
		FIG IN BRIEF
	FIG is the premier international organization representing the interests 
	of surveyors worldwide. It is a federation of the national member 
	associations and covers the whole range of professional fields within the 
	global surveying, geomatics, geodesy and geo-information community. It provides an international forum for 
	discussion and development aiming to promote professional practice and 
	standards.
	FIG was founded on July 18 1878 in Paris by delegates from seven national 
	associations - Belgium, France, Germany, Great Britain, Italy, Spain and 
	Switzerland - and was known as the Fédération 
	Internationale des Géomètres. This has become anglicized to the 
	International Federation of Surveyors. It is a UN-recognized non-government 
	organization (NGO), representing more than 120 countries throughout the 
	world, and its aim is to ensure that the disciplines of surveying and all 
	who practise them meet the needs of the markets and communities that they 
	serve. 
		FIG Profile in pdf:
		
		
The FIG vision
	Surveying is a modern profession acting worldwide for a better 
	infrastructure for our society and planet earth. The International 
	Federation of Surveyors (FIG) wants to keep, and even improve, its role as 
	the premier non-governmental organisation that represents the interests of 
	surveyors worldwide. 
The role of FIG
	FIG’s activities are governed by a work plan, which is approved by the 
	General Assembly and reviewed by Council as its tenure progresses. The 
	current work plan with the motto “Volunteering for the Future ” guides Council, Commissions, Networks and 
	Task Force in their activities. 
	FIG supports the role of a prosperous and sustainable profession of 
	surveyors to provide solution functionality, reliably, affordably for a 
	complex and rapidly changing world that cannot wait, and to translate a 
	sustainable development agenda into action. FIG supports international 
	collaboration among its members for the progress of surveying in all its 
	fields and applications. FIG has a close cooperation with United Nations 
	relevant bodies, World Bank, and its sister associations and has been 
	globally recognized as the leading international non-governmental 
	organization on geospatial information and the management of “land”, the 
	“sea” and the “built” environment. It is within the surveyors’ task to 
	determine the size and shape of the earth, to map its surface and to manage 
	it in a sustainable way.
Who are the members of FIG?
	FIG draws its membership from practitioners working in communities with 
	both the public and private sectors, from the scientific, research and 
	academic community, as well as from the spatial technologies and services 
	community. FIG functions with the goodwill, resources and contribution of 
	its memberships and their corp of volunteers from around the world. 
	Members of FIG consist of: 
	
		- member associations – national associations 
		representing one or more of the disciplines of surveying 
- affiliates – groups of surveyors or surveying 
		organizations undertaking professional activities but not fulfilling the 
		criteria for member associations 
- corporate members – organizations, institutions or 
		agencies which provide commercial services related to the profession of 
		surveyor 
- academic members – organizations, institutions or 
		agencies, which promote education or research in one or more of the 
		disciplines of surveying. An individual may be appointed as a 
		correspondent in a country where no association or group of surveyors 
		exist that is eligible to join FIG as a member.
The Benefit of Being a Member 
		The benefits for all classes of membership of FIG include: 
		
			- being part of the global community of surveyors seeking to 
			extend the usefulness of surveying for the betterment of society, 
			environment and economy 
- international recognition of the national profession and 
			enhancement of the profile of the international surveying profession
			
- access to the international surveying community for exchange of 
			experiences and new developments 
- access to surveyors and surveying companies throughout the world 
			who already have established connections with influential 
			international bodies 
- opportunities through the commission working groups and FIG Task 
			Forces to take part in the development of many aspects of surveying 
			practice and the various disciplines, including ethics, standards, 
			education and a whole range of professional issues 
- access to continuing professional development and critical self 
			evaluation of individual standards and professionalism  
- access to institutional FIG support – the global surveying 
			community – when aiming to improve the educational or professional 
			standing in society; or improving the national systems for land 
			registration and land management.
    
    
    
    
    
    
FIG Organisation
		
		
    
    
    
    
		Commission activity
	Ten commissions lead FIG’s technical work. Each member association 
	appoints a delegate to each of the commissions. Detailed information on the 
	work of the commissions, their work plans, working groups, seminars, 
	newsletters and publications can be found at www.fig.net/organisation/comm/. 
	The terms of reference are as follows:
	
