THE FIG AGENDA 21
Helge ONSRUD, Chair of FIG Task Force on
Sustainable Development
Key words: Sustainable development, role of
surveyors, role of FIG.
1. BACKGROUND
The International Federation of Surveyors FIG
decided at the its Congress in Brighton in 1998 to form a Task Force
to prepare an FIG statement on how the Federation will implement the
concept of sustainable development.
It was agreed to title the statement "FIG
Agenda 21", referring to the report from the United Nations 1992
Rio Conference on Environment and Development which resulted the
Agenda 21. The statement shall, however, not be limited only to
reflect Agenda 21. It shall as well, inter alia, reflect the outcome
of the United Nations Conference on Human Settlements (HABITAT II)
held in Istanbul in 1996 and its result the Habitat Agenda with the
Global Plan of Action. Further it is, in part, implementation of the
Memorandum of understanding between FIG and UNCHS (Habitat), the Bogor
and Bathurst Declarations, and the existing1991 FIG statement on
sustainable development.
Dealing with surveying, planning and management of
land and water resources, laws and systems needed for access to land
and security of tenure, and with geographic information in all its
aspects, the surveying profession is deeply involved in issues of
profound importance for sustainable development. Surveyors' training
and performance can have a significant impact on the implementation of
sustainable development. The aim of the FIG Agenda 21 is to show that
the Federation is committed to do its utmost to develop the surveying
profession and the individual surveyor to act in accordance with the
principles of sustainable development.
FIG is further committed to collaborate with all
relevant United Nations agencies and with other non-governmental
organisations in developing a mutual understanding of how surveying in
all its aspects, as well as related techniques, products and services,
best can contribute to the implementation of Agenda 21 world-wide.
The FIG Agenda 21 has been prepared by a Task Force
that was chaired by Helge Onsrud (Norway).
1.1 A World in Crises
Almost all societies of the world are currently
undergoing change at a pace never observed before. The world's
population increased from less than three billion at the beginning of
the last century, to pass six billion at the start of the new
millennium. Developing countries are experiencing a massive migration
to urban areas, where poor people are increasingly concentrated in
slums and squatter settlements in ever-expanding cities. Since 1950
the global urban population has jumped from 750 million to more than
2,500 million people. It is estimated that, in developing countries,
88 per cent of the population growth during the next 25 years will be
in urban settlements. Within 30 years, two thirds of the world's
population will live in cities. The urban growth is mostly informal
and unplanned, often resulting in people settling in dangerous
locations. Already half the world's population lives within 60
kilometres from the coastline, one-third of which is at high risk from
degradation brought about by human activity.
In many countries fresh water availability is
approaching crisis point. 1.3 billion people do not have access to
clean water and it is estimated that five million die annually from
diseases caused by water contamination.
Large areas of land for food production are lost
annually to erosion and urban growth. The human-induced depletion of
the ozone layer and climate change has the potential to cause major
problems to health and settlements in many parts of the world.
The last thirty years have witnessed a growing
understanding that the earth cannot sustain current levels of
pollution and utilisation of natural resources. Human behaviour and
policies must change radically and the pressure on the world's natural
environment must be reduced
At the same time 25 per cent of the world's
population lives in deep poverty. 1.3 billion people live on less than
1 US dollar per day; 2.6 billion do not have access to basic
sanitation. It is estimated that three quarters of a billion people
not receive enough food. One billion people living in urban areas lack
access to adequate shelter and more than one billion of the city
dwellers are without secure tenure to houses or land.
It has become widely recognised that general change
within societies – development – throughout the world must
be oriented towards behaviour and actions that do not destroy the
natural environment. Within this framework, it is also generally
agreed that changes in behaviour and actions must be expressed in
policies that simultaneously improve living conditions for the poor
peoples. Removing barriers that keep people in poverty is important
for the protection of the environment; but it is also a human
challenge and responsibility in itself.
The world faces two major challenges - protecting
the natural environment and, at the same time, removing poverty.
1.2 Sustainable Development - a Policy for Change
Responding to the above challenges, national
governments, at the United Nations 1992 Rio Conference on Environment
and Development, commonly agreed on the concept of Sustainable
Development as a general principle for policies and actions in
a large number of fields and sectors of societies.
Sustainable development was defined by the World
Commission on Environment and Development in their report on "Our
Common Future" as "development that meets the needs of
the present without compromising the ability of future generations to
meet their own needs".
Expressed in a more direct way, policies for
sustainable development contains three pillars of equal importance:
- Protecting the natural environment
- Improving the social situation for the poor
- Combating poverty.
The Rio Conference agreed a program for the
implementation of sustainable development in the twenty-first century.
