Article of the Month -
July 2005
|
Spatial Data Infrastructures and Land Administration in
Europe
Dorine A. J. BURMANJE, Chair of the Board Dutch Cadastre, Land Registry
and Mapping Agency, The Netherlands
This article in .pdf-format
1) This paper has
been prepared and presented as a keynote presentation in a plenary session
”Co-operation between Land Administration and SDI” at the FIG/GSDI
Conference in Cairo, Egypt, 16-21 April 2005. It is based on material
presented during a UN/FIG/PC IDEA Conference in Aguascalientes, Mexico in
November 2004.
1. INTRODUCTION
The purpose of this paper is to address the question of how the
information-function in a society should work to appropriately support
decision-making processes, and what the role is of land information. In
Europe, not to be confused with the member-states of the European Union
only, in the course of time independent states were formed. They developed
in an autonomous way their own legal frameworks, public administration and
mechanisms of exerting state power. A brief explanation of history aims at
providing understanding of the context in which the subject of the paper is
looked at. Then the paper reviews, in a general way, the existence of land
policies, land administration, and the role of land information in society.
It becomes clear that a well operating broad information function requires
decisions at high political level.
2. EUROPE AS A CONTEXT
About 2000 BC the main civilisation was Greek. The rest of Europe was
inhabited by all kinds of nomadic peoples, from Teutonic, Celtic, and
Slavonic origin. From Italy developed the Roman Empire, which -around the
year 0- existed of almost the whole of Europe, in a reasonable peaceful way
(Pax Romana, by Emperor Augustus). Those days the Empire was split in two
parts, an eastern part that existed until about 1400, and a western part,
that was captured by Teutonic kings in 476. They established the Frankish
Kingdom, that was extended by Charlemagne to almost the whole of western
Europe. After his death, in 768, the Kingdom was split in three parts, of
which the western part developed into France, and the middle and eastern
part into Germany and Italy (1250). At the Iberic peninsula the Visigothic
Kingdoms developed via Castile, into Spain. Around 1500 Charles the Great,
inherited Spain, parts of France, Bohemia and the Netherlands. After a
80-year war, the Netherlands became independent in 1648. After Napoleon, the
Congress of Vienna in 1825 decided on new territorial boundaries in Europe.
The basis for the current lay out was laid after the first world war,
modified after the second one, and finalised through the developments in
central, eastern Europe and the Balkans after the collapse of communism
(1989).
Thus the forming of nations took in many cases hundreds of years. This is
important information, as it explains how norms and values in society could
be shared in the course of time, resulting in jurisdictions that -at a
certain moment- give raise to codification. In this way, the concept of
property as such and property rights are vested in society and constitute in
many cases transparent and homogeneous arrangements. Legal pluralism, that
is so well spread over countries with a younger history, is not so much a
hindrance for good governance.
3. A VARIETY OF INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS
In the literature you may find that at least three topics are determining
the way of public administration, namely the opinion on how to govern a
society, secondly the way of management and organisation of the
administration, and thirdly the civil service culture.
The first, the administration, is very much external oriented,
since it aims for the making and creation of society, or to say it more
sophisticated, it aims for guidance, control and evaluation of society.
Administrative reform in the United Kingdom was very much based on the
opinion that the administration was too ineffective, money wasting, not able
to govern, in the grip of all kind of social institutions and pressure
groups. So the governmental reform aimed for restoring the primacy of
politics, reducing the tasks of the ministries to their core business, and
improving the output of the public institutions by steering them at
distance. Governmental reform in France was very much bases on the
dissatisfaction of the citizens with the extent, the inertia , and
inflexibility of the civil service. Improvements were searched for in
decentralisation and deconcentration of institutions, and improving their
output by quality assurance programmes and special service projects. The
step back of the government in Germany took place mainly by deregulation and
reducing bureaucracy, together with a revitalisation of the social middle
level and the private initiative. In the Netherlands after the centrally
planned and established welfare state in the seventies, the economic draw
back and the need for decreasing the government's budget, the administrative
reforms were based on the experience that it seemed to be impossible to
control the developments in society from a central level. A lot of centrally
performed tasks were decentralised (like social welfare, housing, urban
renewal, regional economic policy, environment), and deregulated (like
education, building regulations, intergovernmental relationships). Other
tasks were moved so that they were at arms length in order to manage at a
distance from the operators of the tasks. In many countries in middle and
eastern Europe administrative reforms were very much based on the great
political changes in the last 10 years, which means that a lot of
governmental attention first of all has been paid to restoring democracy,
and re-establishing the constitutional state. My conclusion is however, that
we see a lot of common movements and developments, we may even speak of
trends, in the reform of the public administration.
