PRINCIPLES FOR EQUITABLE GENDER INCLUSION IN LAND
ADMINISTRATION: FIG GUIDELINES ON WOMEN'S ACCESS TO LAND
Katalin KOMJATHY and Dr. Susan E. NICHOLS,
Canada and Agneta ERICSSON, Sweden
Key words: land tenure, land administration,
gender, urban and rural development
1. INTRODUCTION
Land and housing are central issues in developing economies. How
land tenure issues are addressed in development projects and by land
administration agencies can directly impact the livelihood and
security of people in urban, peri-urban, and rural settings. Failing
to address the land and shelter rights of all stakeholders in a land
development project or programme can cause unexpected problems and
inequities, and often for the most vulnerable and disadvantaged
members of society [See, for example, Harden, 1990].
Whether due to tradition, law, education, or economics, women are
sometimes at risk in land development projects, even if it is intended
that they share the benefits. For example, improving irrigation on
women's fields may have the unintended effect of having these now
valuable fields reclaimed by men in the community [Zwarteveen, 1997].
Enhancing housing in a community or peri-urban area may have similar
unintended results when the units become more marketable [Varley and
Blasco, 2000]. Professionals, such as surveyors, who are involved with
land and housing projects therefore need to be aware of gender issues
and need to ensure that the real objectives of the projects are truly
met.
This paper is based on a report commissioned by the International
Federation of Surveyors (FIG) to develop a set of guidelines for
ensuring that land reform and land administration projects in
developing countries and countries in transition are gender inclusive.
The work is based on research conducted at the University of New
Brunswick and on experience in a number of development projects. It is
a further extension of initial work conducted by UNCHS and Sida for
Habitat II [Sida et al., 1995] in Istanbul and by the United Nations
Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) [Komjathy, 1999; FAO, 1999].
This paper is also based on a FIG Workshop on Women's Access to Land
in September, 1999, co-sponsored by the New Zealand Institute of
Surveyors [see, for example, Eriksson, 1999; Nichols, et al., 1999].
The purpose of this paper is to provides a short summary on why
gender issues matter in development projects and to propose guidelines
that will assist development project managers, surveyors, and others
in ensuring that land administration enhances and protects the rights
of all stakeholders, including women.
1.1 Why Surveyors Should be Concerned
According to the Women's Summit [UN, 1995] findings in most
societies women have very unequal access to, and control over land,
housing associated resources, and basic infrastructure. It has been
long acknowledged however that providing food for the family is
primarily the responsibility of women [e.g, Crowley, 2001]. Yet
women's direct access to land resources, credit, and shelter can be
put at risk in programmes such as land titling, formalization of
property rights, and even housing or road improvements.
Surveyors and other land professionals, who help to establish how
land rights are allocated, adjudicated, and protected, need to be more
aware that gender inclusive land policies and land institutions are
critical. A first step in this direction is understanding the
complexities behind a simple term such as "access to land".
2. ACCESS TO LAND AND ITS RESOURCES
Access is the right or opportunity to use, manage, or control land
and its resources. It includes the ability to reach and make use of
the resource. When describing access to land, we can distinguish
between quantitative parameters (such as the nature of tenure, the
size of the parcel and its economic value) and qualitative parameters
(for example, legal security, and documented, or registered evidence
of rights to land). These parameters play an important role in
"measuring" access to land before, during, and after
development projects or land administration programmes.
In societies following customary rules, women's direct access to
land through purchase or inheritance is often limited. Since women are
the major producers of household food supply there are usually
customary provisions for indirect access to land in terms of use
rights as community members, wives, mothers, sisters, or daughters.
These use rights, however, do not grant enough security for women when
traditional family structures dissolve. The economic and social
well-being of women and their children are at increased risk when
women face widowhood and divorce, or when the male head of household
does not or cannot exercise his traditional responsibilities to his
family.
In many communities, access to resources is governed by both
written and customary laws. In instances when conflicts exist between
traditional norms and national laws, as is often the case when women's
rights are considered, local norms generally prevail and are enforced
by community members. Written national laws granting women equal
access to productive resources are essential but for these rights to
be legitimate and adhered to, it is necessary to secure the support of
the local community. Thus "having a law" does not
necessarily mean that women have equitable recourse to remedies should
the law be broken.
