Spatially Enabled Society Role of the Cadastre

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armasuisse Bundesamt für Landestopografie swisstopo Swiss Federal Directorate for Cadastral Surveying Spatially Enabled Society Role of the Cadastre XXIV FIG International Congress 2010 FIG-Task Force «Spatially Enabled Society» Dr. Daniel Steudler and Dr. Abbas Rajabifard Table of Content Introduction Problems that global community is facing, the needs of societies Role of landownership Vision statements for a Spatially Enabled Society 2 Sydney, Australia, 11 16 April 2010 1

Reversal of perspective What does society need? What are its requirements? Problems that humankind, respective we as a global community are facing: pollution, climate change, global warming, sea level rising, disaster management, shortage of natural and energy resources, land grabbing, mobility, traffic, global financial crisis, overpopulation, increasing urbanization, poverty UN - Millennium Development Goals by 2015: eradication of extreme poverty and hunger, ensure environmental sustainability, develop global partnership for development 3 World status of poverty 4 Sydney, Australia, 11 16 April 2010 2

World Map of GDP 32 5 Urban population growth RURAL 63% URBAN 37% RURAL 53% URBAN 47% RURAL 40% URBAN 60% 1970 2000 2030 Total world population : 6.5 billion 2007: Total urban population: 3.3 billion Total slum dwellers: 1.1 billion 6 Sydney, Australia, 11 16 April 2010 3

Kibera Kibera, Nairobi, 250 ha, 1 mill+ people 7 Bandah Aceh before Tsunami 8 Sydney, Australia, 11 16 April 2010 4

Bandah Aceh after Tsunami 9 Aceh: mosque in washed out land 10 Sydney, Australia, 11 16 April 2010 5

Flooding in Switzerland 11 Architects model I 12 Sydney, Australia, 11 16 April 2010 6

Architects model II 13 Architects model III 14 Sydney, Australia, 11 16 April 2010 7

Architects model IV 15 House of global community 16 Sydney, Australia, 11 16 April 2010 8

How to approach such challenges? as any other problems, global problems have a spatial dimension ("everything happens somewhere"); in order to overcome such problems, to monitor them and to do the proper planning, data and information is required; this information has to represent reality as close as possible; data modelling is needed in order to organize the information involved; these data models have to: represent the actual situation, provide the basis for planning and monitoring the projects, be able to do simulations of alternatives of the planned solutions, provide the correct location spatial enablement. 17 Three ingredients for spatial enablement of society's needs positioning infrastructure content land ownership information 18 Sydney, Australia, 11 16 April 2010 9

Role of landownership everything happens somewhere; always on somebody's property; for planning, monitoring and sustainable development, landownership data is required; even when property is state owned, society needs to know; society needs a documentation system for landownership as a basis for informed decision-making. 19 Documentation of landownership in history Domesday Book (William the Conqueror) 1086 Maria Theresia Cadastre (Austro-Hungarian Monarchy ) 1792 Cadastre by Napoleon 1807 20 Sydney, Australia, 11 16 April 2010 10

3 dimensions of the cadastre for sustainability Economic dimension Fiscal income for government Transparent land market Administration of public-rights restrictions provides a more transparent land market Social dimension Legal security of ownership provides social security Environmental dimension Resource planning and management Land-use planning, management of zoning 21 Land management and landownership land consolidation is an essential tool for good land management; this tool is suited for agricultural areas; but also for urban areas; and for larger zoning projects such as for example for "industrial zoning consolidation" across municipalities; land consolidation always needs landownership information. 22 Sydney, Australia, 11 16 April 2010 11

Land administration in a larger context Tasks Land related activities Tools / Methods Strategy visions and objectives Land policy political activities Management measures and projects for the implementation of the policy Land management land-use planning land consolidation land reallocation melioration landscape development land recycling Administration / Documentation handling of spatial information, data analysis, data visualization cadastral operations, data modelling, data acquisition, data maintenance, data distribution Land administration and cadastre monitoring navigation geoinformation land registration cartography surveying geodesy 23 Lack of landownership information in disaster management Thailand after Tsunami: lack of proper landownership information allowed financial investors to take over land, while local fisherman have been ousted from their properties a well documented landownership information would have protected minorities with lesser economic power against exploitation. Aceh: the lack of a land registry and cadastre caused huge problems for reconstruction, planning, and social stability. Haiti: clear landownership information would support a much quicker recovery (Kappeler, 2010). Disaster management starts before the disaster; landownership information is crucial. 24 Sydney, Australia, 11 16 April 2010 12

