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Terminated in academic year 2022/2023

Planning of Geoinformation Technologies Applications

Type of study Doctoral
Language of instruction English
Code 548-0927/02
Abbreviation PGIT
Course title Planning of Geoinformation Technologies Applications
Credits 10
Coordinating department Department of Geoinformatics
Course coordinator prof. Ing. Jiří Horák, Dr.

Subject syllabus

1. Principles of project management
2. Strategic planning of GIT
3. Methodology Return of investment (ROI)
4. Agile methods
5. Selection and implementation of GIS according to Korte, Tomlinson, Clark
6. Costs of GIT and their estimations
7. Benefits of GIT and their estimations
8. Geoinformation infrastructures
9. Technical normalization
10. Selected laws (111/2009 Sb., 123/2009 Sb., 121/2000 Sb., 106/1999 Sb., 200/1994 Sb., 137/2006 Sb. and more)

Literature

MAGUIRE D., KOUYOUMJIAN V., SMITH R. The Business Benefits of GIS. An ROI Approach. ESRI press, 2008.
DIBIASE D., DEMERS M., JOHNSON A., KEMP K., LUCK A.T., PLEWE B., WENTZ E. (Eds.): Geographic Information Science and Technology Body of Knowledge. UCGIS, publikováno Association of American Geographers, 1.vydání, 2006.
LONGLEY, P.A., GOODCHILD M.F., MAGUIRE D.J., RHIND D.W. Geographical Information Systems and Science. Wiley, 2015, 496 stran. ISBN 978-1-119-03130-7 
MASSER I., CROMPVOETS J. Building European Spatial Data Infrastructures. ESRI press, 2014. ISBN 978-1589483835 

Advised literature

Mäkelä J., Raatikainen L. The economic value of spatially enabled services in Finland. Spatineo, 2018.
A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge. Project Management Institute. 2013. 616 p. ISBN 978-1-935589-67-9. http://dinus.ac.id/repository/docs/ajar/PMBOKGuide_5th_Ed.pdf
European Commission, 2016. Study to examine the socioeconomic impact of Copernicus in the EU.
Geographic information metadata for spatial data infrastructures. Springer, 2005. ISBN 3-540-24464-6