Known as Agenda 21, this focuses, inter alia, on
the strategic importance of an integrated approach to the planning and
management of land. It underlines the importance of sustainable human
settlements and the proper management of land for agriculture and
rural development. It stresses the link between land management and
the protection of bio-diversity, forests and water resources. It
emphasises the need for reliable information for decision-making. It
calls for a stronger role for non-governmental organisations as
partners in sustainable development. It also calls for support from
national governments, regional and local authorities and the
non-governmental sector, all of whom are encouraged to formulate and
adopt local agendas for their respective fields of responsibility.
Since that point of departure, a number of
international events have deepened and widened the understanding of
the profound importance to humanity of achieving sustainability. The
report from the 1996 UN Conference on Human Settlements (Habitat II)
focuses, inter alia, on the major challenge of fast-growing
cities in developing countries - a challenge to be mastered through
proper planning and land management, as well as through security of
tenure as an engine for social and economic improvements. The World
Food Summit (Rome, 1996) underlined the importance of good management
of land in providing food for the rapidly growing world population.
The World Summit on Social Development (Copenhagen, 1995) and the
World Women's Conference (Beijing, 1995) refer, inter alia, to
the importance of giving women, indigenous people and vulnerable
groups equal access to land and security of tenure.
However, in spite of conferences and declarations,
in many parts of the world the developments have been for the worse.
The need for a change in attitudes towards sustainable development is
greater than ever before. This is a challenge to all - to governments
at all levels, to non-governmental organisations and to each
individual, whether a professional or a non-professional person.
1.3 Why FIG Agenda 21?
FIG recognises that professions play an important
role in implementing sustainable development. The surveying profession
plays its part through, inter alia, the planning and management of
land, sea and water resources; the surveying and registration of real
property; and the handling of geographic information.
Even before Rio, the International Federation of
Surveyors expressed its support for the concept of sustainability as a
principle guideline for development. At its annual meeting in Beijing
in 1991 the organisation unanimously adopted the "FIG Statement
on Sustainable Development - a Challenge and a Responsibility for
Surveyors".
During the following decade FIG translated its
support into a number of actions. Surveying for sustainable
development has been a focus of FIG congresses, annual meetings and
commission gatherings. FIG’s collaboration with the United Nations
has been widened and deepened. During the UN Habitat II Conference in
1996 FIG organised, in collaboration with the United Nations Centre
for Human Settlements and the International Federation for real Estate
(FIABCI), one of the ten Habitat II Dialogues for the 21st
Century – the Dialogue on Land and Rural-Urban Linkages – which
provided valuable input to the Habitat Agenda. A joint UN-FIG meeting
was held in Indonesia in 1996, resulting in the Bogor Declaration on
Cadastral Reform The collaboration between UN and FIG in promoting
sustainable development was further developed in a workshop in
Australia in 1999 which prepared the Bathurst Declaration on Land
Administration for Sustainable Development. Co-operation between FIG
and the United Nations Centre for Human Settlements UNCHS(Habitat) was
crystallised into a Memorandum of Understanding in 1997 with a second
extension, covering the period 2000–2003 being signed in May 2000.
These and other events have widened the
understanding of the current and potential future contribution of the
surveying profession to sustainable development, both inside the
profession and within the relevant United Nations agencies. The aim of
this statement is to present this understanding in a concentrated form
to a wider circle of parties and persons, and to present a number of
guiding principles for the implementation of sustainable development
within both FIG itself and the entire surveying profession.
By adopting the FIG Agenda 21, FIG confirms
its support for the concept of sustainable development, and renews its
program for contributing to the implementation of sustainability in
policies and actions on all levels of society.
2. FIG Agenda 21
2.1 Chapter I - Preamble
2.1.1 We, the International Federation of
Surveyors, recognise that the world is confronted with a growing
disparity between and within nations, a worsening of poverty, hunger
and ill health and a continuing deterioration of the ecosystems on
which humanity depends for its well being. We recognise that the only
path forward to a better world for current and future generations is
through integration of environment and development concerns. We
understand that the concept of sustainable development is rooted in
three pillars of equal importance:
- Protecting the natural environment
- Improving the social situation for the poor
- Combating poverty.
2.1.2 We recognise Agenda 21, adopted by the 1992
UN Conference on Environment and Development, as a foundation for
plans, policies and actions for sustainable development. We
acknowledge that other international conferences, including the UN
Conference on Human Settlements (Habitat II 1996), the UN Food Summit
(Rome, 1996), the UN World Summit on Social Development (Copenhagen,
1995) and the UN World Women's Conference (Beijing, 1995) also address
important social, economic and environmental issues. They include
components of the sustainable development agenda, for which successful
implementation depends on actions at local, national and international
levels. We note that in 2000 the United Nations Centre for Human
Settlements launched the Global Campaign for Secure Tenure and that
the UN Commission for Sustainable Development has made security of
tenure a priority matter. Both of these address issues in which the
surveying profession has an important role to play.