Considering the second issue, the management and organisation of the
public sector, it is to say that this issue is more internal oriented,
because it addresses the problem how an administration can perform best, in
terms of effectiveness, efficiency, legitimacy and legality. Here again
three issues are important, namely the capability to develop policies at a
strategic level, the integration of policymaking and implementation, and the
quality of the implementation and the service to the public. In an attempt
to improve the capability to develop adequate strategies, it was decided in
many countries to reform the ministries, to make them smaller, and to
concentrate their tasks on the real political core business. Back to basics.
The measure to reach that situation is privatisation and making large
operational units more independent. The second aspect, the integration of
policymaking and implementation, is important because laws and regulations
are to be implemented, and there are too many examples warning of
insufficient possibilities to implementing governmental regulations in an
effective and efficient way, which results in dissatisfaction by citizens
and private businesses. Here we see that making operational units more
independent, more autonomous, causes at the same time a necessity for the
policymakers to be aware of the operational effects of their policies, since
they will face big problems in establishing a service level agreement with
the independent implementing institution. In the Netherlands we observe much
more political attention for the operational aspects of e.g. health care,
public study grants, agricultural information services, housing, transport,
even for land registration and cadastre.
The third aspect, is the organisational culture of the civil service.
The demand of the citizens and private business for a better service, low
prices, good quality of products and service, value for money, defines
requirements to the institutions in order to be met. The traditional
orientation of governmental organisations towards internal affairs, towards
the internal aspects of products and services, changes more and more towards
an external orientation. More market- and customer oriented approach is
needed here.
The impact of these developments might also be observed regarding land
administration organisations, for example in the Netherlands (‘Cadastre,
Land Registry and Mapping Agency), Sweden (‘Landmäteriet’), England and
Wales (Her Majesty’s Land Registry’), Scotland (‘Registers of Scotland’),
Lithuania (‘State Centre of Registers’), Czech Republic (Czech Office of
Surveying, Mapping and Cadastre’). These organisations are highly
independent public bodies, however operating under the political
responsibility of a minister(UN, 2000). In all cases the main rationale is
that if these organisations are expected to meet the requirements of
customer-satisfaction and cost-recovery as desired by their governments,
they need to have certain managerial degrees of freedom, which are not
possible within the traditional government structures.
These organisations have a lot in common, although they operate in
different countries. They all have much attention to formulating keen
strategic objectives, strategic use of information technology, appropriate
IT-infrastructures and systems, workflow management, and re-training of
staff, embedded in regular customer surveys, quality assurance, and
cost-benefit monitoring. In all cases the new goals impacted heavily on
organisational structure and management principles (van der Molen, 2003a).
Another item is the relationship between the land registry and cadastre.
The existing institutional arrangements stem from historic developments: in
for example France, the Scandinavian countries, Poland, Russia, Slovenia,
Croatia, Estonia and Bulgaria land registration is the responsibility of the
courts, which are supervised by the Ministry of Justice, while the cadastre
is under another ministry or under the municipalities. In countries like
Germany, Austria, Latvia, Switzerland land registration is done by special
Land Book Offices (‘Grundbuch’) while the cadastre is elsewhere in the
public administration.