Equitable access to land does not only mean the quantity of rights
allocated. To make use of the rights and opportunities, access to land
must also be enforceable or secure (for example, against seizure by
force or by law). Equitable access must also be effective, i.e., by
including equitable access to other resources such as irrigation,
roads or finance. The support of legal, customary and family
institutions are fundamental if women's access to land is to be
preserved and improved.

Figure 1. Institutions that Affect Women's Access
to Land and Housing Rights
3. WHY IS GENDER AN ISSUE IN LAND REFORM AND LAND ADMINISTRATION
REFORM?
The body of evidence stressing that outcomes of land reform and
land administration programmes and projects have different
implications for men and women has grown significantly in recent years
(e.g. Zwarteveen [1997], Lastarria-Cornhiel [1997], Agarwal [1995],
Habitat [1999]). Traditionally, the involvement of men in such
programs was viewed as sufficient and it was assumed that women and
children would equally enjoy the benefits of the projects as
dependents. As poverty and landlessness continues to expand and
"feminization" of poverty becomes more apparent, development
organizations and practitioners have had to seek a new direction to
tackle these problems. Furthermore, as social, political and
economical changes continue to undermine women's ability to secure
adequate housing, fulfill the food requirement of the household and
use land in a sustainable manner, development projects have begun
observing women's priorities and concerns as separate issues.
Still, protecting and strengthening women's access to land and its
benefits are not without adversities. The following example is a case
in this point [for further examples see Nichols et al., 1999]:
Documenting Customary Tenure: In several African countries
(e.g., Zimbabwe, Uganda, Malawi) there have been recent discussions
and proposals to document or register customary rights in land as part
of the development of national land policies. The arguments for these
certificates of customary tenure and for registration are that the
processes will:
- provide greater security of tenure on customary lands;
- provide a document that can be used as collateral for credit;
- provide more information for planning and land management.
Despite the merits or limitations of the processes, there could be
significant impacts on women's access to land. The major difficulty is
the fact that such documentation effectively freezes customary rules
that are in place at the time. No account is made, for example, of
such future rights as the right of a woman to return home and receive
a parcel of family land after a divorce. Limited rights such as the
right to pick fruit or gather wood on another's property may be
eliminated by the documentation.
Then there is the question of whose name(s) the certificates or
registers will record. For example, will the name be the de facto
head of household, who may be a woman whose husband works away from
home, or the de jure head of household according to customary
law; there are limitations with both of these approaches, including
the problem of whether the documents have priority over customary law
in cases of inheritance when both names are recorded.
5. MONITORING AND EVALUATING THE SITUATION OF WOMEN
Having some measurement system for evaluating access to land is
essential if the 'success' or 'failure' of a particular program,
policy, or project is to be determined. There needs to be a set of
indicators that can describe the situation before, during, and after
something (e.g., a new law, a titling project) has occurred. Basically
this is the same as a deformation survey of a dam - campaigns of
measurements at discrete intervals of time to detect movement. The
problem in measuring access to land is similar to the problem of
determining which points on the dam are critical in detecting
movement. These 'points' become indicators.
Measurement of access to land needs to involve both qualitative and
quantitative parameters [See, for example, Nichols, et al., 1999].
Surveyors and other land administrators tend to think primarily of
property rights to the surface of the land together with its fixed
improvements. The focus becomes the quantity of rights (e.g.,
leasehold, freehold, easement), the size of the parcel of land, or its
economic value. On the other hand, social anthropologists have tended
to emphasize the uniqueness of land tenure systems within a given
culture and focus on the nature or quality of the rights that may be
involved. Both approaches are valid for certain purposes and both have
their limitations. If, however, we are to design a way of measuring
women's access to land it may be important to draw on both approaches.
One way of examining the quantity of rights is to view the
'bundle" of rights as a spectrum. At one end of the quantitative
spectrum are temporary rights of use. At the other end is absolute
control over what can be done with a particular resource, including
who else can use the resource and for how long. Somewhere in the
middle of the spectrum is the management of the resource where there
is more limited decision making power (e.g., the ability to transfer
rights and the opportunities to reap the direct and indirect profits
from the resource). An English common law freehold estate then might
be considered to be at the management level subject to the overall
control of the state. A short term leasehold might be considered a
temporary use right.
