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Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/10217/241609
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Item Open Access Co-creating a regional sustainability hub: conversational AI, community engagement, and local data for computing in place(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2025-07-21) Pittman, Daniel, author; Williams, Alyssa, author; Haring, Kerstin, author; Salo, Jessica, author; Newman, Gregory, author; Kennedy, Alexis, author; Newman, Sarah, author; Kalevela, Sylvester, author; ACM, publisherThe Sustainability Hub is a community-driven digital infrastructure project that connects policymakers, researchers, and community members across Colorado through a shared platform for sustainability and well-being data. Grounded in a place-based computing approach, the Hub integrates conversational AI, open-source tools, and community asset mapping to support regional decision-making and resilience. This paper presents early-stage development and future directions. We introduce Bili, a natural language assistant that lowers technical barriers to data access and BiliCore, a framework for evaluating large language models in sustainability contexts. Another key component is the implementation of survey-informed Communities of Interest to support collaboration and engagement. We describe our co-design methodology, beta testing strategy, and participatory outreach efforts, offering a real-world case of computing in place that bridges technical innovation with social infrastructure.Item Open Access Decentralization and environmental governance in multicultural areas: lessons from two Colombian communities(Colorado State University. Libraries, 2012) Velasco, Marcela, authorMost Latin American countries recognized the right to self-determination of ethnic groups and became precursors in community forest management. The paper takes the case of Colombia to evaluate how multicultural areas have adapted to these reforms. I evaluate the effect of local politics on ethnic organizations and environmental governance by comparing an indigenous community settling 1,300 hectares of forested land in Karmata Rúa (Antioquia) and a riverine Afro-Colombian community addressing the environmental effects of a hydroelectric company in the Anchicayá River (Valle). The paper argues that in multicultural areas, ethno-political autonomy may lead to environmental governance. Autonomy is affected by the scale and characteristics of ethnic territories and their natural resources, social movement dynamics, type of state presence and inter-government relations, and the reciprocal recognition and adaptation of consuetudinary and statutory norms within multiple layers of governance. I conclude that autonomy rights depend on local faculties to oversee government actions and synchronize customary and statutory rights. This is more likely to happen in the presence of strong social movements that support community empowerment and facilitate governance technology transfers compelling cooperation or acquiescence from government, and other powerful groups. I draw information from primary and secondary documents, participant observation and interviews with stakeholders.