In Spain and Portugal land registration is carried out by private
registrars (e.g. ‘Registeradores de Espagna’), which are supervised by the
Ministry of Justice, while the cadastre is a fiscal cadastre under the
Ministry of Finance. In countries like Albania, Armenia, Czech Republic,
Greece, Hungary, the Netherlands, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Slovakia,
England & Wales, Scotland, the land registration and cadastre function are
within one single organisation (UN, 2000) (UN, 2001). The advantage is that
the process of registration of land and updating the cadastral registers and
maps can be executed in one run without problems of continuous mutual
transfer of relevant data. Also the Worldbank recognises efficiency benefits
(Deiniger, 2003), although countries where the situation is not ‘unified’
normally have good arrangements to cope with the transfer of data.
A related issue is the financial regime. Land registration is a true
public monopoly, as it is only the government that is entitled to provide
security of a property right through registration. As parties on the land
market are interested to acquire secure transfer of real rights, they are
willing to pay a good price for land registration. In many European
countries the cost-benefit ratio of land registration is therefore
considerably positive. However cadastres, on their turn, face high costs
because land surveying and maintaining maps is expensive, not to mention the
costs of migration from analogue maps into digital databases. In short:
title offices are money- makers and cadastres are big spenders. If there are
no financial arrangements to cover the expenses of the cadastre with the
surplus of title offices, the benefit of the system as a whole is difficult
to materialise (van der Molen, 2001) (van der Molen, 1998).
4. LAND POLICIES TO ADMINISTER THE LAND
A ‘land policy’ can be defined as all the whole complex of socio-economic
and legal prescriptions that dictate how the land and the benefits from the
land are to be allocated (UN/ECE, 1996).
The function of having access to information regarding the ownership,
value and use of land becomes manifest if we consider the implementation of
a land policy. In the European countries governments face that execution of
public power when it regards to land issues, interferes with private
property rights. In fact it is an intervention of the government in the
right to dispose, which is the substantial and fundamental characteristic of
a property right. The justification of that intervention is provided by
public law, and the democratic decision making process that enforces the
law.
As societies tend to be more complex on one hand and the people expect
the government to govern on the other hand, the extent and substance of
public law steadily is growing. This might be observed in all European
countries. It results in a growing amount of options for the government to
impose restrictions on property rights to land. The existence of public
rights on land however limits the use that can be made of the land, which
might affect the marketability of the property. As we know from North
(1990), access to relevant information controls the transaction costs that
shape human interaction. A solution for that is the registration of public
rights to land and providing access to this public part of the legal status
of land.
5. LAND INFORMATION WITHIN AN INFRASTRUCTURE
Information acquisition, storage and dissemination constitute a
substantial cost for society. Not much is known about the actual figures
(van der Molen, 2003b). However, the specific costs for a relatively narrow
description of the specific costs of creating and maintaining a spatial data
infrastructure in the US amount to some 5 billion US$ to 6 billion US$ per
annum at a first approximation.. Taking a wider scope, and including the
business dependent on the infrastructure, the total expenditure seems not to
be less than 15 billion US $ per annum. The US Mapping Sciences Committee of
the National Academy of Science reported in 1994 that the annual federal
spending on spatial data only was in the order of 4,4 billion US $ (Groot,
2000).
Regarding the nature of the tasks of government bodies, many tasks have a
substantial element of collecting, processing, and disseminating information
as part of their decision making process: about persons, legal entities,
vehicles, ownership, house rent, leases, land use, housing, constructions
etc. Government bodies, as they need information for good execution of their
given tasks, pursue these informational activities for their own purposes.
In fact it is a matter of duplication of efforts. Data about persons are
collected by departments of the municipalities, e.g. for their welfare
policies, employment policies, land use planning, land use control, social
housing, local taxes, and land market control. Departments in Districts and
Provinces collect the same, e.g. for overall spatial planning, environmental
policies, water-management. Central government bodies do the same e.g. for
national taxes, construction of transport infrastructure, census, land
consolidation, land reform. In fact this is an ongoing duplication of
efforts, that creates high cost for the government on one hand, and a
financial and administrative burden to citizens on the other hand. In
macroeconomic terms this results in unnecessary high government budgets,
which is at the expense of economic growth and GDP. In microeconomic terms
this results in costs for households, and less return on investment for the
business sector.
From a foreign investment point of view, too high financial and
administrative burdens put investors off. They might prefer to invest
elsewhere.
