| Symposium on Innovative Technologies for Land Administration24 - 25 June 2005, Madison (WI), USAThis symposium, held at the University of Wisconsin, has been organised 
	by FIG Commission 7 on Cadastre and Land Management. 
					
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						 University of Wisconsin, State Historical Society, Madison, venue of the 
		Symposium
 | Land Administration includes processes of land registration, 
		cadastre, valuation and land inventory. Every country in the world 
		pursues these activities in one form or another. Whatever the stage of 
		development is, technology plays a role in executing these tasks. 
		Developing countries are challenged by pro poor land management and 
		administration, and aim at enhancing the services of the authorities as 
		soon as possible. These countries are worried how to organise the 
		provision of relevant land information as support of their governance. 
		Traditional approaches to land administration result in design and 
		implementation projects that take a long time, even such that land laws 
		are adapted in order to provide for more simple procedures. 
		Unconventional approaches are urgently needed, both from a conceptual 
		and technological point of view. Technology plays an important role, 
		although its success depends on the link with society's needs. In 
		particular technology is a major facilitating factor for speeding up 
		processes. Countries in a further stage of development enjoyed benefits 
		of IT-application at an earlier stage. Many of them now face the renewal 
		of their IT architecture because their existing information systems 
		cannot cope with evolving customer demands and IT opportunities. |  The Symposium About 60 experts in ICT, Land Administration, Surveying representing the 
	Geo-ICT industry and Land Administration organisations participated. The 
	relevance of the alignment between the business of Land Administration and 
	ICT on strategic and operational level and the, often underestimated, impact 
	on organisations was underlined. The Land Management Paradigm was introduced 
	and discussed. An impressive introduction on reconstruction Land 
	Administration in post conflict conditions and the role, (non-)acceptance 
	and implementation of information technology in this was given. Leading industries as Oracle, ESRI, Intergraph, Bentley, CARIS and Leica 
	gave their view on the further developments in data acquisition, processing 
	and dissemination related to land administration. There was a lot of 
	attention to 3D data processing and 3D Cadastres, GPS based data collection, 
	with very nice examples from Seiler Industries, distributed data management 
	in an open environment. Intergraph gave its view on simplifying the business 
	of land administration. DataGrid International had a very impressive 
	contribution on Strategies and technologies for integrated land 
	administration and management of national resources. Focus in this 
	presentation was on developing countries with easy to learn and efficient 
	technologies for data collection. International Land Systems, gave a view on 
	using ICT to drive business processes change with land registry offices. 
	Representatives from the Open Geo-Spatial Consortium and the US Federal 
	Geographic Data Committee highlighted that standards enhance the data and 
	that spatial data infrastructures should be developed internationally. The 
	importance of standardisation of the Cadastral Domain was item of 
	discussion. A remark in relation to this was that the discussion on a deed 
	based or title based system should stop and that the focus should be on well 
	performing land administration systems, and in many countries organisations 
	failed in this, because of both institutional and managerial reasons.  Conclusions According to the chair of the Commission 7, Paul van der Molen, 
	the outcome of the symposium are to be used to further develop an opinion on 
	the role and importance of ICT in land administration to the World bank, the 
	United Nations, governments and professionals. land administration is not an 
	end in itself, it serves society, whether it is poverty reduction , pro poor 
	land management or 3D legal volumes and their registration. From that point 
	of view all land administration organisations face similar challenges. Land 
	administration should be less bureaucratic, simple, cheaper and more 
	transparent according to many global reports. During the symposium it became 
	clear that these goals are hard to achieve if one doesn’t take the support 
	of ICT as a prerequisite. The World Bank, an important funding organisation 
	of land administration in many countries, and other international 
	organisations see low cost approaches sometimes as in conflict with ICT. The 
	Commission feels there might be a need to redefine the role and importance 
	of technology in realising the world's objectives. What came out of 
	presentations, is that most probably low cost approaches require high 
	technology. One further consideration is the awareness of land 
	administrators of strategic management. Many leaders of land administration 
	organisation are kept away from strategic issues and are too busy with daily 
	problems they experience in service delivery. However, leadership is 
	necessary to develop the future, in accordance with clearly set requirements 
	by their governments. If they don’t do this well, replacements is an option 
	as usual in private business life. A specific example related has been 
	discussed during the symposium.  Paul van der Molen & Christiaan LemmenFIG Commission 7
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