| FIG PUBLICATION NO. 13ATHE 
	BOGOR DECLARATIONUnited Nations Interregional Meeting of Experts 
	on the CadastreBogor, Indonesia 18-22 March, 1996  This publication in .pdf-format 
      
        |  | The organisers of the conference wish 
		to acknowledge the support of the Land Administration Centre of New 
		South Wales, Australia, in the publication of this document. |  
 Contents
      
    Background
    Historical Perspective
    AGENDA 21, the HABITAT II Global Plan of 
	Action and the Role of Cadastral Systems
    A Cadastral Vision
    Diversity of Needs
    Cadastral Issues
    The need for Re-engineering Systems
    Administrative and Technical Options8.1 General
 8.2 Land Policy Options
 8.3 Legal Options
 8.4 Institutional Options
 8.5 Technical Options
    Resource Implications
    The Role of the Private Sector and NGO's
    Recommendations Orders of the printed copies 
 THE BOGOR DECLARATIONUnited Nations Interregional Meeting of Experts on the Cadastre
Bogor, Indonesia 18-22 March, 1996
1. Background 1.1 An Interregional Meeting of Experts on the Cadastre was held in 
Bogor, Indonesia from the 18-22 March, 1996. The United Nations Department for 
Development Support and Management Services (DDSMS) worked closely with the 
Indonesian State Ministry for Agrarian Affairs, the National Land Agency (BPN), 
the National Coordination Agency for Surveys and Mapping (BAKOSURTANAL) and the 
International Federation of Surveyors (FIG) in organising the meeting. The 
meeting also received an important contribution from AusAID, the Australian 
agency for international development.  1.2 The meeting was attended by experts from Australia, Bulgaria, 
Cambodia, People's Republic of China, Indonesia, Republic of Korea, Malaysia, 
New Zealand, Philippines, South Africa, Sweden, United Kingdom, Thailand and 
Vietnam, as advised by the FIG.  1.3 The meeting was a response to the problems of land management and 
environmental protection as stipulated in the Global Plan of Action for HABITAT 
II, and to the recommendations contained in Agenda 21 arising out of the United 
Nations Conference on the Environment and Development (UNCED), the "Earth 
Summit", in Brazil in 1992. Due to the international importance of the subject, 
the meeting was included in the calendar of events leading up to the HABITAT II 
conference or "City Summit" in Istanbul in June 1996.  1.4 Since its inception the United Nations has been actively promoting 
cadastral programs, guidelines, seminars and workshops through its various 
agencies. This commitment is continued in Agenda 21 and the Habitat II Global 
Plan of Action which recognise that efficient and effective cadastral systems 
are essential for economic development, environmental management and social 
stability in both developed and developing countries.  1.5 The main objective of this interregional meeting was to consider 
the desirable requirements and options for cadastral systems with particular 
emphasis on the Asia and Pacific region and to make recommendations to the 
United Nations, national governments and appropriate non government 
organisations (NGOs) on cadastral and land management issues.  1.6 The meeting recognised that all countries have individual needs 
but that countries at similar stages of development have some similarities in 
their requirements.  1.7 The meeting also recognised that a key to a successful cadastral 
system is to ensure that the three main cadastral processes of adjudication of 
land rights, land transfer and mutation (subdivision or consolidation) are 
undertaken efficiently, securely and at affordable cost and speed, in support of 
an efficient and effective land market.  1.8 This Declaration is a summary of the key outcomes from the meeting 
and is supported by all experts.  2. Historical perspective 2.1 The United Nations has been involved in land administration issues 
since its inception, and in the early 1950s its Food and Agriculture 
Organisation published a series of monographs including one on the registration 
of rights in land. This was published in 1953 and has recently been revised and 
reissued.  2.2 In 1972 the United Nations called together an ad-hoc group of 
experts in response to a resolution of the Sixth United Nations Conference for 
Asia and the Far East that requested the United Nations to 'study in depth the 
problems of cadastral survey and to consider the setting up of a permanent 
committee to keep developments in this field under constant review'. The report 
produced a series of guidelines particularly directed at developing countries.