2.1.3 We recognise that sustainable development can
only be achieved through a global partnership. Successful
implementation of Agenda 21 is first and foremost a responsibility of
national governments, supported by international co-operation and in
particular by the relevant agencies of the United Nations. However, we
note that Agenda 21 also calls for the broadest possible public
participation and the active involvement of non-governmental
organisations. We fully share the opinion that non-governmental
organisations, at the local as well as the international level, can
and should make a significant contribution to promoting and
implementing sustainable development.
2.1.4 The exploitation and management of the
world's natural resources are of crucial importance for sustainable
development. In particular the good management of land, sea and water
resources will be a prerequisite in ensuring sufficient food for
current and future generations and in protecting bio-diversity. Proper
planning and management of human settlements, both in urban and rural
areas, are critical components in combating poverty and ill health and
for improving the general social and economic situation of the poor.
2.1.5 It is widely recognised that access to land
and security of tenure are of profound importance in improving the
situation of the poor, who frequently live in informal settlements
without recognised rights to shelter or to land that can provide food
for basic needs. The fast-growing number of urban dwellers in non-regularised
settlements in developing countries poses a tremendous challenge in
combating poverty, ill health and illiteracy. In addition to keeping
people in poverty, the unjust distribution of rights to land leads to
violence and is the cause of major conflict in several developing
countries.
2.1.6 The movement of people to urban areas in
developed countries is correspondingly straining many of natural
resources. Inter alia good agriculture land is being used for
housing and local sources of potable water are being destroyed.
2.1.7 Much of the world’s commerce depends on the
shipment of goods by sea and their subsequent transhipment to
land-based modes of transportation through ports. This global activity
creates a high environmental risk in and around the land/sea
interface. Hydrographic knowledge is fundamental to the development of
safe, efficient and sustainable marine navigational infrastructure.
Systems relating to navigational aids and vessel traffic control are
also required for safe marine transportation. When integrated marine
navigation systems are implemented, the cost of transporting goods
will be reduced and the risk of adverse environmental impact will be
lessened.
2.1.8 Plans, policies and actions for sustainable
development depend on access to appropriate information. Issues
concerning sustainable development are frequently of a spatial nature
and Chapter 40 of Agenda 21 reflects this when it underlines the
importance of access to geographic information. Mapping, aerial
photography, remote sensing from satellites, hydrographic surveying,
and geographic information systems and related communication
technologies are powerful tools in raising public awareness and in
helping decision-makers at all levels.
2.1.9 The surveying profession deals with the
surveying, planning and management of land and marine resources, with
laws and systems needed for access to land and for security of tenure,
and with geographic information in all its aspects. This makes it
deeply involved in issues of profound importance for sustainable
development. The way surveyors are trained and act can have a
significant impact on the implementation of sustainable development.
2.1.10 Organising surveyors from all over the
world, the International Federation of Surveyors is committed to do
its utmost to develop the surveying profession and to help the
individual surveyor to act in accordance with the principles of
sustainable development. It is also committed to collaborate with all
relevant agencies of the United Nations and with other
non-governmental organisations in developing a mutual understanding of
how surveying in all its aspects, as well as related techniques,
products and services, can best contribute to the implementation of
Agenda 21 world-wide.
2.1.11 The Chapters below formulate principles and
programmes to which the surveying profession should adhere to help
implement sustainable development. Chapters 2, 3 and 4 deal with the
three main areas of activities where the profession can make a
significant and tangible contribution. Chapter 5 seeks to develop the
surveying profession to enable it to respond ethically and with
professional competence to the challenge of Agenda 21. Chapter 6 shows
how FIG itself will focus internally on sustainable development issues
and how its member associations can and should contribute. Chapter 7
describes FIG’s collaboration with the United Nations and with other
non-governmental organisations in respect to sustainable development
issues.