Examining the quality of the rights to determine indicators is more
complex and only a few examples can be given here. One measure of
quality is the legal security of the rights, i.e., how well do formal
law (e.g., legislation) or informal law (e.g., traditional or local
community rules) protect the ownership of the rights. Thus, for
example, inheritance through entail or patrilineal inheritance rules
may limit women's right of management or control. Physical security is
another indicator that may be affected, for example, by war or by
custom in many countries where land is seized by the male relatives on
death of a husband. A third example of quality of rights is
transferability. Use rights may often be non-transferable because they
are vested in a family or particular family members. Furthermore,
transferability may be affected by the quality of the evidence of the
right, such as an official document or register.
In assessing the quality and quantity of rights, the scope of
potential rights of access must be broad. For this reason we have
chosen the term "access to land and the benefits of land".
Some of these direct and indirect benefits that should be considered
in measuring access include:
- rights to shelter;
- rights to access water, firewood, fish, or fruit;
- rights to shares in inheritance on the death of a family member;
- rights to shares in land and improvements on the death or
departure of a partner in an informal marriage;
- rights of access to financing and financial inputs;
- rights to the profits from the use or sale of the resource;
- social status in the community based on access to land;
- role in decision-making (e.g., management and control).
The next step for project managers, policy makers and others who
want to know more about the quantity and quality of access to land, is
what specific indicators might be used? These will be important in
pre-project assessments and in later monitoring and post-project
evaluation. Again only a few samples can be given here.
In many land administration projects and programs the conventional
approach has been to use documents of land rights or land registry
records. This has the advantage of being straightforward and
reasonable objective but the limitations are many. Even in western
countries title documents and registers only record a limited set of
rights and the situation is made more complex in customary societies
and less-developed nations where either:
- few documents or registers exist;
- they may not be up-to-date or complete;
- they may not reflect the on-site situation;
- they often only list one name (de jure head of household)
- they probably do not reflect the variety of formal and informal
rights that exist through custom and tradition.
A second major indicator used to measure access to land is
legislation, such as laws for inheritance, divorce, or land use. This
however may also be misleading since the formal legislation may not
reflect what actually is accepted as practice on the ground. One
example are the divorce laws in some socialist states which may
recognize equal division of property. How well a woman's (or man's)
rights might be protected on divorce, especially in impoverished rural
regions, will also depend on the degree of access to the courts,
ability to finance litigation, and the degree of support provided by
the family or community. Similarly calls for equal rights in
constitutions can be quite meaningless in the actual practice of local
communities.
Other indicators include physical occupation or proof of the actual
exercise of the rights. Again this has some difficulties in that it
may not agree with the formal (legal) status and it may be difficult
to observe (especially in a short time span) all of rights in play.
Related to these indicators are indicators such as: de facto head of
household; primary food provider; community acceptance or agreement of
someone's rights; or the share of financial and labour inputs. Even
more difficult to measure objectively and completely are factors such
as social status and decision-making power.
7. RECOMMENDED GUIDELINES FOR SURVEYORS IN LAND ADMINISTRATION
AGENCIES AND PROJECTS
The surveying community should not underestimate its role in
allocating, adjudicating, protecting, and changing the way in which
people hold rights to land. In the past the major impact was the size
and shape of land parcels and the general pattern of the parcel
fabric. Today, surveyors also have a role in land reform and promoting
security of tenure in ensuring that the cadastral systems, laws, and
procedures put in place during such reform do not adversely affect the
rights of groups and individuals that the reforms were meant to
benefit.
Learning more on how to approach the gender dimension of such
programmes and projects and acquiring the tools necessary to address
them are vital for securing a more equitable outcome. The following
section discusses some of the measures that should be considered by
practitioners working in development of human settlements both rural
and urban environment. The authors are aware that it may not be
possible or practical to exhaust all of these measures during a
project cycle. Also, collecting gender disaggregated data as well as
general information on women and minorities often prove to be a
serious challenge. Recently however, there has been a significant,
although far from sufficient, increase in the number of sources
offering applicable data and information.