 2.3 A further meeting of a group of experts was convened in 1983 and 
updated this report. It stressed the need for speed, economy and efficiency and 
encouraged the use of computer technology in the development of land information 
systems.  2.4 This current meeting was a response to a resolution from the 
United Nations Cartographic Conference for Asia and the Pacific held in Beijing 
in 1994 which recommended that a range of cadastral options be determined to 
serve the different needs of countries in the Asian and Pacific region.  2.5 In 1996 the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe produced 
a set of Guidelines on Land Administration for countries in economic transition 
as its contribution to the HABITAT II Conference.  2.6 At the same time the International Federation of Surveyors has 
been active in cadastral issues, particularly through its Commission 7 which is 
responsible for cadastre and land management. One outcome from this activity has 
been the publication of a "Statement on the Cadastre" in 1994 which to date has 
been translated into eight languages.  2.7 This United Nations meeting noted all such previous activity so as 
not to "re-discover the wheel" and in particular adopted the FIG definition of 
cadastre as set out in the Statement on the Cadastre as the basis for discussion 
as set out below:  
  "A Cadastre is normally a parcel based, and up-to-date land information 
  system containing a record of interests in land (e.g. rights, restrictions and 
  responsibilities). It usually includes a geometric description of land parcels 
  linked to other records describing the nature of the interests, the ownership 
  or control of those interests, and often the value of the parcel and its 
  improvements. It may be established for fiscal purposes (e.g. valuation and 
  equitable taxation), legal purposes (conveyancing), to assist in the 
  management of land and land use (e.g. for planning and other administrative 
  purposes), and enables sustainable development and environmental protection."
   3. Agenda 21, the HABITAT II Global Plan of Action and the 
role for cadastral systems 3.1 Many countries already recognise the need for a cadastral system. 
Agenda 21 and the HABITAT II Global Plan of Action provide additional 
justifications for establishing and maintaining appropriate cadastral systems to 
serve the different needs of nations and their citizens.  3.2 Both documents address environmental protection, sustainable 
development and better living standards for all and identify a number of key 
areas of responsibility for land administrators. These include issues regarding 
access to information, development of appropriate data bases, exchange of 
information, land use and transportation planning, legal frameworks and in 
particular land tenure. Land administrators are called on to create efficient 
and accessible land markets that meet community needs by improving land registry 
systems and streamlining procedures in land transactions; and to establish 
appropriate land tenure to provide security for all land users, especially for 
indigenous peoples, women and the poor.  3.3 A number of key activities or institutions raised by Agenda 21 and 
the Habitat II Global Plan of Action highlight the importance of cadastral 
systems to sustainable development and environmental management. These include 
clear and secure title, facilitating access to land, sustainable human 
settlement, efficient land information systems and effective land administration 
systems.  3.4 The formalisation of rights in land, which are an integral 
component of an effective cadastral system, is very important for sustainable 
economic development and environmental management in both urban and rural areas.