In order to combat the negative effects of multiple data collection,
storage and dissemination, data sharing is a solution. This means that
government bodies at all levels use data that is collected by one of them
and that they don’t spend money on collecting the same data by themselves.
In fact this is in my view the main challenge of the concept of data
infrastructures. Regarding the spatial component of data, this concept is
specified as a ‘geo-spatial data infrastructure’, that is defined as the
encompassement of networked spatial databases and data handling facilities,
the complex of institutional, organisational, technological, human and
economic resources which interact with one another and underpin the design,
implementation, and maintenance of mechanisms facilitating the sharing,
access to, and responsible use of geospatial data at an affordable cost for
a specific application domain or enterprise (Groot, 2000).
Last ten years countries in Europe embarked on the development of such
infrastructures (Inspire, 2004) (www.eurogi.org),.
Data- sharing issues take a prominent place. A good example can be found in
Germany (Brüggemann, 2003) and (Brüggemann, 2004).
At the level of the European Union, the three Commissioners of
Environment, Statistics, and Research signed a memorandum on the creation of
an Infrastructure for Spatial Information in Europe (INSPIRE). The INSPIRE
initiative aims at making available relevant, harmonised, and quality
geographic information to support formulation, implementation, monitoring,
and evaluation of Community policies with a territorial dimension or impact.
The INSPIRE expert group focuses on a stepwise approach: through
standardisation, harmonisation towards integration (INSPIRE, 2004)
The question is: who has to take the lead when a country desires to
embark on a co-ordinated management of government-information ? There are
many examples that governmental data-suppliers join together in some form of
national council. In Europe these national councils are associated in the
EUROGI, the umbrella organisation for national GI bodies, which acts as the
contact-body to the European Union. Somebody should however take the
initiative to create such a national council. Big data-suppliers, like
national mapping agencies, cadastres, and geological survey organisations,
which have a nation wide coverage, are the obvious organisations to provide
leadership. This happens for example in the Netherlands, Germany, UK and
Sweden.
While working on infrastructures, practice reveals that the impact of the
concept of information infrastructures develops along two lines. Namely on
one hand the need for what is called interoperability, thus the ability to
combine and integrate data-sets from different origin, and on the other hand
the need for the government to re-organise government data-sets that
everybody knows are of a fundamental importance. The first need,
interoperability, is normally divided in three forms, the interoperability
of data, software, and information (Pichler, 2004). Data-interoperability is
to a large extent provided by generic intermediate data-formats, which are
commonly used (such as DXF, TIFF, GML). Software interoperability is
provided by servers, that can communicate. At the moment the
openGIS©-consortium works hard to generate industry standards. Information
operability means that systems know that what is called a 'street' in one
information-system, is the same object that is called 'highway' in another
system. Without national agreements on how to deal with this issue,
data-sharing and integration of data will be difficult. From a political
point of view it means that if data-suppliers in a country do not succeed in
solving the problem by themselves (‘self-regulation’) , they should be
forced by political decisions. It might be observed that a major activity of
all national councils for geo-information in Europe concerns the development
of such standards.
The second need looks after governmental data-sets that are of vital
importance for many users. If these fundamental data-sets are not available,
it appears difficult to reap the financial and intangible benefits of
data-sharing. (Groot, 2000) speaks in this respect of ‘framework-data’, such
as
- geodetic control network (‘national triangulation’)
- digital terrain models (‘height’)
- topographical maps
- geographical names
- administrative boundaries
- hydrography
- cadastral data
- land use/cover
The concept is such, that -based on these framework data-sets- users can
add their specific information regarding, for example, forestry, property
management, environmental preservation and industrial development.
