The Global Role of Surveying in the New Millennium
by Robert W. Foster
Key words: FIG, surveying, sustainable development,
globalization.
Abstract
Globalization and sustainable development are two concepts being
discussed at length today. How globalization will affect surveyors
depends in large part on how surveyors define their profession and on
how surveyors see themselves in the world arena. The activities of
surveying, as defined by FIG, are examined.
The sustainable development concept is a response to the many
symptoms of an over-expanding world population and its impact on the
natural environment. In sustainable development, each generation would
utilize the world’s resources in order to meet its needs without
inhibiting future generations from meeting their needs. Three general
ways are suggested in which the surveying profession may contribute to
achieving sustainable development. The role of FIG is examined with an
explanation and further examination of the FIG Bureau Work Plan.
Two major goals of the current Bureau Work Plan are "improving
FIG’s responsiveness to the needs of the Member organizations’
members", and "developing of contacts with United Nations
agencies and other international organizations in the context of the
Commissions’ work plans".
Robert W. Foster
President
International Federation of Surveyors
FIG Office
Lindevangs Allé 4
DK-2000 Frederiksberg
DENMARK
Tel. + 45 3886 1081
Fax + 45 3886 0252
E-mail: rwfoster@juno.com or FIG@FIG.net
The Global Role of Surveying for the New
Millennium
The theme chosen by the US Bureau members during
the years we were still a "shadow bureau", was The Global
Role of Surveying in the 21st Century. Two concepts we are
hearing more and more about these days speak directly to the condition
of our changing world in the 21st century. Those concepts are
globalization and sustainable development.
Globalization
In his keynote address to the XX FIG Congress in
Melbourne, Australia in 1994, Dr. Peter Ellyard pointed out that the
global trend most relevant to the future of surveying is what he
called creation of a planetary society and culture, and what we
commonly refer to as globalization. The term "globalization"
is used in the popular press to refer to a growing web of trade and
investment between and among nations, bringing economies into close
proximity - and dragging societies and cultures along in the process.
The emergence of a common market and common currency in Europe is an
example. The North American Free Trade Agreement, an event of
considerable controversy in my country, is another. The General
Agreement on Trade in Services provides for a set of multilateral
rules for the conduct of services trade and creates a framework for a
process of liberalization.
One commentator recently stated, "If anything
seems obvious today, it is that globalization is a new and powerful
force that is erasing national borders and linking the world in an
unprecedented web of trade and investments."
Many surveyors do not see themselves affected by
globalization. Many of us work no more than a few kilometers from our
home offices. We do not sell our services beyond local boundaries and
see little prospect for doing so in the near future. We recognize that
for the producers of products and commodities globalization is a major
economic factor determining prosperity or failure. A few service
industries, like banking, communications and entertainment find
immense opportunity in the globalization phenomenon, but for many of
us surveying is a local service to be marketed locally. This is the
myopic view of surveying. It is the limited vision of the local
practitioner (of which I am one) who provides surveying services in
his or her own community and perhaps the immediately adjacent
communities.
The broader view recognizes surveying in all its
applications. Consider the FIG definition of surveying which describes
nine activities "which may occur either on, above or below the
surface of the land or the sea and may be carried out in association
with other professionals". Those activities, briefly, are
- The determination of the size and shape of the earth
- The positioning of physical features, structures and engineering
works
- The determination of the position of boundaries of public or
private land
- The design, establishment and administration of geographic
information systems
- The study of the natural and social environment for the planning
of development in urban, rural and regional areas
- The planning, development and redevelopment of property
- The assessment of value and the management of property
- The planning, measurement and management of construction works
- The production of plans, maps, files, charts and reports
In my country only one of those nine is the
exclusive activity of the licensed surveyor in most jurisdictions.
Four more are activities commonly performed by some US surveyors. The
remaining four activities are not considered to be within the scope of
what we call "surveying" in the United States. What is true
in the US is also true in many other countries: the FIG definition of
surveying goes well beyond surveying as it is practiced in much of the
world. I maintain that if we are to be active in the globalization of
this new millennium, we must be consistent in our definition of who we
are and what we do. And, not incidentally, if measuring and
positioning are to become, as many in the profession predict, purely
mechanical activities due to the new technologies, it behooves us to
broaden the scope of our activities. Where planning, valuation and the
management of land are not considered "surveying",
associations in those countries should seek to include them. It will
not be easy. Legislation, educational systems and institutional
arrangements must be addressed. Political considerations may play a
role. There will be resistance both from within and from outside the
profession. None the less, if "surveying" is to be a player
on the world scene it must expand its activities and it must be clear
in its definition of itself.