The terms of reference are as follows:
Commission 1 - Professional Practice
	Chair: Mr. Timothy Burch (United 
	States) 
	Perception of surveying profession; professional practice, legal aspects 
	and organizational structures; standards and certification; code of ethics 
	and applications; under-represented groups in surveying; students and young 
	surveyors; information technology management and professional practice; 
	project management, quality and best practice
Commission 2 - Professional Education
	Chair: Dr. Dimo Todorovski  
	(The Netherlands) 
	Curriculum development; learning and teaching methods and technologies; 
	educational management and marketing; continuing professional development; 
	networking in education and training.
Commission 3 - Spatial Information Management
	Chair: Dr. Sagi Dalyot (Israel) 
	Management of spatial information about land, property and marine data; 
	spatial data infrastructure – data collection, analysis, visualisation, 
	standardisation, dissemination, and support of good governance; knowledge 
	management for SIM; business models, public-private-partnerships, 
	professional practice and administration.
Commission 4 - Hydrography
	Chair: Dr. Malavige Don Eranda Kanchana Gunathilaka (Sri 
	Lanka) 
	Hydrographic surveying; hydrographic education, training and CPD; marine 
	environment and coastal zone management; data processing and management; 
	nautical charting and bathymetric maps – analogue and digital, including 
	electronic navigational charts.
Commission 5 - Positioning and Measurement
	Chair: Dr. Ryan Keenan (Australia) 
	The science of measurement including instrumentation, methodology and 
	guidelines; the acquisition of accurate and reliable survey data related to 
	the position, size and shape of natural and artificial features of the earth 
	and its environment and including variation with time.
Commission 6 - Engineering Surveys
	Chair: Prof. Dr. Werner Lienhart (Austria) 
	Acquisition, processing and management of topometric data; quality 
	control and validation for civil engineering constructions and manufacturing 
	of large objects; modern concepts for setting-out and machine guidance; 
	deformation monitoring systems; automatic measuring systems, multi-sensor 
	measuring systems; terrestrial laser systems.
Commission 7 - Cadastre and Land Management
Chair: Dr. Rohan 
Bennett (Australia) 
	Cadastre, land administration and land management; 
	development of pro poor land management and land administration; development 
	of sustainable land administration as an infrastructure for sustainable 
	development to underpin economic growth; applications of innovative and 
	advanced technology in cadastre and land administration; promoting the role 
	of surveyors in land administration matters to the public and stakeholders.
Commission 8 - Spatial Planning and Development
	Chair: Mr. Kwabena Asiama (Ghana) 
	Regional and local structure planning; urban and rural land use planning 
	and implementation; planning policies and environmental management for 
	sustainable development; re-engineering of mega cities; public-private 
	partnerships; informal settlement issues in spatial development, planning 
	and governance.
Commission 9 - Valuation and the Management of Real Estate
	Chair: Mr. Peter R. Ache (Germany) 
	Valuation; investment in real estate and investment planning; real estate 
	investment vehicles; real estate, development finance and land use 
	feasibility planning; real estate economics and markets and market analyses; 
	management of property and property systems; management of public sector 
	property.
Commission 10 - Construction Economics and Management
	Chair: Ms. Mercy Iyorter (Nigeria) 
	Construction economics, including quantity surveying, building surveying, 
	cost engineering and management; estimating and tendering; commercial 
	management including procurement, risk management and contracts; project and 
	programme management including planning and scheduling.
    
    
    
    
    
    
Networks
	Young Surveyors Network 
	Chair: Ms. Shirley Chapunza 
	(Zimbabwe) 
	FIG Young Surveyors Network addresses the need for young surveyor 
	representation within FIG, and the need to ensure FIG activities are meeting 
	the needs of students and young professionals. 
	Regional Capacity Development Network 
	Chair: Dr. Diane Dumashie (RICS, 
	United Kingdom) 
	Africa: Chair: Mr. 
	Mohammed Mamman Kabir
	(Nigeria)
		America: Chair: Mr. Dan Roman 
		(United States)
		Asia/Pacific: Chair: Mr. Robert Sarib 
		(Australia)
		This network originates from the Africa Task Force 2009–2014 and was 
		transformed into a Network. 
	Standards Network 
	Chair: Mr. David Martin (ESRF, 
	France) 
	Standards are continuously important in the work of surveyors. In 2012 
	the Standards Network succeeded in publishing the Land Administration Domain 
	Model (LADM) as ISO Standard19152.
	Permanent Institutions 
	International Institution for the History of Surveying & Measurement 
	(IIHSM) 
	Director: Mr. Jan de Graeve (UBGE, 
	Belgium) 
	The International Office for Cadastre and Land Records (OICRF) 
	Director: Dr. Eva-Maria Unger (Austria)
	Task Forces 2023–2026
	FIG Task Force on FIG and the Sustainable Development Goals
	Chair: Ms. Paula 
	Dijkstra (the Netherlands) 
	The task force identifies relevant SDGs for FIG and its Commissions, 
	assesses the needs, requirements and opportunities for FIG and explores 
	solutions, approaches, curricula and tools to boost the achievement of the 
	SDGs 
		FIG Task Force on Climate Compass
	Co-Chairs: Ms. Roshni Sharma (Australia) and Ms.
	Clarissa Augustinus (Ireland)
		The task force will examine and actively promote the engagement and 
		role that surveyors can have in contributing to the climate change 
		agenda.
		FIG Task Force on Geospatial Information Ecosystem
		Co-Chairs: Mr. Prof Abbas Rajabifard (Australia) 
		and Ms. Dr. Kirsikka Riekkinen (Finland)
		The Task Force centred upon the involvement of our profession in 
		geospatial fields to re-position its international standing and assert 
		the essential relevance of geospatial experts in international markets.
		FIG Task Force on Evolutionary Diversity and Inclusion
		Chair: Mr. Stephen Djaba (Ghana)
		The task force aims to promote diversity and inclusion within the 
		surveying profession, not only in terms of race, gender, and ethnicity, 
		but also in terms of age and generational diversity, including Gen X, Y, 
		and Z.
The FIG Foundation
President: Mr. Bryn Fosburgh (USA)
The FIG Foundation is an independent body under the Federation giving grants 
and scholarships to support education and capacity building especially in 
developing countries. Contributions are received
through conferences, corporations, and private donators.
    