In order to cope with the demand for framework data-sets, governments in
Europe develop the so called authentic registers or base-registers. Base
registers, such as census data, cadastres, legal entities, vehicles,
addresses, topographical databases, are guaranteed by the government
regarding the availability, access, continuity, up-to-date-ness, quality,
and price. In the Netherlands the Ministries of Home Affairs, Economic
Affairs, Agriculture & Nature, Housing & Spatial Planning & Environment,
Transport &Water, Social Affairs together with the Association of
Municipalities embarked on a common programme to develop –so called-
authentic base-registers (Schravendeel, 2002). In Finland, following the
Policy Decision of the Council of State of 5 February 1998, ‘base-registers’
are under development regarding persons, enterprises, corporations,
buildings, and real estate (Kokkonen, 2004). In Lithuania similar
developments take place, even further because these registers are brought
under the authority of one single government agency, the State Enterprise of
Registers (Sabaliauskas, 2004). The same happened in Scotland in the
‘Registers of Scotland’ (Blaikie, 2003). In Germany a large pilot project
called GEOBASIS.NRW was started in 1999 under the aegis of the Ministry of
Interior (Brüggemann, 2004). In the UK several governmental data-suppliers
work together in data-sharing and shared service provision in the pilot
project National Land Information System NLIS in Bristol in which Her
Majesty’s Land Registry HMLR and the Ordnance Survey take a prominent role
(Smith, 1998). Also in other parts of the world these developments might be
observed (Groot, 1999) (FIG Innsbruck, 2004)
6. FUNCTION OF LAND ADMINISTRATION IN SOCIETY
The definition of ‘land administration’ as ‘the process of determining,
recording and disseminating information about ownership, value and use of
land, when implementing land management policies’ has proven to be a guiding
principle in policy documents, research programmes, and education and
training (UN/ECE, 1996). Although other definitions are used (e.g. Dale &
McLaughlin, 1999), and also the definition is challenged (e.g. Fourie, Groot
& van der Molen, 2002), the definition still stands firmly especially when
the concepts of ‘ownership’, ‘value’, and ‘use’ are interpreted in a broad
sense.
The concept of ‘ownership’ should -in my view- be understood as a
relationship between people concerning land within any jurisdiction, thus
the mode in which rights to land are held, and therefore based on statutory
law, common law, and customary traditions.
‘Value’ should be understood as all the values that could be
assigned to land, depending on the purpose of the value, the use of the
land, and the method of valuation.
‘Land use’ should be understood as both the use to which the land
can be put, depending on the purpose and nature of the land, classification,
methodology, and land cover according to defined classification systems
(e.g. FAO Land Classification System, 2000).
The concept of ‘land’ should be understood as the surface of the
earth, the materials beneath the surface, the air above the surface, and
everything attached to the surface – i.e. it should be perceived as more
than just the ‘land’ as such.
The definition reveals that land administration is a process, which
brings application of process-modelling and related topics (e.g. workflow
management, process re-design, and system-support), within the scope of land
administration.
Finally, the definition makes very clear that the land administration
activity is not an end in itself, but that it facilitates the implementation
of land management policies. So, the way land administration should work
depends on the requirements defined by the various instruments, which are at
the disposal of governments in order to allow appropriate implementation of
its land policy.
Unlike many other geographic information systems, which provide
information about geographical objects and their attributes, land
administration systems reflect in principle the social relationship
recognised by a community or a state between people concerning land.
Therefore such a system is in no way just a ‘GIS’. Data recorded in a land
administration system have a social and legal meaning, and are based on
accepted social concepts. That concerns both owners, rights and land
objects. It is not relevant whether these concepts are laid down in the law
or in unwritten customs. In both cases the way the individual people
understandrights to land, the right-holders and the land itself determine
the content and meaning of the land administration system. These rules,
constituting the basic principles for the system and justifying its
existence, form the institutional context for land administration. Without
rules land administration is not possible, as it will be without a societal
and legal meaning. By consequence it will be a meaningless activity, not
worth to put any effort in.
Institutional aspects are therefore of paramount importance. The legal
framework for land issues, and the mandates and tasks entrusted to public
administration to allow the performance of the land administration function,
determine how the system should function. Other institutional measures also
do, although they might be more specific and down to earth, like a
requirement to the financial conditions that the government wants to apply
on the land administration activity: for example that the work should be
executed under a cost recovery regime. Rules for investments in the system,
the way it should operate, the way the government wants to keep control, all
of these can form operational constraints.
