Article of the Month in 2013
FIG publishes each month the Article of the Month. This is a high-level paper
focusing on interesting topic to all surveyors. This article can be picked up
from an FIG conference or another event or it can be a paper written directly
for this purpose.
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December - 2013 - John Hannah, New Zealand:
Climate Change and Responsible
Governance: The Role of Surveyors in Assisting Small Island Developing
States. This paper was presented in a plenary session at the Pacific
Region Small Island Developing States Symposium, 18-20 September 2013
in Suva, Fiji. The paper discuss how surveyors can contribution to the
issues of climate change and responsible governance, particularly as they
affect Small Island Developing States (SIDS). The paper reflects some of the
work the FIG Task Force on Climate Change has been undertaking since it was
established in 2010. John Hannah is chair and at the FIG Congress 2014 in
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia the task force will deliver a final report.
- November - 2013 - Giselle Byrnes, New Zealand:
Boundary Makers: Land Surveying
in nineteenth-century New Zealand. This paper is a historical outline of
the early land surveyors importance to the history of New Zealand, as they
were among the advance guard of European settlers to walk the land and
assess its potential for future development. Surveyors around the world are
struggling with many current challenges. However, this article gives you a
possibility to reflect about the impact of surveyors through history in the
development and mapping of societies. The paper is a historical outline of
the early land surveyors importance to the history of New Zealand, as they
were among the advance guard of European settlers to walk the land and
assess its potential for future development. We are pleased to share this
paper with you since FIG Institution for the History of Surveying and
Measurement organises a very special trip, conference and event on
Charting and Mapping the Pacific Paradise of the Pitcairners at Norfolk
Island, (an island half way between Australia and New Zealand), 6-10 July
2014:
Invitation
and
program.
- October - 2013 - Pasi Häkli, Ulla Kallio Jyrki Puupponen,
Finland:
From Passive to Active Control Point Networks – Evaluation of Accuracy in
Static GPS Surveying. This peer reviewed paper was presented at
FIG Working Week in Abuja, Nigeria, 8 May 2013 and evaluates the accuracy of
static GPS surveying through active stations with regard to the official
passive control point networks in EUREF-FIN.
- September - 2013 - Frank F. K. Byamugisha, World Bank:
Improving Land Governance for Development: Opportunities and Challenges for
the Survey Profession. This paper is an annotated version of a keynote
addressed by Frank Byamugisha from the World Bank at the FIG Working Week,
6-10 May 2013 in Abuja, Nigeria. The central message of the paper is that
surveyors and other land professionals have an important role to play in
improving land governance in Africa, which is critical to unlocking the
continent’s potential of abundant land to end extreme poverty and boost
shared prosperity. For further information about land administration and
reforms in Sub-Saharan Africa, Frank Byamigisha has just published the book
Securing Africa's Land for Shared Prosperity. Download the book
here.
- August - 2013 - Gary Strong, Alexander Aronsohn and Ben Elder,
United Kingdom: Innovative Approaches
to Spatially Enabling Land Administration and Management. This paper was
presented at the FIG Working Week, 6-10 May 2013 in Abuja, Nigeria. This
paper explores how, with only a small amount of investment, the development
and implementation of internationally agreed and recognised measurement
standards will support an improved market efficiency and providing a wide
range of beneficial tools to decision makers.
- July - 2013 - Solomon Haile, Ombretta Tempra and Remy Sietchping,
UN-habitat, Kenya: Towards a
capacity development Framework for Land Plocy in Africa. The article
discusses the Land Policy Initiative (LPI) and how relevant activities are
planned and implemented to think through and develop strategies and road
maps that will culminate into the development of a coherent, unified and
cutting edge Capacity Development Framework (CDF). LPI Capacity Development
was a sub theme at the Working Week 2013. The LPI was discussed at the
GLTN/Director General forum which were spread over 4 sessions during the
Working Week and furthermore there was a special session on Africa LPI
Capacity Development where Solomon Haile presented the proposed Africa LPI
Capacity Development initiative.