    
    
How does FIG operate?
	The commissions prepare and conduct the programme for FIG’s international 
	congresses, held every four years, and annual working weeks, held in the 
	intervening years. The two previous congresses were held in Kuala Lumpur 
	(Malaysia) in 2014 and Istanbul (Turkey) in 2018. The next congress will be 
	held in 2022 in Warsaw (Poland). Congresses attract 
	several thousand participants from all over the world and are the most 
	important events in the FIG calendar. The technical programme, which marks 
	the culmination of each commission’s four-year programme of work, is 
	complemented by a major international exhibition. 
	Working Weeks combine meetings of FIG’s administrative bodies with 
	technical conferences organized by the commissions and the host member 
	association and as such provide the opportunity for commissions to implement 
	and develop their work programmes and for FIG to network at a more regional 
	level. In 2019 the Working Week was held in Hanoi (Vietnam). Due to Covid-19 
	the Working Week 2020 was replaced with an article series and in 2021 it was 
	organized, together with Dutch local organizers, as an online event. The 
	2023 Working Week takes place in Orlando, United States. To increase regional activities FIG also organizes regional 
	conferences, the most recent of which was held in Uruguay in November 2012.
	
	In addition to their involvement with FIG congresses and working weeks, 
	commissions and their working groups organize or co-sponsor a wide range of 
	seminars and workshops, usually in collaboration with member associations or 
	other international professional bodies.
	A key element to the success of a commissions work is the appointment of 
	national delegates, providing a unique opportunity for professional 
	development. Member associations, affiliates, corporate members and academic 
	members are all entitled to appoint delegates to the commissions; and 
	commission chairs often co-opt additional experts to assist with particular 
	aspects of their work programmes.
How is FIG administered?
	By its General Assembly which meets annually during the FIG Working Week 
	or the FIG Congress. The General Assembly comprises of delegates of the 
	member associations and, as non-voting members, the Council, commission 
	chairs and representatives of affiliates, and corporate and academic 
	members. The General Assembly debates and approves policies and implemented 
	by the Council. 
	The Council is elected by the General Assembly. The Council consists of 
	the President (elected for four year term of office) and four Vice 
	Presidents (term of office is four years) with two of the Vice Presidents 
	being elected every second year, and coming from different countries 
	throughout the world. In addition commission chairs appoint their 
	representative to the Council. 
	The work of the General Assembly and the Council is assisted by an 
	Advisory Committee of Commission Officers (ACCO); ad hoc task forces 
	appointed from time to time to review existing work plans; three networks; 
	and two permanent institutions.
FIG Council members 2023–2026
President:
	
		- Dr. Diane Dumashie (United 
		Kingdom) (2023–2026) 
Vice-Presidents: 
	
		- Ms. Winnie Shiu (Hong 
		Kong, China) (2023–2026) 
- Dr. Daniel Steudler (Switzerland) (2023–2026) 
- Prof. Qin YAN (China) (2025-2028)
- Mr. Michalis Kalogiannakis (Greece) (2025-2028)
- ACCO Representative: Mr. Ryan Keenan (Australia) 
		(2025–2026) 
- Young Surveyors Network representative: Mr. Iaroslav Zifceac
		(Romania) (2025-2026)
- Corporate members representative: Mr. Brent Jones, ESRI
Term 2023-24:
	
