CSMP14 - Formal and informal representation Flashcards
1
Q
What are the pros of formal representations?
A
- Statistical/factual accuracy
- Allows easier comparison between places if comparison done by same organisation (e.g. UK census)
- Often more neutral/less biased/more objective
- Often have same questions asked over time allowing for longitudinal studies
- Often a spatial element to data collection
- Often more academic – brings respectability/trustworthiness to data
2
Q
What are the Pros of informal representations?
A
- Gives a more emotive account of issues
- Often reach a wider audience (good if representation is good) because it is not academic (not everyone can interpret formal representations)
- Can promote areas in which representation is set (e.g. tourism boom in NZ off back of Tolkein’s Lord of the Rings)
- A wider range of forms of representation
- Often has a longer-lasting impact (eg BATMAN) – the notion of a ‘picture is worth a thousand words’
3
Q
What are the cons of formal representations?
A
- Some places have very poor funding/mechanisms for data collection and therefore representations can be difficult to come by
- Data can lack motives/reasons/emotions – often difficult to explore the ‘why’s
- Data can be obscure – not easily accessible to a lay audience and only understandable by specialists
- Less memorable
- Can be inaccessible (data behind pay walls or security walls)
4
Q
What are the Cons of informal representations?
A
- To what extent can individual representations be deemed representative of larger populations? We don’t know if this the ‘voice of the people’ or ‘voice of one person’ (e.g. editor/director)
- Meaning sometimes hard to decipher/interpret; do we always do this correctly? (particularly when the representations are designed by people with differing cultural norms)
- Can be misinterpreted (Borat) and portray stereotypes.
- Often reaches a wider audience (bad if representation is bad)