2.2.Chapter II - Access to Land and Security of Tenure
Basis for action
2.2.1 Land resources are the basis for human life:
they provide soil, energy, water and the opportunity for all human
activity. It is estimated that more than half the people in the
developing countries are still effectively excluded from ownership or
other types of secure rights to land for shelter or for producing food
to cover basic needs. It is generally agreed that lack of access to
land and secure tenure severely hamper social and economic development
in these countries. Only a few countries exhibit true land shortages:
consequently it is the current distribution of secured land holdings
that hamper development. On the other hand, widespread and secure
rights to real property are common among the richer nations of the
world. Access to land and security of tenure are strategic
prerequisites for the provision of shelter for all and for the
development of sustainable human settlements affecting both urban and
rural areas. They are also a way of breaking the vicious circle of
poverty. (Habitat Agenda, paragraph 75)
2.2.2 The effect on economic development of being
able to turn assets kept in fixed property into liquid capital is
increasingly recognised. In developed countries mortgages on private
homes are the single most important source for raising capital for
investment. Contrary to this, developing countries in general have not
adopted laws and systems that facilitate mortgages, effectively making
it impossible for people to convert their savings in property into
capital for investment. Yet poor people in developing countries in
total possess tremendous assets that could be turned into capital they
had secure tenure and access to systems for making transactions in
property safely and at affordable costs.
2.2.3 Most developing countries experience a
massive migration to cities where the majority of the new urban
dwellers settle in non-regularised areas, often in locations that are
exposed to natural hazards (such as land slides and flooding) and to
ill health, illiteracy and unemployment. They are thus effectively
kept in poverty. Lack of secure tenure discourages residents from
improving conditions through investment in their houses and in common
services for water, sewage, roads, etc. In former socialist countries,
particularly in Europe, the regularisation of rights to apartments in
multifamily buildings is a major concern if problems in the housing
sector are to be avoided.
2.2.4 In many countries, particularly in the
developing world, the main proportion of land is owned by a small
percentage of the population, whilst large numbers of people are
landless and poor.
2.2.5 In every continent there are people whose
customary rights to land and natural resources have been ignored. In
many countries the rights of indigenous people to own, posses or use
land are still not properly recognised.
2.2.6 In many countries, and particularly in
developing countries, legal, cultural and social barriers prevent
women and other vulnerable groups from having equal and equitable
access to land.
2.2.7 In addition to national policies for the fair
and equitable distribution of land, security of tenure requires
appropriate institutions, especially legislation, registration systems
and organisations. In many countries the current tenure and cadastral
infrastructure do not render adequate and reliable services to all.
This may be due to high costs, slow procedures, inadequate technical
requirements, a lack of co-operation between ministries and agencies,
or corruption. Field surveying of boundaries with high geodetic
precision is a critical cost element in developing a cadastre and
viable land markets can be facilitated without accurate property maps.
Both former socialist countries, which are re-establishing private
ownership, and developing countries, which are introducing private
ownership and related institutions for the first time, are faced with
these problems. In the latter group the issues of customary land
tenure and of land grabbing, are frequently not adequately addressed.
2.2.8 Agenda 21 and the Habitat Agenda underline
the close link between access to land and security of tenure and
sustainable development. Both documents provide concrete programs for
related actions to be taken by governments, the private sector and
non-governmental organisations. In Agenda 21, Chapter 7 (promoting
sustainable human settlements) and in Chapter 14 (promoting
sustainable agriculture and rural development) are particularly
relevant in this respect. In the Habitat Agenda reference should be
made to Chapter IV, Global Plan of Action, section B (adequate shelter
for all) and in particular to paragraphs 75 and 76, as well as to
paragraph 40 of Chapter III on Commitments.
2.2.9 FIG has for a number of years collaborated
closely with the United Nations in raising awareness and developing
recommendations and guidelines concerning the issues of access to land
and security of tenure (see the Bogor Declaration (1996), the Bathurst
Declaration (1999) and the FIG publication "Cadastre 2014"
prepared by FIG Commission 7).
Actions
2.2.10 To accelerate access to land and security of
tenure as instruments for sustainable development, FIG will in
particular:
- Enhance the knowledge of, and access to, the property-related
principles and policies of Agenda 21 and subsequent international
agreements, including those developed in co-operation between the
United Nations and FIG, and actively promote the application of
these principles and policies throughout the surveying profession.
- Promote fairness and equity in access to land and to the
infrastructure that provides security of tenure, including
promotion of the equal rights of women and indigenous people to
possess, buy, inherit and use land. Nobody should be excluded from
these basic rights on the basis of sex, religion or race.
- Continue to assist in developing international guidelines and
models for land-related legislation and registration systems,
marine-related tenure systems and surveying and mapping that
respond to current and local needs and that reflect the principles
contained in the points below.
- Ensure an understanding that current western-type land
registration systems need to be re-engineered to accommodate other
forms of information that may not be parcel based, inter alia
to facilitate the collection of information about tenure forms
such as occupancy claims, use rights, water rights and overlapping
rights.
- Underline the need to develop practical and low-cost
registration systems that facilitate the recognition of housing
rights and other rights to land in informal settlements.