The special focus of this paper is on rural development, but most
recommendations are also applicable in urban development projects.
7.1 Land administration procedures should accommodate all segments
of the population
- Ensure women's ACTIVE participation in the processes.
This includes ensuring that women in the community affected and on
staff are involved in the project or policy processes, not as an
afterthought, but from planning, to implementation, and to
evaluation of the results. This is not always an easy process and
sensitive ways must be found in some communities to allow women to
share their views and experiences openly, especially with
strangers. Another way in which women in the community or
organization can be encouraged to participate is to provide role
models, such as appointing women as key project members and
supporting them. 1)
1) The importance of role models was
made very apparent to Dr. Nichols in her first year of teaching
cadastral surveying. After a guest lecture by the only woman
cadastral surveyor in Canada at the time, one first year foreign
student wanted to know whether all cadastral surveyors in Canada
were women.
- Obtain knowledge of the local situation. For project
managers to know whether women's access to land may be an issue,
there is a need for an adequate pre-project assessment of the
situation. The level of detail and complexity will depend on the
local situation and the objectives of the project. However, if the
situation does appear to have issues directly related to women's
rights, then special measures may have to be taken to understand
the potential implications of the project. This can be assisted by
monitoring changes during the project and by obtaining feedback
from women as well as male community leaders before and during the
project. Post-project evaluation (the role of which is too often
disregarded or minimized) is also important for understanding what
worked and what did not and what were the lessons learned.
- Provide opportunities for women's rights to be explicitly
recognized. If a land titling, cadastral surveying, land
registration, or information system project is going to document
rights to land, then decisions need to be made as to: what rights
will be included? whose names will be documented and based on what
evidence? and how will these names be kept up to date? In addition
there is a need for the decisions made on these issues to be
acceptable to the recipient community to ensure the sustainability
of the systems introduced.
- Support women in land administration organizations. In
major internationally funded projects, women employees often do
not have the same access to opportunities on the project. Yet
these women may be able to help foreign project members and
recipient organization staff to better understand the issues
related to women's access to land locally. They may also be a
communication bridge to the community's women. Projects can also
enhance women's sustained participation in a land project through
education and training. The Swedish International Development
Agency, for example, has required that 50% of all participants in
cadastral training and education projects abroad be women.
- Ensure effective access through other support. Providing
equity is not enough. To be effective, access to land must also
include access to other resources (such as financing, technology,
and training) and to required support systems (e.g., water, roads,
marketing co-operatives). Without these resources and support, the
projects may leave nothing but paper titles behind.
- Share awareness of the issues and their complexity. Just
being aware that there may be some potential issues is a long step
forward. This will help project managers, task managers, and other
participants in policy formation or project design understand that
they need to be sensitive to potential impacts. Awareness of the
complications in what may have seemed to be a straight forward
surveying project, may help professionals decide whether or not
people with specialized expertise may be necessary. It is also
important that surveyors share this awareness with their staff and
others involved in the projects.
- Include women among surveying professionals working with
local communities. Female professionals might be able to
establish connection with women's groups in communities where
religious or cultural customs prohibit social contact between the
sexes or when women are not allowed to speak publicly in the
presence of their husbands. It is however equally important that
female professionals responsible for these tasks have a good
understanding of the gender dimensions of the project, the local
situation and are willing and able to undertake these assignments.
- Add a spouse's or partner's name to all legal documents
concerning land rights, including any official register of land
rights. This helps to prevent fraud, adds security for the
woman beyond family or legislative recognition (e.g., matrimonial
laws), and helps to ensure that both partners understand what
their rights are.
- Consider that women have limited access to financial
resources. Any procedures that would require financial
compensation should be carefully examined not to present an
additional burden for women and exclude them from the benefits of
the project.
- Safeguard and enforce women's rights. Pottier [1999] and
others suggest that women often lose access to certain resources
when those become profitable or receive more attention.
- Explain the rights and obligations associated with holding
title to land. Women should feel comfortable about being title
holders. They should understand the rights, responsibilities and
opportunities granting title to land carries and the potential
changes and consequences this may bring in terms of their status
(i.e. fees to be paid during transaction, possible tension with
male relatives, etc.)
- Discuss the meanings of land administration terms with women.
