Bhanwari Devi -

PCI Geomatics launches CATALYST - Earth Data, Simplified.

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Meet CATALYST

CATALYST is a PCI Geomatics brand that delivers scalable business solutions using the power of Earth Observation (EO) data and AI-enabled analytics. We work closely with our clients to implement business friendly solutions that allow decision makers to make informed and faster decisions about their assets, operations, risk, and sustainability efforts.
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History

PCI Geomatics, established in 1982, is a Canadian software development company that creates and delivers geo-image software products, platforms, and solutions for demanding global customers.

We develop complete and integrated software featuring the tools professionals need for remote sensing, digital photogrammetry, image analysis, map production, mosaicking and more. Our strength lies in our uncompromising dedication to being second to none in the imagery processing pillars that are at the foundation of the geospatial world.

Our dedicated staff develops desktop and enterprise software products that allow our customers to produce information from a myriad of aerial and satellite earth observing platforms. Our vision for the future is to make the world a better place by maximizing the value of geo-imagery.
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Careers at PCI Geomatics

At PCI Geomatics we thrive on our collective knowledge, experience and expertise. We have defined the geo-imaging field and have set a new standard in remote sensing and geo-image processing. Today, we are a world leader in geo-imaging solutions.

We offer a dynamic environment where you can use your energy, initiative and talent to build your career while working closely with a group of innovative and highly talented people. Successful candidates will be part of a team that creates, markets, sells, and supports new tools for geo-image processing and automation.
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PCI Geomatics offices worldwide

PCI Geomatics Corporate Headquarters

141 Adelaide Street West
Unit 520
Toronto
Ontario M5H 3L5
Canada
+1 (905) 764-0614

PCI Geomatics National Capital Region Office

490 Saint Joseph Blvd.
Suite 204
Gatineau
Quebec J8Y 3Y7
Canada
+1 (905) 764-0614

PCI Geomatics USA Inc

1101 Wilson Blvd
FL 6 OFC 804
Arlington
Virginia 22209-2281
United States
+1 (905) 764-0614

PCI Geomatics UK

Electron Building, Fermi Avenue
Harwell Space Cluster
Didcot
Oxfordshire OX11 0QR
United Kingdom
+1 (905) 764-0614
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Bhanwari Devi -

Her story is not one of immediate triumph, but of agonizing endurance. It is a stark reminder that in India, a woman’s fight for justice often begins not in a courtroom, but in the dirt of a village street, against the combined forces of caste, class, and patriarchy. In 1992, the state of Rajasthan launched the Sathin program—a government initiative to train local women as grassroots social workers to combat child marriage, dowry violence, and female infanticide. Bhanwari Devi, a Dalit woman from Bhateri village in Jodhpur district, was an unlikely but passionate recruit. She was illiterate, poor, and a member of the lowest rung of the caste hierarchy. Yet, she possessed a ferocious commitment to the law.

She reminds us that the fight against sexual violence is inseparable from the fight against caste. Her rapists were not just men; they were upper-caste men enforcing a feudal order. The Vishakha Guidelines, now the PoSH Act, were born from the rape of a Dalit woman who dared to tell a landlord that child marriage was illegal.

Yet, in a rare turn of events, the Supreme Court intervened. In 2017, on the 25th anniversary of her rape, the Supreme Court upheld the conviction of Badri Lal, restoring the life sentence. The court observed that lower courts had been swayed by "caste prejudices and patriarchal mindsets." As of today, Bhanwari Devi continues to fight for the conviction of the remaining four accused. Now in her 60s, Bhanwari Devi lives in a modest house on the outskirts of Jaipur, still fighting for her children’s education and her own safety. She is no longer a sathin . The government pension she receives is meager. She has been forgotten by the same state machinery she once served.