- Stress that emerging registration systems, in particular in
developing countries and in transition economies, should not be
overloaded with registering more data than is needed to meet
urgent needs. These are normally to provide secure tenure, to
facilitate the selling and buying of land, and to enable real
property to be used as security for loans.
- Recommend, in particular to the surveying profession, that
standards for geodetic precision in boundary documentation in
countries that have to undertake massive registration should not
exceed those required to serve basic needs. In several countries
it has been demonstrated that overview maps (index maps), without
detailed field surveying, are perfectly satisfactory for an
emerging land market.
- Underline the importance of respecting local cultures and
traditions in developing systems for registration of rights to
land. Legislation and systems should, wherever relevant,
facilitate the granting of title to groups or families as well as
to individuals.
- Stress that in implementing a modern land registration service,
systems must be coupled with policies and practical instruments
that prevent land grabbing, as this can easily happen in countries
where only a rich minority possesses funds for buying land.
- Stress that the demand for formal land tenure should come from
the people in the area, and that the local inhabitants as well as
the local authorities should play an active part in the related
processes.
2.3 Chapter III - Planning and Management of Land and Coastal
Areas
Basis for action
2.3.1 Migration to urban areas, the sprawl of
cities into wider geographical areas and the rapid growth of
mega-cities, in particular in developing countries, are among the most
significant causes of the transformation of human settlements. Many
cities are witnessing harmful patterns of growth, of land use and of
energy consumption, often resulting in serious pollution of soil,
water and air; loss of valuable agricultural land; and loss of land
that sustains bio-diversity. Open and green spaces are frequently not
set aside for human well being. Urban settlements, on the other hand,
hold out a promise for human development through their ability to
support large numbers of people while limiting their impact on the
natural environment.
2.3.2 Following the massive migration to cities,
developing countries experience the establishment of large informal
settlements. Lack of appropriate up-front planning and investment in
infrastructure result in settlements that are only seldom serviced
with water, sanitation, transport, schools, etc. This frequently
causes serious health problems, unemployment, illiteracy and crime.
2.3.3 Sustainable development overall depends on a
balanced development of both urban and rural settlements. Urban and
rural areas are interdependent economically, socially and
environmentally. Ensuring appropriate urban-rural linkages is of vital
importance for making sustainable cities as well as sustainable rural
settlements. Rural settlements need to be valued and supported with
improved infrastructure and services.
2.3.4 In many countries large areas of arable land
are continuously lost due to change in land use that leads to massive
erosion. Uncontrolled clearing of forest frequently results in
landslides, floods, and loss of the vegetation on which bio-diversity
depends.
2.3.5 In many areas critical fresh water resources
are polluted by the harmful effects of human settlements that do not
respect the close connection between land use and the quality of
ground as well as of surface water.
2.3.6 Poorly surveyed coastal areas and inadequate
marine navigation infrastructure often result in marine pollution
incidents that destroy fish habitats and seriously affect coastal
ecosystems. These marine environmental disasters inevitably reduce
food supplies from the sea and increase hardship and poverty.
2.3.7 Good land use planning and management of land
can reduce many of the above problems. However, the environmental
impacts are not always appropriately assessed by politicians, planners
and developers. Furthermore, the implementation of zoning plans and
regulations are not always appropriately monitored and enforced.
2.3.8 Agenda 21, Chapter 7 sets out a program for
the development of sustainable human settlements including (at point
7.5) program elements for:
- Providing adequate shelter for all
- Improving human settlement management
- Promoting sustainable land use planning and management
- Promoting the integrated provision of environmental
infrastructure; water, sanitation, drainage and solid waste
management
- Promoting sustainable energy and transport systems in human
settlements
- Promoting human settlement planning and management in
disaster-prone areas
- Promoting sustainable construction industry activities
- Promoting human resource development and capacity building for
human settlement development
Chapter 10 of Agenda 21 outlines a program for an
Integrated Approach to the Planning and Management of Land Resources,
taking into consideration environmental, social and economic issues.
The broad objective of the program is to facilitate the allocation of
land to the uses that provide the greatest sustainable benefits and to
promote the transition to integrated management of land resources. In
more specific terms, the objectives are (Chapter 10 point 10.5):
- To develop policies to support the best possible use of land and
the sustainable management of land resources
- To improve and strengthen planning, management and evaluation
systems for land and land resources
- To strengthen institutions and co-ordinating mechanisms for land
and land resources
- To create mechanisms to facilitate the active involvement and
participation of all concerned, particularly communities and
people at the local level, in decision-making related to land use
and management.