For instance, women's understanding of the term security of tenure
or ownership can be greatly different from what men think [Varley
and Blasco, 2000]. This should be within a non-threatening
environment where women are not afraid to ask questions.
- Establish land administration institutions that are
responsive and accommodating to women as well as men.
Efficient, decentralized land administration agencies are better
able to serve the community. Participatory methodologies and
decision-making structures can provide opportunities for
inclusion.
- Simplify registration procedures. Women, especially poor
women and female heads of households are often unable to comply
with excessive documentation requirements. They are also unlikely
to represent their interests effectively and in a timely manner
required in procedures designed with a bias toward the more
affluent segments of society.
- Recognize women as stakeholders. Zwarteveen [1997]
emphasizes the importance of women's informed participation when
individuals' access to water and land is determined. Their active
participation throughout the program - from research to
implementation and post project evaluation - is key if their
interest is to be taken into account. This participation also has
to be in a meaningful way. They have to be informed of their
rights and a support system has to be in place to help them defend
those rights.
- Propose alternative ownership models. There are instances
where combining individual, common, public or group ownership may
provide a better solution for women or groups of women to secure
or extend their existing rights. Under customary regimes women
have use rights to their male relatives land. During privatization
programmes they can easily lose these rights if the land is titled
under the name of the male relative without giving consideration
to women's overlapping use rights. Identify joint ownership
interests during registration where applicable.
- Document lessons learned and best practices. Obtaining
relevant and reliable information regarding the situation of women
is often difficult. For that reason, sharing information and
experiences within the surveying community has enormous
significance.
7.2 Removing barriers to access to information
- Disseminate information in a way that is comprehensible by
women. It should be taken into consideration that the
illiteracy rate is much higher among women than men. Adoption of
training and advisory materials for the non-literate population is
essential. Employ those forms of media that reach women in rural
areas and in poorer districts of cities.
- Consult those women directly who will be affected by the
program outcomes. More and more accurate information can be
gathered as to the priorities and interests of women when they are
asked directly.
- Ensure that there is a two-way communication mechanism in
place between women and surveyors. Women's experience and
knowledge should be part of the initial community assessment.
Facts pertinent to the project should be communicated to women by
development professionals and women must have opportunity to voice
their concerns without being intimidated. Religious and customary
laws governing the interactions between women and
"outsiders" must be understood before the project, be
adhered to, and worked around (e.g., by employing women to conduct
the interaction).
7.3 Increasing awareness about the obstacles hindering women's
participation
- Be aware of women's daily schedules. Plan meetings and
information sessions during that part of the day when women are
able to attend. Accommodate women's request in terms of timing and
location. Women are seldom able to visit geographically remote
areas for the purpose of attending meetings.
- Analyze decision-making patterns within domestic units.
It is often the male head of the domestic unit who is viewed as
the decision maker and it may be so. Research has shown [e.g.
World Neighbours, 2000] that the male decision maker does not
necessarily represent the interest of the women and children in
the domestic unit. Receiving independent input from women is
essential when a project may affect their well-being.
- Recognize the different needs of different women. All
women are not equal. Women who are economically in a better
position have different interests than poor women, and their
participation and input do not replace poor women's participation
and input. Instead, it represents another segment. Special
attention need to be given to the situation of divorcees, female
heads of households and widows.
7.4 Working with the local customary community
- Identify rural institutions in charge of the implementation
of customary rules. One of the important elements in the
project or programme may be an interdisciplinary approach.
Surveyors are not sociologists or anthropologist, nor micro
finance experts. Part of any successful project is knowing when to
bring in the experts.
- Oversee the legitimacy of women's land claims. Women's
access to resources can only be sustainable if it is viewed by the
community - both men and women - as legitimate. Projects should
strive to allocate resources equitably and strive to ensure
acceptance by the members of the community.
- Investigate what rights - in what areas (inheritance,
divorce, property rights, family law etc.) are upheld in the
event of controversy between written and customary laws. Once
again experts (lawyers and others) can provide project managers
with a better understanding of the issues, the status of the law,
and any contradictions.