But globalization will have its own impact on
surveyors with a local base of operations. In a negative sense,
globalization may bring foreign competitors into their own backyards,
especially if standardization for competency in geomatics becomes a
reality, as has been proposed to the International Standards
Organization, ISO. In a positive sense the international recognition
of surveying in its broader definition may bring greater status to all
surveyors. Surveying is not yet seen as a discipline vital to all the
world’s economies.
Returning to Dr. Ellyard’s 1994 address in
Melbourne: he advised that the surveying profession must develop
"a clear vision of where it wants to go and then organize itself
to go there." FIG has accepted that challenge. The current FIG
Strategic Plan has as one of its stated objectives, "Facilitating
in the evolution and development of the profession". The
surveying profession must evolve and develop in order to keep pace
with the evolution and development of the world’s economies through
globalization.
Sustainable
development
Consider what we know - or believe - about the
current condition of our world and its occupants:
- The world’s population has doubled in the last 40 years and
passed the 6 billion mark only a few months ago. It is predicted
to reach 8.5 billion by the year 2030, a population level thought
by many scientists to be the maximum number of people supportable
by the world’s resources and capacity for food production.
- Less than half the world’s population has secure access to
land. Women comprise roughly half the world’s population yet 70%
live in poverty and women own less than 1% of the world’s
wealth.
- The world’s tropical rain forests are crucial to the global
climate and give living space to half of all living species, but
were being destroyed at a rate of 20 million hectares a year by
1990 according to the World Resources Institute.
- The United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
predicts that global warming may cause a significant rise in sea
levels by the year 2090 due to melting of the polar ice caps. Vast
coastal areas could be inundated, from the harbors of the world’s
industrial nations to the desert areas of North Africa. Other
sources predict that 80% of the world’s population will be
living within 50 km of the coastal zones by mid-century. The
combination of massive coastal flooding and the tendency of
populations to settle in coastal areas suggests enormous social
hardship and dislocation in the near future.
It is an irony, on the other hand, that two thirds
of the world’s population will live in water-stressed conditions by
the year 2025, according to current forecasts.
The sustainable development concept is a response
to these reports of social inequities and the physical condition of
our earth. Sustainable development may be defined as the utilization
of the world’s resources in order to meet our needs without
inhibiting future generations from meeting their needs. The Bathurst
Workshop on Land Tenure and Cadastral Infrastructure for Sustainable
Development, held in Australia last October, produced "The
Bathurst Declaration on Land Administration for Sustainable
Development". It is a document that will be a major center of
discussion and reference in the months and years ahead. The
Declaration recommends a global commitment to:
- Providing effective legal security of tenure and access to
property for all men and women, including indigenous peoples,
those living in poverty and other disadvantaged groups;
- Providing the land administration reforms essential for
sustainable development and facilitating full and equal access for
men and women to land-related economic opportunities, such as
credit and natural resources;
- Investing in the necessary land administration infrastructure
and in the dissemination of land information required to achieve
these reforms;
- Halving the number of people around the world who do not have
effective access to secure property rights in land by the year
2010.
The recommendations are ambitious and will require
a nearly unanimous international commitment to their objectives. The
question for us is, how shall the surveying community participate in
these worthy goals? I will suggest three general ways in which we may
participate:
- We are the data-gathering experts. Our members are the
professionals who will assemble and quantify data as to the world’s
land and resources, their value and their current distribution.
- Our members are the professionals who will plan the cadastral
and land registration systems to enable markets to deal equitably
in the distribution of land and its resources; others of our
members will provide crucial urban and rural land use planning.
Land management and land administration are the specific interests
of Commission 7 of FIG but the Bathurst Declaration defines land
administration as the process of determining, recording and
disseminating information about the tenure, value and use of land
when implementing land use policies. By that definition all the
commissions of FIG are involved in land administration.
- The greatest difficulty in achieving sustainable development may
prove to be the political problem of convincing all nations to
concentrate on the development of resources and distribution of
land in order to meet people’s needs while the richer nations
continue to spend resources meeting people’s less vital wants
and desires. Such political problems can only be overcome by
effective public education, an effort in which all our members can
participate.
The role
for FIG
We know what our members can contribute in the
effort to achieve sustainable development; now the question is, what
should be FIG’s role at the beginning of this new millennium?
The current FIG Bureau recognizes two main
principles of organization. First, the commissions of FIG are the very
heart of the Federation. They do the work in the technical fields for
which the Federation exists. We intend to support the commissions
financially to the limits permitted by budgetary constraints. We also
intend to hold the commissions accountable for their work plans. We
will encourage their efforts and we will look expectantly for results.