Land administration serves various functions in a society. Documents like
Agenda21, Habitat etc. relate the land issue very much to poverty reduction,
sustainable housing, sustainable agriculture and the strengthening of the
role of vulnerable groups in society, like women, farmers, indigenous
groups. A land administration system is –as said earlier- not a purpose in
itself. They are part of such a broader land policy.
Land policy reflects the way governments want to deal with the land issue
in sustainable development, or as the Guidelines say ‘land policy consist of
the whole complex of socio-economic and legal prescriptions that dictate how
the land and the benefits from the land are to be allocated’. That of course
depends on the culture, history and attitude of a people. It is worthwhile
to draw up a picture of the support land administration systems give to the
implementation of (the most important) land policy instruments, as there are
-at least- (GTZ, 1998):
- improvement of land tenure security
- regulation of the land markets
- implementation of urban and rural land use planning, development
and maintenance
- provision of a base for land taxation
Concerning the improvement of land tenure security, the legal
framework of land administration systems (related to the registration or
recording of rights and interest in land) is determining the nature of the
security provided. Within the context of the definition of these rights ‘in
rem’ (as an institutional prerequisite), deed-systems provide a different
(in casu: less) security compared with title systems. The combination of a
strong notary-system (e.g. Latin Notary) and a deed registration
might however provide as much security as the combination of non-authentic
(underhand) documents with a title registration (strong role of the
registrar).
Concerning the regulations for the land market, land administration
systems provide transfer procedures of a different nature. On one hand there
are plain procedures of submission of a transfer document and a recording
after a minimum of formalities (e.g. simple deed registration). On
the other hand there are more complex procedures regarding investigations
prior to the approval of the legal impact of the transfer (e.g. issuing
of a title certificate). Some countries require approval by a chief
surveyor, a chief planner or another authority. Advantage is that e.g. a
building permit is granted together with the title, while in the first case
the procedure for planning- and building permits starts just after the
transfer. The process-time necessary for the transfer procedure (for example
from the obligatory agreement to the official recording or registration,
that is often used as a benchmark) therefore might result in a different ‘value’
for the applicant.
Concerning urban and rural land use planning, development and control,
the support of land administration systems lies foremost in the phase of
development and control of a given land use. This activity is to be seen as
an intervention by the government in private rights to dispose. Without
knowledge about who owns what and where (also in customary areas)
land management will be hardly possible for the government. From the
landowner’s point of view, intervention by the government specifically
limits his private right to dispose on the actual parcel, being the legal
object of his private rights. The intervention takes an ultimate form in the
execution of pre-emptive rights and expropriation. Regarding protection of
third parties in good faith, pre-emptive rights and expropriation decisions
should therefore be recorded in the land administration system.
Concerning the support of land taxation, the fact is that land tax
is an outstanding example of local tax. Without knowledge about taxable
persons, taxable objects and land values (all data to be provided by the
land administration system), the generated revenue can not be high. Land
taxation in many countries is based on land administration systems.
The management of environmental resources is of increasing
importance. The measures a government can take, are in many cases executed
by imposing restrictions on the use of land. A good example is soil
sanitation, where governments can impose on owners of land a compulsory soil
cleaning, and can give such measures the status of real right, which means
that these orders have legal power against third parties (e.g. new owners).
Therefore these public encumbrances are eligible for registration.
Focusing on land taxation, a study on European Land Tax Systems in 23
countries (Brown & Hepworth, 2000) revealed that they all levy some sort of
land tax. In the majority of cases the countries have a cadastral system for
the recording of property related information. As said earlier, the nature
and implementation of such systems varies considerably from being a series
of different registers often administrated at various levels of government
on one hand to a single register administered at national level on the other
hand. Even in those countries such as Macedonia and Moldavia, which have
adopted a self assessment system, central information systems are used to
ensure that the information given by the taxpayer is appropriate.
7. PROBLEMS AND BARRIERS OF THE SITUATION IN EUROPE
Obstacles and barriers in the development of good land administration
within an information infrastructure might have different aspects as shown
earlier.
