“…Additionally, GIS successfully facilitated the spatial visualization of relationships between causes and mining impacts such as the case of conflict and social acceptance mapping (Craynon et al, 2015;Haslam & Ary Tanimoune, 2016;W. Liu & Agusdinata, 2020;Pactwa & Górniak-Zimroz, 2021) while also supporting the consolidation of various socioeconomic and environmental indicators such as with landscape quality assessment (Molina et al, 2016), poverty mapping via socioeconomic outcome indicators (Hentschel et al, 2000;Loayza & Rigolini, 2016;Londono Castaneda et al, 2018) and risk mapping (Chen et al, 2015;Onencan et al, 2018;Risk et al, 2020;Saedpanah & Amanollahi, 2019). Aside from being an effective stakeholder engagement tool, participatory GIS and geovisualization combined allow for the rapid and effective communication of data patterns, useful for assisting decisionmaking processes to evaluate where, how and why changes have occurred and exactly where to target efforts for mitigation and land use planning.…”