 3.5 In rural areas secure tenure and the formal recording of rights in 
land are important: in promoting increased investment in agriculture; for more 
effective husbandry of the land; for improved sustainable development; to 
support an increase in GNP through an increase in agricultural productivity; and 
to provide significant social and political benefits leading to a more stable 
society, especially where land is scarce or under disputed ownership. In densely 
populated rural areas or areas of high land value a cadastral system also 
facilitates the operation of an effective land market at affordable cost and 
allows an equitable land taxation system to be operated.  3.6 This is also true in urban areas where a cadastral system is 
essential to support an active land and real estate market by permitting land to 
be bought, sold, mortgaged and leased efficiently, effectively, quickly and at 
low cost. In addition a parcel based land information system (not necessarily 
computerised), based on the cadastre, is essential for the efficient management 
of cities. Cadastral systems permit land and property taxes to be raised thereby 
supporting a wide range of urban services, and allowing the efficient management 
and delivery of local government services.  3.7 The meeting agreed that the issue is not whether cadastral systems 
are important and essential, but what is the most appropriate form of cadastral 
system for each country.  4. A Cadastral Vision 4.1 The vision of the future shared by the meeting was to:  
  develop modern cadastral infrastructures that facilitate efficient land 
  and property markets, protect the land rights of all, and support long term 
  sustainable development and land management. facilitate the planning and development of national cadastral 
  infrastructures so that they may fully service the escalating needs of greatly 
  increased urban populations. These will result from the rapid expansion of 
  cities that is already taking place and which is projected to continue into 
  the 21st century.  4.2 To achieve effective sustainable resource management and 
development for the future world population explosion, simple and effective 
cadastral structures must be available. These will need to support land use 
planning, accommodate the greatly increased demand for facilities and resources 
while ensuring that there is minimum damage to the environment, and be the 
foundation for the orderly and efficient provision of property markets and the 
supply of land-related services. They will need to provide simple mechanisms for 
identifying and protecting property rights, responsibilities and obligations, 
for recognising land use opportunities and limitations, environmental 
requirements and constraints, and for permitting consistent and acceptable 
valuation assessments.  4.3 The cadastral infrastructures envisaged for the 21st century will 
need to adapt to the different patterns and rates of population change. They 
will therefore vary according to the circumstances and population profiles of 
different countries. Nevertheless, a common cadastral vision is possible and is 
indeed essential to the progress of all.  4.4 The resulting cadastral infrastructure will facilitate access to 
land, support security of tenure and allow land rights to be traded, where 
appropriate, in an efficient and effective way and at affordable cost.  4.5 The infrastructure can support a vast array of legal, technical, 
administrative and institutional options in designing and establishing an 
appropriate cadastral system, providing a continuum of forms of cadastre ranging 
from the very simple to the very sophisticated. Such flexibility allows 
cadastres to record a continuum of land tenure arrangements from private and 
individual land rights through to communal land rights, as well as having the 
ability to accommodate traditional or customary land rights.  4.6 The cadastre will include all land in a state or jurisdiction, 
including all state and private lands. It will cover both urban and rural areas 
within a unified system. Each land parcel will be uniquely identified.  4.7 The spatial cadastral framework (usually a cadastral map) will be 
a fundamental layer within a nation's spatial data infrastructure thereby 
allowing the integration of different forms of spatial data.  4.8 While the vision is applicable in general terms to all countries, 
it is essential that it is implemented to meet the individual needs and 
different development priorities of United Nations member countries.  5. Diversity of needs 5.1 The meeting recognised that different countries have different 
needs for a cadastre at different stages of development. While the basic 
justifications for cadastral systems are economic development, environmental 
management and social stability, different countries will place greater 
importance on different areas at different periods of their development.  5.2 Western developed countries that have relatively complete 
cadastral systems tend to be more concerned with increased efficiency and 
micro-economic reform. Countries which are moving from a command economy to a 
market economy are more concerned with the rapid creation of a new system in 
support of economic development and efficient land markets. Likewise developing 
countries are concerned with economic growth, the protection of land rights and 
the reduction of land and boundary disputes. In all countries there is a concern 
that cadastral systems support social justice.  5.3 Due to their different stages of development, different countries 
have different capacities for the development of cadastral systems. In 
particular human, technological and financial resources will determine the most 
appropriate form of cadastral system to meet the needs of individual countries. 