Inventory of natural hazards in combination with landownership information 25 Private landownership supporting environmental sustainability Azerbaijan after transition in 1990's: private landownership was introduced initially for land within the village only; land outside the villages remained common property respective state property; village society was not sufficiently organized; sheep secure the income of the rural population; sheep stock became approx. 5 times as big as the actual capacity of the land would have been; serious erosion and degradation problems; basic problem was the lack of responsibility and accountability. 26 Sydney, Australia, 11 16 April 2010 13

Landownership plays a central role landownership data is required for planning, monitoring and sustainable development; disaster management starts before the disaster; landownership information is crucial; accountability: only stakeholders with ownership rights i.e. landowners take responsibility; tools for land management need reliable landownership information. Private landownership is crucial; it needs to be secured by an appropriate land policy driven by sustainable development principles and documented with an efficient and reliable land administration system. 27 Positioning infrastructure "everything happens somewhere" many business applications are in need of position data CORS provide high accuracy business cases show a high potential (Higgins, 2009) accuracy not really a problem anymore nowadays A positioning infrastructure provides the spatial enablement of content. 28 Sydney, Australia, 11 16 April 2010 14

Modelling of content based on the positioning infrastructure, content is added to locations; content needs to be organized, i.e. modelled in order to be helpful for monitoring, planning, and managing change; the data model behind has to represent reality as close as possible; data modelling would have to be done according to accepted standards in order to share the data and allow ease of use; Data modelling is the enabling technology to organize the content of data. Data modelling standards are crucial for the sharing of data. 29 Statement 3 on Cadastre 2014 cadastral modelling 'Cadastral mapping' will be dead! Long live modelling! 30 Sydney, Australia, 11 16 April 2010 15

Structure for land information system Legal topic spatial data textual data Stakeholders (data owners) Water protection Local government Noise protection Local government Environmental protection Environmental department Land use planning Planning department Indigenous land rights Tribe, clan Collective land rights Corporations Land ownership, cadastre National government State government Local government Two preconditions: common geodetic reference framework common data modelling concept 31 The Social Tenure Domain Model Party Social Tenure Relationship Spatial Unit Right Parcel Person (Lemmen, 2009) Sydney, Australia, 11 16 April 2010 16

Network infrastructure Spatial Data Infrastructure Less detailed data Vertical Relationship Horizontal Relationship Global Decisions Regional Decisions National Decisions State Decisions Local Decisions Organizational Decisions Global SDI Regional SDI National SDI State SDI Local SDI Organizational SDI More detailed Data Rajabifard, 2007 Network infrastructure for sharing spatial data. 33 Data and information We are living in the information age, where patchwork information is not good enough. Data needs to be: comprehensive complete updated reliable 34 Sydney, Australia, 11 16 April 2010 17

Public sector information (PSI) spatial data, above all, cadastral information tends to be managed by government and is often not readily available; value of data lies in its use; fee policies vs. cost recovery policy or the balance between accessibility and cost recovery; PSI needs to be accessible in an efficient way. PSI initiative in Europe GILF initiative in Australia (GILF = Government Information Licensing Framework, gilf.gov.au) Public sector information needs to be accessible in defined and easy ways in order to facilitate its multiple use. 35 Six vision statements for a SES A society is spatially enabled, when: 1. A positioning infrastructure is in place. 2. Content is added with data modelling standards in place that allow to model reality as close as possible. 3. Private landownership is established, well documented, and its information readily available. 4. A network infrastructure for spatial data is in place in order to provide access to data and information. 5. Data and information is comprehensive, complete, updated, and reliable. 6. Access to relevant public sector information is organized and efficient. 36 Sydney, Australia, 11 16 April 2010 18

Changing role of (cadastral) surveyors from measurement to management global land management perspective land administration systems provide the infrastructure for implementing land policy and land management strategies in support of sustainable development no development will take place without a spatial component we are not talking of maps any longer, we are in the information business!!! 37 Sydney, Australia, 11 16 April 2010 19