- June - 2013 - Paul
Munro-Faure and Andrew Hilton, FAO, Italy:
Building on the
consensus: FAO’s first twelve months after endorsement of the Voluntary
Guidelines on Responsible Governance of Tenure. In May 2012 the
Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land,
Fisheries and Forests in the Context of National Food Security, which
represent an unprecedented international agreement on the governance of
tenure, and place secure access to land, fisheries and forests firmly in the
context of food security, was officially endorsed. This paper describes the
first twelve months of the FAO work, with its partners, in developing and
implementing a programme for making improved governance of tenure a reality.
FIG is co-organising a Pacific Small Island Developing States Symposium at
Fiji, 18-20 September 2013 addressing the specific challenges for the
Pacific area as a follow up on the SIDS (Small Island Developing States and
the Millennium Development Goals) Agenda for Action, started at the FIG
Congress 2010 in Sydney.
- May 2013 - Ismail Ojetunde, Nigeria:
Revisiting the Interaction between
the Nigerian Residential Property Market and the Macroeconomy. This
paper is a Nigerian Peer Review paper, which was presented at FIG Working
Week 2013, 6-10 May, in Abuja, Nigeria. Like last month article, this paper
also highlight one of the challenges Nigerian surveyors are dealing with,
namely the Nigerian property market. At the conference many papers
highlighted the current challenges Nigerians surveyors are faced with, but
also international challenges. You can find the papers
here.
-
April 2013 -
Iyenemi Ibimina Kakulu, Simeon
Igbara, Isaac Akuru and Nekabari Paul Visigah, Nigeria:
Land Access and Community Entry Challenges in Environmental Surveys Selected
cases from Nigeria. This paper is a Nigerian Peer Review paper,
which will be presented at FIG Working Week 2013 -6-10 May, in Abuja,
Nigeria. We are pleased to share this Peer Review paper with you already now
prior the conference to highlight one of the challenges that Nigerian
surveyors are dealing with, namely land access restrictions. Together with
UNEP, the authors have undertaken a comprehensive environmental survey of
several communities in the Niger Delta region, and their findings and
methods are interesting not only in Nigeria but can be used in countries all
over the world. At the conference you will be presented to many further
papers both from Nigeria, Africa, and Internationally, that highlight the
current challenges for surveyors.
- March 2013 -
Peter Van Oosterom, Christiaan
Lemmen and Harry Ultermark, The Netherlands: Land
Administration Standardization with focus on Evidence from the Field and
Processing of Field Observations. The 'Land Administration Domain Model
(LADM)' was approved as an official International ISO Standard a on 1
November 2012, a milestone for FIG. The proposal for this standard was
submitted by FIG to ISO almost five years ago. LADM defines terminology for
land administration, based on various national and international systems
that is as simple as possible in order to be useful in practice. LADM covers
the compete domain, surveying included.It is highly relevant that documented
field surveys can be included, in combination with reconstructable
adjustments to the spatial database.
- February 2013 -
Michael Barry, Richard Molero and Abdel-Rahman Muhsen, Canada:
Evolutionary Land Tenure Information System Development: The Talking Titler
Methodology. This article was presented at the 8th FIG Regional
Conference, 26-29 November 2012 in Montevideo Uruguay. The authors argue
that conventional land registration systems often do not produce the desired
results in uncertain land tenure situations such as peri-urban areas in
developing world cities, post-conflict situations, land restitution cases
and aboriginal lands. They introduce a methodology “The Talking Titler”
system. The methodology was conceived in South Africa, and has recently been
tested in Canada and Nigeria.
- January 2013 -
Msc. Ing. Raquel SOSA, Msc. Ing.
Agrim. Rosario CASANOVA, Facultad de Ingeniería and Ing. Agrim. Jorge
FRANCO, Dirección Nacional de Topografía, Uruguay:
gvSIG Batoví an Educational GIS.The
paper summarises a keynote presentation given at the 8th FIG Regional
Conference, Montevideo, Uruguay, 27 November 2012 and describes a
comprehensive and impressive Uruguayan project called "Plan Ceibal". All
school children have received a free lap top, and a software to manage
geographic information has been developed, implemented and used at all
Uruguayan schools. At the same time the project shows a remarkable
cooperation between different Uruguayan organisations.
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