Thus a simple low cost manual cadastre recording only private ownership rights 
may be appropriate for one country, while a sophisticated and relatively 
expensive fully computerised cadastre recording a wide range of ownership and 
land use rights may be appropriate for another country.  6. Cadastral issues 6.1 The meeting reviewed a broad range of issues that affect access to 
land, security of tenure and the management of land resources. While there was 
great diversity amongst the countries represented, a common concern was the 
identification of ownership of rights in land, especially rights of occupancy 
and use.  6.2 There can be little security in the buying, selling, mortgaging, 
inheriting, leasing and renting, and enjoyment of easements over land without 
the clear identification and recording of rights. Even where documentation has 
taken place, there is often a separation between ownership rights, usually 
administered by a central government authority, and use rights, usually recorded 
and controlled by local authorities. It was noted that in one jurisdiction there 
were over 120 statutes which could possibly impact on the use of parcels of 
land.  6.3 There is a need to identify clearly what restrictions and 
obligations relate to any individual land parcel and to simplify access to this 
information for the land owner or user. This applies to both urban and rural 
land and to land held in formal and informal tenures.  6.4 A variety of forms of informal tenure were identified by the 
meeting, for instance those that involve the illegal occupation of government or 
private land; those that result from the infringement of formal land use 
controls; those where settlement is long established but has not yet been 
brought within the formal registration system; and those where land is vacant 
but subject to an unproven claim.  6.5 It was recognised that many cadastral systems are at present 
unable to keep pace with urban growth and that intermediate or provisional forms 
of tenures may be needed to cover the transition from informal to formal.  6.6 It is important to keep any land record system simple and 
up-to-date. Several different organisations may maintain land records about the 
same piece of land, hence a common definition of a land parcel and a common 
system of land parcel referencing is essential to ensure the effective exchange 
of information about the land between these different organisations. Thus 
whereas the recording of ownership rights and use rights may be the 
responsibility of different authorities, the data must be compatible between 
them.  6.7 There is a strong need to integrate and rationalise land title 
registry and cadastral systems, to link and coordinate them with other land 
administration and management activities such as valuation and planning. The 
responsibility for the maintenance of individual land records should remain with 
those responsible for their original collection. Provided that each organisation 
works to compatible standards the exchange of information between all those 
concerned with land management and administration should be facilitated.  6.8 Cadastral systems are not ends in themselves. They support 
effective land markets, increased agricultural productivity, sustainable 
economic development, environmental management, political stability and social 
justice.  6.9 Cadastral reform or improvement should focus on the functions of 
the cadastre and in particular the key processes that are associated with 
adjudicating, transferring and sub-dividing land rights.  6.10 The success of a cadastral system is not dependent on its legal 
or technical sophistication, but whether it protects land rights adequately and 
permits those rights to be traded (where appropriate) efficiently, simply, 
quickly, securely and at low cost. However if the resources are not available to 
keep the cadastral system up-to-date then there is little justification for its 
establishment.  7. The need for re-engineering systems 7.1 The meeting recognised that the success of a cadastre is not 
dependent on its legal or technical sophistication, but whether it protects land 
rights adequately and permits those rights to be traded (where appropriate) 
efficiently, simply, quickly, securely and at affordable cost. This requires a 
focus on the user and landowner as well as the needs of government. As such the 
meeting focused on the efficiency of the key cadastral processes of land 
adjudication, land transfer and mutation (subdivision and consolidation).  7.2 In order to improve a cadastral system the importance of focusing 
on the cadastral processes to identify bottlenecks, inefficiencies and 
duplication was recognised. Once the processes have been fully documented and 
understood it is possible to re-engineer them to improve efficiency and 
effectiveness in the delivery of cadastral services to the user. Such 
re-engineering often requires changes to legislation, modified institutional and 
administrative arrangements, and the use of different technologies.  8. Administrative and technical options 8.1 General8.1.1 The main objective of the meeting was to consider appropriate 
administrative and technical options for the cadastre to serve the different 
needs of countries at different stages of development. The meeting considered in 
general terms administrative options which included land policy, legal, 