		- Mr. Mikael Lilje (Sweden) (2021–2024) 
- Mr. Kwame Tenadu (Ghana) (2021-2024)
- ACCO Representative: Mr. Timothy 
		Burch (United States) 
		(2023–2024) 
- Young Surveyors Network representative: Ms. Shirley Tendai 
		Chapunza (Zimbabwe) (2023-2024)
- Corporate members representative: Mr. Brent Jones, ESRI
For details on the current council see: 
		www.fig.net/organisation/council/
		 
	
FIG Office
The FIG Office is located in Copenhagen, Denmark.
Address:
FIG Office
Kalvebod Brygge 31-33,
DK-1780 Copenhagen V, Denmark.
Tel: +45 3886 1081
E-mail:  fig@fig.net
Further information about the FIG office at: 
www.fig.net/about/office/index.asp 
    
    
    
    
    
    
	How Does FIG Communicate?
	
		- Through the FIG home page www.fig.net, 
		which is the main medium of external communication. 
- The FIG annual 
		review – an overview of major activities and achievements (available on 
		www.fig.net/about/annual_review/). 
- The FIG e-Newsletter – a monthly 
		newsletter and the main medium of internal communication (available 
		through subscription on 
		www.fig.net/resources/subscriptions/getnewsletter.asp). 
- The FIG 
		publications series – formal policy statements, guidelines, and reports 
		(available on 
		www.fig.net/resources/publications/figpub/). 
- Proceedings of FIG congresses and of selected technical seminars 
		sponsored or co-sponsored by FIG’s commissions and member associations 
		(available on www.fig.net/resources/proceedings/). 
- Commission news – 
		for the dissemination of information specifically concerned with the 
		work of individual commissions (available on 
		www.fig.net/organisation/comm/ ). 
- Social media.
How Is FIG Financed? 
		Members’ annual membership fees largely finance operating costs. 
		Rates of membership fees payable by member associations are approved 
		annually by the General Assembly. The Council sets rates of membership 
		fees payable by affiliates, corporate and academic members. 
		Other activities, including congresses, technical seminars and 
		administrative meetings, are mostly self-financing. In the case of 
		meetings, income is raised from registration fees, which may be 
		supplemented by income from an accompanying technical exhibition, by 
		subventions from the host government or association, or by grants from 
		aid agencies.
		FIG International Co-Operations
		FIG international co-operations include: 
		
			- UN agencies, notably the United Nations Human 
			Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT), the Food and Agricultural 
			Organization (FAO), the United Nations Global Geospatial Information 
			Management (UN-GGIM), United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), 
			the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs (UN OOSA) and the 
			World Bank, as well as United Nations Economic Commission for Europe 
			(UN-ECE), United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA), the 
			UN sponsored United Nations Regional Committee for Global Geospatial 
			Information Management for Asia and the Pacific (UN-GGIM-AP) and 
			Permanent Committee on SDI for the Americas (PC IDEA), and United 
			Nations Regional Cartographic Conferences (UNRCC). Joint workshops 
			and other collaborative projects help to identify and develop 
			practical solutions to problems associated with the ownership and 
			management of land. FIG is officially recognised by the United 
			Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC). 
- International professional organizations in surveying 
			disciplines through the Joint Board of Spatial Information 
			Societies that includes organizations such as the International 
			Association of Geodesy (IAG), the International Cartographic 
			Association (ICA), the International Hydrographic Organization 
			(IHO), the International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote 
			Sensing (ISPRS), and the Global Spatial Data Infrastructure 
			Association (GSDI). Furthermore, FIG has formal co-operation with 
			the International Society for Mine Surveying (ISM), Pan-American 
			Institute of Geography and History (PAIGH) and the International 
			Federation of Hydrographic Societies (IFHS). FIG is also an 
			international scientific associate of the International Council for 
			Science (ICSU).
The Benefit of Being a Member 
		The benefits for all classes of membership of FIG include: 
		
			- being part of the global community of surveyors seeking to 
			extend the usefulness of surveying for the betterment of society, 
			environment and economy 
- international recognition of the national profession and 
			enhancement of the profile of the international surveying profession
			
- access to the international surveying community for exchange of 
			experiences and new developments 
- access to surveyors and surveying companies throughout the world 
			who already have established connections with influential 
			international bodies 
- opportunities through the commission working groups and FIG Task 
			Forces to take part in the development of many aspects of surveying 
			practice and the various disciplines, including ethics, standards, 
			education and a whole range of professional issues 
- access to continuing professional development and critical self 
			evaluation of individual standards and professionalism  
- access to institutional FIG support – the global surveying 
			community – when aiming to improve the educational or professional 
			standing in society; or improving the national systems for land 
			registration and land management.
For further information about FIG and its activities consult the 
homepage at: www.fig.net