2.3.9 The Habitat II conference Istanbul 1996
agreed on a large number of principles, commitments and strategies for
developing sustainable settlements. These are of vital importance for
land use planning and management, whether executed by national or
local governments. Among these (see the Habitat Global Plan of Action,
point 113) are the need to:
- Establish appropriate legal frameworks for public plans and
policies for sustainable urban developments and rehabilitation,
land utilisation, housing and the management of urban growth
- Promote efficient and accessible land markets that respond to
community needs
- Develop, where appropriate, fiscal incentives and land control
measures including land-use planning solutions for the more
rational and sustainable use of limited land resources
- Encourage partnerships among public, private and voluntary
groups and other interested parties in managing land resources
- Promote urban planning, housing and industrial siting
initiatives that discourage the siting of hazardous industrial
facilities in residential areas, including areas inhabited by
people living in poverty or those belonging to vulnerable and
disadvantaged groups
- Develop and support land management practises that take into
account the need for everyday activities - playgrounds, parks,
sports and recreation areas and areas for gardening and urban
agriculture
- Promote the integration of land use, communications and
transport planning to reduce the demand for transport
- Develop and implement integrated coastal zone management plans
to ensure the proper development and conservation of coastal
resources
- Institutionalise a participatory approach by developing and
supporting strategies and mechanisms that encourage open and
inclusive dialogue among all interested parties, with special
attention to the needs and priorities of women, minorities,
children, youth, people with disabilities, older persons and
persons living in poverty and exclusion.
Actions
2.3.10 To encourage best practises in land use
planning and land management for sustainable settlements and the
management of land resources in general, FIG will in particular:
- Promote knowledge of the principles, commitments and strategies
for sustainable land use expressed in Agenda 21 and the Habitat
Global Plan of Action among the members of the Federation and
throughout the surveying profession.
- Promote the application of these principles and strategies among
surveyors working in the public as well as the private sector, inter
alia by transforming the principles and strategies into
guidelines and models for practical use in planning and land
management, and mechanisms and systems for monitoring and
reporting on changes in land use.
- Promote an understanding of the importance of up-front planning
and appropriate land management for creating sustainable
settlements for all those low-income groups migrating to cities in
developing countries, to ensure a minimum standard for water,
sanitation, drainage, and solid waste treatment.
- Promote an understanding of the importance of protecting fresh
water resources through the appropriate siting of settlements and
harmful human activities in the management of reservoirs and water
catchment areas.
- Promote an understanding of the importance of protecting coastal
areas in general, and related fish and wildlife habitats, from
destruction, inter alia through the development of adequate
marine charts and navigation systems to enhance safety in marine
transportation.
- Promote the importance of planners and land managers insisting
on an integrated approach to planning and land management, where
environmental as well as social and economic factors are taken
into account.
- Promote the importance of surveyors demanding environmental
impact assessments as part of the planning process whenever and
wherever appropriate.
- Promote the importance of surveyors in planning and land
management insisting on applying processes that actively involve
all interested parties including women, children, older people and
people living in poverty.
- Encourage nations to define their Territorial Boundaries and
Exclusive Economic Zones as regulated by the United Nations Law of
the Sea
2.4 Chapter IV - Geographic Information for Decision Making
Basis for action
2.4.1 Good decisions for sustainable development
depend on access to reliable and relevant information and to a very
large extent on information that is geographically referenced. The
need for geographic information arises at all levels of government,
from senior decision-makers to the grass roots and individual levels.
2.4.2 Considerable data exist, but access to data
is often hampered by lack of standardisation, coherence and adequate
services for data retrieval, including information about what data
exist and where data are kept.
2.4.3 There is an increasing gap between developed
and developing countries in their capacities to collect and
disseminate geographic information, seriously impairing the capacities
of countries to make sound decisions concerning environment and
development.
2.4.4 The rapid development of technologies and
methods in surveying and mapping, such as integrated geographic
information systems, remote sensing, satellite positioning systems and
digital networks for sharing and disseminating of data, provides a
strong and important tool for decision making for sustainable
development. Accessible and relevant geographic information will play
an important role in planning, executing and monitoring development.
Developing countries have embarked on implementing spatial
infrastructures for the optimal sharing and use of geographic data in
digital form. However, the majority of developing countries lack the
capacity to utilise the emerging technologies and methods.
2.4.5 The recent extension of the United Nations
Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) to nations’ territorial
rights over vast ocean areas requires, on the one hand, national
capacities to collect hydrographic and other data needed for
presenting claims and, on the other, a capacity to manage the areas.
There is a very real need to ensure that these resources are
integrated with the national land information systems.
Activities
2.4.6 To facilitate the optimum use of geographic
information in decision making for sustainable development, FIG will
in particular:
- Help in the collection and dissemination of research,
developments and best practises in the application of geographic
information systems and spatial data infrastructures as well as in
the use of surveying and mapping for environmental protection,
planning and monitoring, and for social and economic development.