Secondly, we recognize that the member national
associations are FIG. The member associations provide the funds and
the delegates for FIG. Yet we have found that historically, the
leadership of the member associations is removed from direct contact
with the leadership and workings of FIG. A member association
characteristically pays its subscription and appoints its delegates,
but has little more to do with the operation of the Federation. Rarely
do the member associations comment on either the objectives of FIG or
its policies and actions. Immediate past president Dale began a
tradition of inviting the leaders of the member associations to the
FIG working weeks for discussion of matters of interest to them. We
intend to continue this practice. We will also urge all the delegates
to carry information back to their associations. We do not believe
that the delegates should participate in commission work and the
deliberations of the General Assembly without the involvement of, and
some direction from, their home associations.
More specifically, the US Bureau’s Work Plan for
the years 2000 through 2003 states its primary objective as "the
improving of FIG’s responsiveness to the needs of the member
organization’s members". The Bureau intends to achieve this
goal by:
- Increasing the effectiveness and responsiveness of the
commission work plans through Bureau oversight;
- Developing, through the commissions, products, training and
services which have practical application to the member
organizations and their individual members, and
- Communicating the commissions’ accomplishments to the member
organizations and others.
- Developing of contacts with UN agencies and other international
organizations in the context of the commission work plans.
We believe that another way to bring the member
associations into a closer working relationship with FIG is to allow
for a more democratic selection of the administrative body of FIG, the
body we now call the Bureau. Following the recommendation of the Task
Force on Governance, instituted during the UK Bureau, we will bring a
proposal to the General Assembly in Prague which will provide for the
election of the President and an Administrative Council of FIG.
Instead of choosing the administrative body on the basis of the
location of the next FIG Congress, there will be a popular election of
these leaders by the General Assembly.
"Developing of contacts with UN agencies and
other international organizations in the context of the commission
work plans" is an FIG Bureau effort that has been underway since
the Bureau resided in Finland more than eight years ago. More recently
we have appointed Professor Ian Williamson of the University of
Melbourne, Australia as Director of FIG-UN Liaison in order to secure
and formalize relations between our organizations.
FIG and
the United Nations
An FIG/UN Roundtable meeting was held in Melbourne
in October, following the Bathurst meeting. The roundtable’s purpose
was to develop a cooperative agreement between FIG and the United
Nations agencies during the term of office of the US Bureau. The
participants were:
- UN Centre for Human Settlements (UNCHS(Habitat))
- UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)
- UN Commission for Sustainable Development
- The World Bank
- UN Economic Commission for Europe, Working Party on Land
Administration (former knows as MOLA)
- Permanent Committee on GIS Infrastructure for Asia and the
Pacific
- UN Economic Commission for Africa
- Permanent Committee on GIS Infrastructure for the Americas
- The German Agency for Technical Cooperation and
- FIG represented by President Peter Dale, Ian Williamson, Markku
Villikka and myself.
From the Roundtable discussions came FIG
Publication No. 22, "Co-operation Between FIG and the UN Agencies
2000 - 2003", which summarizes the comments of the roundtable
participants and sets forth guidelines for future FIG/UN cooperation.
Key among the guidelines are the two following statements:
- To recognize that FIG is a non-profit organization whose great
strength is its access to a large pool of experienced
professionals, who in general contribute their services
voluntarily to FIG activities, and
- To recognize that FIG is in a unique position to bring together
various UN agencies interested in land administration and spatial
information management as a group to discuss issues of common
concern. In this regard FIG can act as a facilitator in
encouraging networking between UN institutions and bilateral
institutions.
The role of FIG in its relationship with the United
Nations may be summarized in those guideline statements. It is access
to experienced professionals in our various disciplines that makes FIG
valuable to the UN; and it is as facilitator creating networking links
between UN agencies and others that FIG has proven itself of value to
the UN. Value of the relationship to FIG is summarized in other
guidelines that encourage progress in advancing our work plans and
recognize that seed funding from UN agencies is required in order to
support joint UN/FIG activities.
If the new world order of the 21st
century is globalization, the greatest challenge to civilization may
be to achieve sustainable development. Our profession must deal
successfully with the globalization phenomenon in order to fulfill its
responsibilities in the sustainable development challenge. This is the
beginning of a century in which life for all earth’s occupants my
improve uniformly - or may degenerate to levels of universal hardship
unfamiliar to most of us in the so-called developed countries. Mine is
the optimistic view, and I believe that these next few decades are to
be an exciting and rewarding time for the members of our profession as
we involve ourselves in the struggle to preserve and improve living
conditions through the "best practices" of land
administration.
Robert W. Foster
President
International Federation of Surveyors
FIG Office
E-mail: rwfoster@juno.com
3 April 2000
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