settlement
patterns provides one with a basis for predicting the significance
of probable population changes associated with developmental changes. |
Work Routines
A work routine is a predictable way in which people earn a
living, including where and how. The types of employment, the skills
needed, the wage levels and the natural resources required in the process
are used to generate a profile of an area's work routines. The opportunities
for advancement, the business ownership patterns, and the stability
of employment activities are also elements of the work routine descriptor.
A knowledge of work routines can be used to evaluate how alternative
types of development will affect the ways people earn a living. |
Support Systems
A support service is any arrangement people use for taking
care of each other. Support services occur in an area in both formal
and informal ways. Examples of formal support services include the
areas of health, education, law enforcement, fire protection, transportation,
environment and energy. Examples of informal support activities include
the ways people manage on a day-to-day basis using family, neighborhood,
friendship or any other support system. One can use the support services
descriptor to evaluate how alternative types of development will affect
the ways people take care of each other. |
Recreational
and Cultural Activities
A recreation activity is the way in which people spend their
leisure time. A cultural activity is the way in which people spend
their spiritual time. The recreation and cultural opportunities available,
seasonality of activities, technologies involved, and money and time
required are aspects of this descriptor. The frequency of locallnon-local
uses of these resources, the preferences of local and non-local users,
and the location of the activities are also included. One can use this
cultural descriptor to evaluate how alternative uses of resources will
affect the ways people recreate and participate in recreation and cultural
activities. |
Geographic Boundaries
A geographic boundary is any unique physical feature
with which people of an area identify. Physical features
separate the activities of a population from those in other
geographic areas such as a valley that people identify
as being "theirs" or a river that
divides two towns. Examples of geographic boundaries include topographic
and climatic features, distances, or any unique characteristic that
distinguishes one area from another. Geographic boundaries may be
relatively permanent or short-lived; over time, boundaries may dissolve
as new settlement patterns develop and as work routines and physical
access to an area change. By knowing the geographic boundaries of
a population, one can identify and manage the effects of development
that are unique to a particular geographic area. |