- Assist in keeping relevant UN agencies and other international
bodies informed about developments in the use of all aspects of
geographic information for sustainable development.
- Promote an understanding that access to relevant geographic
information is a democratic right and support a policy that
nobody, particularly local communities, grass root movements,
people in poverty or any other vulnerable groups, should be denied
that access by law, high prices or any other unreasonable means.
- Promote the Internet as a medium that can substantially improve
the value of geographic information to involved parties at all
levels of society and the importance of governmental agencies and
private institutions holding such information in ways that
facilitate access for all.
- Promote the need for countries, as well as agencies within
countries and regions, to facilitate the sharing of geographic
data to help in an integrated approach to the planning and
management of land, settlements, coastal areas and the oceans.
- Promote the need for governments, agencies and institutions to
document and share information about sources of available
information within their respective organisations.
- Work with international bodies such as the International
Standards Organization (ISO) to develop and implement suitable
standards for the exchange of geographic information.
- Work with relevant bodies, including educational institutions,
to ensure that there is a knowledgeable and skilled workforce
available to develop and maintain geographic information systems.
- Promote technical assistance and co-ordination between countries
that have the technology and resources for data collection,
analysis and dissemination and countries that are in need of
assistance in these areas.
- Support the United Nations and other agencies in planning and
developing regional spatial data infrastructures.
2.5 Chapter V - Developing the Surveying Profession
Basis for action
2.5.1 Surveyors at all levels of government as well
as in private enterprises, dealing with land and property, land use
planning and management, and geographic information, play an important
role in developing and implementing policies, strategies and services
of vital importance to sustainable development.
2.5.2 The way that surveyors act, be they in the
public or the private sector, has the capacity to influence society’s
attitude towards sustainability.
2.5.3 Although the concept of sustainable
development is generally understood by most surveyors, its practical
implications, the challenges it poses and the consequent
responsibilities facing the profession and individuals need to be
elaborated, promoted and continuously updated.
2.5.4 FIG recognises that it provides a mechanism
and an opportunity for surveyors to enhance and demonstrate their
professionalism.
2.5.5 FIG recognises that the education and
training of surveyors, including continuous professional development,
is of paramount importance in supporting their contribution to
sustainable development.
Actions
2.5.6 FIG is committed to doing its utmost to
assist the surveying profession to respond to the challenges and
responsibilities of sustainable development. FIG will in particular:
- Continue to include all aspects of sustainable development and
its relevance to the surveying profession in technical programmes
at FIG congresses, conferences, workshops and meetings, including
those arranged by individual FIG Commissions.
- Assist in developing university programmes for the general
education of surveyors that reflect their role and
responsibilities in relation to sustainable development.
- Promote the inclusion of appropriate elements of sustainable
development policies and strategies in relation to the activities
of the surveying profession within national programmes for
continuous profession development.
- Ensure that any FIG evaluation and rating of educational
programmes, or similar activities undertaken by its subsidiary
bodies, duly considers whether they adequately address all
relevant aspects of sustainable development.
- Encourage national associations to include appropriate
references to sustainable development in their codes of conduct.
Support the principle that these codes should, inter alia,
require surveyors to facilitate equal access to land registration
services; insist on integrated approaches to planning and land
management; request that environmental impact assessments be
carried out whenever and wherever relevant; and request that all
interested parties be actively involved in relevant planning and
development processes and granted access to all relevant data.
- Assist in establishing professional societies in countries where
there are no such bodies and when established, ensure that the
societies develop appropriate codes of ethics and professional
conduct.
- Encourage the development and maintenance of quality principles
to ensure quality customer service from the surveying profession
throughout the world.
2.6 Chapter VI - Committing FIG and its Member Associations
Basis for action
2.6.1 Agenda 21 calls for non-governmental
organisations at all levels to support the implementation of
sustainable development policies.
2.6.2 FIG recognises that professional
associations, at the international as well as the national level, can
play an important role in implementing Agenda 21.
2.6.3 FIG recognises that, in developing the
Federation into an efficient and effective non-governmental
organisation, it should actively support the implementation of
sustainable development and formulate a set of values to which it will
urge its member associations, associate members, academic members and
individual surveyors to adhere.
2.6.4 FIG reiterates the policies stated in FIG
publication no.3, 1991, "Sustainable development – a Challenge
and a Responsibility for Surveyors". This focused on the
potential for surveyors to contribute to sustainable development;
committed the Federation to include environmental issues as important
topics at conferences and other occasions; and encouraged national
associations to do likewise.