Regarding the legal frameworks of the European countries, rather
large changes are necessary to include digital lodgement of legal documents
and electronic signatures. Normally land laws are focused on analogue
working processes which exclude legal validity for other forms e.g. digital
ones. In Finland, a new Act on Electronic Service in the Administration was
endorsed in 2000 (Kokkonen, 2004). In Poland, a new set of laws is in place
that constitute a solid body for e-governance and e-commerce (Sambura,
2004). In England and Wales, a new Land Registration Act passed the
Parliament , introducing specific powers to facilitate the introduction of a
system of e-conveyancing (Beardsall, 2004). In the Netherlands, an
adaptation of the Cadastre Act is still pending (Louwman, 2004).
Another legal issue concerns copyright and pricing of electronic data.
Whilst these aspects are often rather clear in an analogue situation,
digital data flowing around on the internet appears to be unprotected and
available for free. Not many countries have effectively solved these
problems yet. The same applies to the enforcement of standards that
establish interoperability.
Regarding institutional arrangements the role of the courts in the
land registration process is under review in the Scandinavian countries. For
example Norway and Finland recognise the difficulty of creating efficient
land administration in an infrastructure environment, when local courts are
to take part in it. Trend is -in any case- to concentrate the land
registration work in 5 may be 6 larger courts, and even to transfer the task
as a whole to the Cadastre (Statens Kartverk Norway, National Land Survey
Finland).
Regarding operational issues the fact that in many European land
administration organisations the information systems have been in place now
for 10-20 years and are to be qualified as good-working but old fashioned,
while the maintenance is getting more and more complex, and the costs are
getting more and more expensive, places a heavy burden on IT-capacity and
budget. These organisations now are increasingly faced with rapid
developments in the technology, a technology push: internet, geodatabases,
modelling standards, open systems, GIS as well as a growing demand for new
services, a market pull: enhanced user requirements, e-governance,
sustainable development, electronic conveyance, integration of public data
and systems. The strategy to renew those information systems while the ‘shop
stays open’ varies from country to country, however there are two main
options: a big bang approach, where systems are replaced at a certain fixed
date, and the more evolutionary approach, where step by step system
re-engineering is carried out (FIG Commission 7, 2003). Apart from that, the
impact of these developments on organisational structures and skills of
staff are not always well understood (van der Molen, 2004).
At the information level the main reasons for lack of data
availability are that data is too expensive, data is not usable, lack of
market transparency, too high expectations of hard- and software, too
limited user rights, too high expectations of personnel, and too complicated
ordering, delivering, and paying. This leads in NordRhein Westfalia
(Germany) to the estimation of a information market worth 8020 million euro,
from which only 15% is actually exploited (Brüggemann, 2004).
8. ISSUES FOR CONSIDERATION
There are actually three issues at least, that deserve political
attention.
Firstly this pertains to the political decision to embark on a
coordinated information management within the government, in order to reap
the economic benefits of data sharing and data integration. A system of well
coordinated base registers is beneficial for the government, but might also
lead to added value activities by the information industry that contributes
to economic growth.
Secondly this concerns the development of laws that facilitate the
use of electronic signatures and recognise the legal authenticity of
electronic documents.
Thirdly the implementation of all this depends on how active the
leadership of involved organisations is in pursuing change-management, in
order to cope with the necessary changes. Politically responsible ministers
should make this necessary change high on the agenda.
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NOTE
This paper is based on material presented during a conference in
Aguascalientes Mexico November 2004.
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES
Dorine Burmanje (49) is chair of the Executive Board of the
Netherlands Cadastre, Land Registry and Mapping Agency since May 2004. Prior
to this, she was a director of the Waterboard Rijn and IJssel (since 1999),
manager Association of Utility Companies (since 1995), free lance
change-manager (since 1991), director of a foundation educational
counselling (since 1986) and vice-director of a large school for
intermediate vocational education (since 1978). She has a university degree
in remedial education.
CONTACTS
Dorine Burmanje, chair Executive Board
Cadastre, Land Registry and Mapping Agency
P.O. Box 9046
7300 GH Apeldoorn
THE NETHERLANDS
Tel. + 31.55.528.5231
Fax + 31.55.355.5456
Email: femke.post@kadaster.nl
Web site: www.kadaster.nl
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