The Bathurst Declaration on Land Administration for Sustainable Development

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Transcription:

United Nations and International Federation of Surveyors The Bathurst Declaration on Land Administration for Sustainable Development

The Story The cumulative evolution of society s land administration needs (western examples) pre-industrial revolution: land as wealth and cadastre as basic record and fiscal tool industrial revolution: land as commodity and cadastre as land market tool post-war reconstruction: land as scarce resource and cadastre as planning tool sustainable development: land as scarce community resource and cadastre as land management tool + + +

The Story (continued) The relationship of humankind to land is dynamic As a result, the supporting land administration infrastructures are dynamic The humankind to land relationship is changing due to global drivers

Social and Environmental Imperatives half the world s population lives in urban areas; 40-60% of urban population have no secure land tenure; 2/3 of world s population will live in water stressed conditions by 2025; a tenfold reduction in resource consumption of industrialized countries is necessary to meet the needs of developing countries;

Social and Environmental Imperatives in 1995, 25% of the world s mammal species were at risk of total extinction; women account for half the world s population but they own only 1% of world wealth; every continent faces indigenous rights issues.

Why the Bathurst Declaration nearly three decades since the Stockholm Declaration on the environment; seven years since Agenda 21; still far from sustainable development; imperative for fundamental institutional, legal and technological reforms; land administration infrastructures are crucial for sustainable development.

Background FIG Statement on the Cadastre - 1995 UN-FIG Bogor Declaration on Cadastral Reform - 1996 MOLA Land Administration Guidelines 1996 FIG CADASTRE 2014-1998 UN-FIG Bathurst Declaration Land Administration for Sustainable Development - 1999

Delegates 40 world experts in land administration from: 5 continents 25 developing and developed countries 5 UN agencies and World Bank FIG and particularly Commission 7 (Cadastre and Land Management) Chosen for their expertise and established record of achievement in their respective areas

United Nations UN DESA, Division for Sustainable Development, New York; UN DESA, Division for Statistics, New York; UNCHS (Habitat), Nairobi; UNFAO, Rome; UNECA, Addis Ababa; World Bank, Washington DC; Meeting of Officials of Land Administration (MOLA), UNECE; and PCGIAP created by UNRCC for Asia and the Pacific.

Delegates Extended to experts with backgrounds including: surveyors, lawyers, economists, valuers, anthropologists, geographers, planners, information technologists, government administrators, academics, private sector.

Process Pre-workshop: draft outline of the Declaration and draft of key topics many participants (25) were asked to prepare a paper on a recommended topic that was based around the workshop themes

Process One-week residential workshop: each topic discussed in small groups then debated in plenary draft of key points for comment and modification three Plenary Discussions of successive drafts of Declaration, Recommendations and Report

International Melbourne Conference Official launch of Bathurst Declaration on Land Administration for Sustainable Development Presentation of position papers Extensive discussions

Future Actions Report to UNRCC for Asia and Pacific, March 2000 Report to UN Sustainable Development Commission in New York in April, 2000 Present to FIG General Assembly, May, 2000 Present at a wide range of conferences and distribute to countries and NGOs widely

Executive Summary The Bathurst Workshop examined: future humankind/land relationships, the role of land in sustainable development, food, water and land policies, land tenure and land administration systems, how land markets, land registration, spatial planning and valuation interact, and re-engineering land administration systems.

Executive Summary (continued) Global context: sustainable development (social, economic, environmental) e.g. rapid urbanization, water crisis, land degradation economic restructuring information revolution globalization

The Bathurst Declaration Calls for: legal security of tenure and access to property for all men and women; institutional reforms to give people full and equal access to economic resources and investment in the necessary property infrastructure; halving the number of people around the world who do not have effective, secure access to property rights in land by the Year 2010;

The Bathurst Declaration Calls for: investing in the necessary land administration infrastructure and in dissemination of land information to achieve reforms; strengthened cooperation between land administration professionals; full and active participation by local communities in formulating and implementing the policy agenda;

The Bathurst Declaration Calls for: improved access to land and to land administration systems by all, especially women, indigenous groups, the poor and the disadvantaged; development of user-driven systems for sustainable development; flow of information on land and property between government agencies and the public;

The Bathurst Declaration Calls for: efficient operation of land markets through appropriate regulatory frameworks that address environmental and social concerns; UN to undertake a study and produce an atlas of global land tenure and land administration issues;

The Bathurst Declaration Calls for: coordinated UN-FIG education and training in land administration; country profile analyses of land administration systems; development of performance indicators.

Conclusion Sustainable development is not attainable without sound land administration Good Land Information Better Land Policy Better Land Admin/ Management Better Land Use