- Acknowledge when there is a problem regarding women's unequal
access to land and associated resources. Women's lack of
access or insecure access to housing and productive resources are
not always transparent and customary tenure systems vary from
place to place and even in time as the social and economic fabric
of rural communities are subject to transformation and
modernization. Bringing the issue to the attention of appropriate
authorities may not always be popular but may be considered part
of a surveyor's code of ethics.
8. CONCLUSIONS
Providing secure and effective access to land for women can benefit
families, communities, and nations through, for example:
- increased economic opportunities;
- increased investment in land and food production;
- improved family security during economic and social transitions;
and
- better land stewardship.
However, these benefits can only be fully realised if the
strategies adopted for improving women's access to land work in
practice and if decision-makers and project teams are aware of those
strategies that do and do not work. They need to know about the
quality and distribution of rights in land, the economic and cultural
impediments that limit women's effective and secure access to land,
and the benefits that can be achieved by enhancing women's access.
They also need to know what options for improving equitable access to
land exist and be able to evaluate the full range of implications of
these options.
Surveyors have an impact on land tenure systems worldwide. This
implies that the profession also has a special responsibility to
society. As the land tenure issues grow increasingly complex and
become more diverse, the profession has a responsibility to know more
about the issues and to do more to ensure that the systems for
administering property rights serve all societies well.
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Crowley, E. [2001]. In "Helping the dirt-poor." The
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Crowley, E. [1998]. "Women's right to land and natural
resources: Some implications for a human-rights based approach."
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Advancement and Gender Equality." Rome, Italy.
Ericsson, A. [1999]. "Women's access to land." Survey
Quarterly, No. 20. pp.11-15.
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Information, Rome 4-6 October 1999. Http://www.fao.org/docrep/meeting/X2985E.htm
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Komjathy, K. [1999]. "Women's access to benefits from land and
natural resources. A bibliography." Land Tenure Service, FAO,
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Lastarria-Cornhiel, S. [1997]. "Impact of privatization on
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25. No. 8. Pp.1317-1333.
Nichols, S., E. Crowley and K. Komjathy [1999]. "Women's
access to land: Surveyors can make a difference." Survey
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Pottier, J. [1999]. "Food Security and Gender: Information
Gaps and How to Plug Them." FAO High Level Consultation on Rural
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Sida and UN Habitat [1995]. Proceedings of the International
Workshop on Women's Access, Control, and Tenure of Land, Property, and
Settlement. Preparation for Habitat 2, Swedesurvey: Gavle, Sweden.
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Varley, A. and M. Blasco [2000]. "Gender and Property in
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World Neighbours [2000]. "Gender and Decision Making: Kenya
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BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
Katalin Komjathy holds a Masters in Business Administration
and she is currently a Masters student in Geodesy and Geomatics
Engineering at the University of New Brunswick (UNB) in Canada.. In
1999 she was a consultant to FAO compiling a Bibliography on Women's
Access to and Benefits from Land for the Land Tenure Service.
Dr. Susan Nichols is a survey engineer involved in land
reform and is currently an Associate Professor in Land Administration
at the University of New Brunswick (UNB) in Canada. She was a visiting
scholar with the Land Tenure Service at the UN Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) in Rome in 1998/99.
Agneta Ericsson is a Chief County Surveyor at The National
Land Survey of Sweden. Since 1994 she has been involved in FIG
Commission 7, until 1998 as Secretary of "Working Group Cadastral
Systems in Developing Countries" and now as a chairperson of the
task force group on women's access to land.
CONTACT
Katalin Komjathy
Dept. of Geodesy & Geomatics Engineering
University of New Brunswick
P.O. Box 4400
Fredericton
N. B. E3B 5A3
CANADA
Tel. + 1 303 543 7726
Fax + 1 506 453 4939
Email: komjathy@unb.ca
Dr. Sue Nichols
Dept. of Geodesy & Geomatics Engineering
University of New Brunswick
P.O. Box 4400
Fredericton
N. B. E3B 5A3
CANADA
Tel. + 1 506 453 4151
Fax + 1 506 453 4939
E-mail: nichols@unb.ca
Agneta Ericsson
Chief County Surveyor
National Land Survey
S-801 82 Gävle
SWEDEN
Tel. + 46 26 171 646
Fax + 46 26 171 642
Email: agneta.ericsson@lm.se
14 April 2001
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