At the time of writing this report it is four months since
the Commission’s Annual Meeting in the Bay of Islands, New Zealand, and just
less than four months until the Commission’s next Annual Meeting, the first in
the new Millennium, at Hamburg in Germany. This will take place in the week
prior to the Prague Working Week.
The Bay of Islands meeting was an outstanding success. It was
a real tribute to the organising abilities of Bill Robertson and his team from
the New Zealand Institute of Surveyors. The setting was spectacular, everything
went wonderfully well, our meetings with our New Zealand colleagues formed many
new friendships, and the Commission’s business made real progress.
The particular feature of the Annual Meeting that has become
the Commission’s trademark, the one day international symposium, focussed this
time on the work of Agneta Ericsson’s Task Force on Women’s Access to Land.
Agneta, our Swedish delegate, with Sue Nichols from Canada in particular
generated a great deal of light on the subject. I think we were all very
impressed not only by the quality of the papers and presentations but also by
the genuine interest and enthusiasm of the large numbers of people attending.
The material was considered of such quality by the New Zealand Institute that it
has been formally published in the Institute’s Survey Quarterly, a
notable first for those involved and a real achievement. The whole Commission, I
am sure, joins me in congratulation.
From New Zealand, a strong contingent of Commission 7
delegates went on to work as a part of the Bathurst Workshop on "Land
Tenure and Cadastral Infrastructures for Sustainable Development". The
outcome of the Workshop, The
Bathurst Declaration, has been widely reported internationally, and will
help to focus our thinking for the future for years to come.
The group was a part of the team assembled by Ian Williamson,
our former chair, and Don Grant, our Australian delegate, over a period of years
of patient and painstaking planning. The Workshop ended up including
representatives from 25 different countries and five United Nations related
agencies: the Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Habitat (Centre for
Human Settlements), Division for Sustainable Development, Food and Agriculture
Organisation, Economic Commission for Africa, and World Bank.
It was a remarkable meeting, and everyone there put their
whole hearts into the work. But I think we all recognise that, at the end of the
day, we were there because of the commitment, remarkable effort and energy of
Ian and Don. My warmest congratulations to our two Australian delegates and
their colleagues on behalf of the Commission.
Of course, what can be said about Bathurst, has equally to be
said about Melbourne and the International
Conference. This attracted over 150 international delegates and was followed
by the Melbourne Round Table
between FIG and the UN and bilateral agencies, hosted at Ian’s University of
Melbourne.
Later in the year, the hand-over from the UK to the US
administration took place. Peter Dale, the outgoing President, has been, and
will continue to be a great friend of the Commission. We hope he will still join
our annual meetings when he has the time. His place is taken, of course, by Bob
Foster, who will be very welcome in joining us in Hamburg and providing us with
an opening address at our one day International Symposium.
Surviving the Millennium bug, the next item on the Commission’s
agenda following New Zealand was the Advisory Committee of Commission Officers (ACCO)
in Denmark in January. The meeting was held at the new FIG permanent office, and
organised by Markku Villikka, FIG’s Executive Secretary. The new permanent
address, with Markku and his support staff, is one of the most important and
positive moves ever made by FIG and is working outstandingly well. The meeting
provided an excellent opportunity for helping to focus peoples’ attention on
working co-operatively between commissions, and on looking to the future to
supporting and implementing the Bureau’s workplan.
Plans for the future
The Commission’s three Working Groups have continued to
work since the New Zealand meeting.
The Commission is looking forward to the Annual Meeting in
May in Hamburg, Germany, in May 2000. This is the hosted by the German
Association and organised by Dr Winfried Hawerk, our German delegate, and
Gabrielle Dasse.
Working Group 3, chaired by Andras Ossko, is making a big
input into this meeting in fulfillment of a part of the Working Group’s terms
of reference to prepare a one day open international
seminar on "Land Markets". This highly topical programme looks
excellent and we will be able to report informally to the Working Week on what
will I am sure prove a very successful day.
Meanwhile preparations continue for the Commission's inputs
into the Prague Working Week and Symposium in May 2000 immediately following the
Commission’s Annual Meeting. A valuable contribution will be made in Prague by
a group of Commission delegates and others. It will focus on the land market and
cadastre debates that are of great interest and debate in the Central and
Eastern European region. A second group of Commission delegates will
simultaneously be heading in the direction of Austria to join Gerda Schennach,
our Austrian delegate, for the Austrian Association’s Meeting in Vienna. The
papers there will feature a strong representation from the Commission including
Andras Ossko (Hungary), Paul van der Molen (Netherlands and vice chair) and Jürg
Kaufmann (Switzerland) amongst others.
Later in the year – in September 2000 – the Commission is
also involved with the Maltese member association in the preparation of a joint Commission
Meeting with Commissions 2, 4, 5, and 6 in Malta. We have already filled our
part of the bill with an excellent schedule of papers for two sessions. The
first Commission session will feature international specialists from various
parts of the globe; the second will feature specialists sharing the experience
of situations in the Mediterranean region. As always the Commission will hope to
get a good picture of the situation in Malta in particular, but more widely in
the region as well.
Active preparations for the Commission's Annual Meeting in
Sweden in 2001 are under way. This will be a critical meeting where we set the
agenda for the Washington DC Congress under the US administration.