Actions
2.6.5 By adopting this statement, the International
Federation of Surveyors renews its undertaking to promote the concept
of sustainable development, and its related challenges and
responsibilities, to surveyors in all its relevant activities. FIG is
thereby committed to:
- Emphasising the wider understanding of sustainable development,
to include policies, strategies and actions for social and
economic development as well as for environmental protection.
- Including sustainable development policies, strategies and
actions in all relevant activities of the Federation, as well as
in the activities of all its Commissions, and ensuring that
national member associations do likewise.
- Including appropriate responses by the profession and individual
surveyors to the challenges and responsibilities of Agenda 21 in
all relevant guidelines, statements and other documents.
- Ensuring that concrete activities to implement FIG Agenda 21 are
included in the long and short term work plans of the Federation.
- Ensuring that progress on activities related to sustainable
development, including those activities undertaken by the
Commissions and national associations, is regularly reported to
the annual General Assembly of the Federation.
2.7 Chapter VII - Collaboration with United Nations, National
Governments and Non Governmental Organisations
Basis for action
2.7.1 Agenda 21 (para. 27.9) urges all agencies of
the United Nations to establish mechanisms and procedures for drawing
on the expertise and views of non-governmental organisations in policy
and program design, implementation and evaluation.
2.7.2 Agenda 21 (para. 27.10) further urges
governments to establish or enhance dynamic dialogues with
non-governmental organisations.
2.7.3 Since the adoption of Agenda 21 the issue of
land administration for sustainable development has come to the
forefront of the work of several UN agencies that are implementing
Agenda 21 - in particular through the UNCHS Global Campaigns on Good
Urban Governance and on Security of Tenure, and the programme of the
Commission on Sustainable Development. Similar initiatives are taking
place within the UN’s regional activities and within other
international and national organisations dealing with aid, environment
and development.
2.7.4 Following the collapse of socialist regimes
in East and Central Europe and other regions of the world, transition
countries have embarked on large programs to re-establish property
rights and registration systems, and to strengthen the institutions
for land use planning and management that are needed for the effective
functioning of market-based economies. However, assistance in
developing appropriate solutions and models are still badly needed.
2.7.5 During the last decade (1990–2000) FIG has
increased its collaboration with various United Nations agencies –
notably in chairing the dialogue on urban-rural linkages during the
1996 UN Conference on Human Settlements; preparing the two UN-FIG
declarations on cadastral reforms (Bogor, 1996) and on Land
Administration for Sustainable Development (Bathurst, 1999); preparing
a statement for co-operation between FIG and UN agencies as a result
of an FIG/UN roundtable (Melbourne, 1999); and entering into a
Memorandum of Understanding with UNCHS (Habitat) (Nairobi, 2000).
2.7.6 FIG has well-established relations with other
international associations – notably the International Council for
Research in Building and Construction (CIB) and the International Real
Estate Federation (FIABCI) – in developing strategies for working on
sustainable development issues at the level of international
non-governmental organisations.
Actions
2.7.7. FIG is committed to further develop its
links with relevant UN agencies, the World Bank and other
international aid organisations, donors and lenders, national
governments and non-governmental organisations. In so doing FIG will:
- Channel information about relevant UN programs and activities to
FIG member associations and individual surveyors.
- Help UN agencies to develop sound strategies and policies for
using the competence and services of the surveying profession in
implementing sustainable development whenever the advice of the
surveying profession is relevant.
- Collaborate with UN agencies in developing guidelines targeted
at the surveying profession to optimise the profession’s
contribution in implementing sustainable development at all levels
of society.
- Collaborate with UN agencies in developing guidelines and
practical models for developing national surveying capacities to
assist in implementing sustainable development at national,
regional and local level.
- Participate actively as a non-governmental organisation
representing the global surveying profession in relevant UN
meetings to which NGOs are invited to contribute.
- Establish collaborative arrangements with international
non-governmental organisations, and non-commercial institutions
that are involved in implementing Agenda 21 and which will benefit
from sharing knowledge developed within FIG concerning sustainable
development and from the services of the surveying profession.
- Establish or further develop existing links with other
international non-governmental organisations dealing with tangible
issues so as to enhance, through concerted action, their
contributions to sustainable development.
- Encourage member associations to establish proper links with
relevant departments of their domestic governments so as to
enhance the surveying profession’s input to the implementation
of Agenda 21 at the national level.
- Support education and training initiatives of the UN, the World
Bank and other relevant institutions rendering assistance to
developing countries.
CONTACT
Helge Onsrud
Chair of FIG Task Force on Sustainable Development
Statens Kartverk
P.O. Box 8120 Dep
Oslo
NORWAY
Tel. + 47 22 360 510
Fax + 47 22 360 304
E-mail: helge.onsrud@statkart.no
28 March 2001
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