institutional and technical options. In considering all options the meeting took 
into account economic and human resource issues and the cost of the various 
options.  8.2 Land Policy Options 8.2.1 Land policy is a part of the national policy of countries. Such 
policies generally relate to economic development, social justice and equity, 
and political stability. The land policy may for instance include or promote the 
provision of security of tenure, improve access to credit, land reform, land 
titling and the resolution of issues relating to traditional or customary 
tenures, facilitate special attention to provision of land for the poor, ethnic 
minorities and women, facilitate land use and physical planning, real property 
taxation, measures to prevent land speculation and land disputes. The meeting 
emphasised the need to establish a coherent national land policy to guide 
policies within different sectors.  8.2.2 The cadastre can support land polices by providing a legal 
framework for administering land rights. A land rights framework supports 
structural change, environmental protection and sustainable management and 
control of natural resources and environment. It supports land markets, 
information for planning and monitoring of land use and also provides tools for 
the implementation of land policies, for instance land consolidation, resolving 
land disputes or compulsory acquisition of land.  8.3 Legal Options Within this policy framework, particular legal issues must be addressed 
including:  
  appropriate land registration legislation to include questions on 
  provisional titles and procedures for registration adjudication indefeasibility of title and adverse possession protection of different levels of rights and interests in land such as 
  ownership, long- and short-term leaseholds, easements, shares in real 
  properties, group rights, rights to apartments, rights to jointly owned 
  facilities etc. land acquisition including compulsory purchase land allocation and land consolidation or reapportionment land parcel mutations (subdivision, consolidation, boundary re-adjustment)
  strata, cluster and community titles copyright and data protection when cadastral data becomes a marketable 
  commodity quality assurance and licensing of practitioners  8.4 Institutional Options A variety of issues arise when selecting the most appropriate organisational 
structure for managing a cadastre. These include:  
  whether there should be combined land registration and cadastral surveying 
  and mapping functions or whether these should be separate organisations whether the system should be centralised or decentralised how to establish linkages between different authorities responsible for 
  maintaining records on the ownership, value and use of land. whether the activities of the cadastre should be commercialised, 
  corporatised or privatised the extent of participation by private surveyors in a state run cadastre
the role of professional bodies and NGOs and the administration of 
  licensing boards regulation of responsibilities, accountability, quality assurance
funding arrangements for the creation or development of a cadastreeducation training and continuing professional development research and development international cooperation  8.5 Technical Options 8.5.1 Technical options for the development and maintenance of the 
cadastre were considered by the delegates. Consideration covered the different 
needs of countries at different stages of development. The major factor 
addressed was the identification of the need for, the appropriateness of and the 
phasing in of computerisation into the cadastral environment based upon need, 
geography or political dictate. Any move towards the adoption of a programme of 
computerisation should be subject to the availability of trained staff or 
contractors, the access to maintenance and support staff, adequate 
communications and a suitable storage capability. The move to computerisation 
should bring security to the cadastral system, greater accessibility to 
information and will overcome the deterioration of records in paper form.  8.5.2 It is likely that emphasis will be given first to the 
computerisation of indexes, then to textual data sets, moving through graphical 
data conversion, the establishment of the fundamental spatial data bases and 
ultimately leading to an automated mapping capability.  8.5.3 While the end result will improve system functionality and 
linkages between the components of the cadastral system it is essential to 
achieve short term results to demonstrate what the future will bring. This is 
best done by comprehensive pilot projects where issues of or proposals for data 
conversion, standards and the updating and upgrading of content can be developed 
or proved. Experience and education are the best outcomes from a pilot project.
 8.5.4 Computerised indexes should be an initial development to 
provide, at the strategic level, a statement of metadata available throughout 
the cadastral system. Initially such indexes will provide rapid access to 
existing manual records. At the tactical level, emphasis should be placed on the 
careful selection of a unique parcel identification system.  8.5.5 The long term aim should be to move from paper to computer 
titles to improve efficiency and particularly to improve the ease of dealings in 
the mortgage market. Any move to reliance on electronic titles however must be 
accompanied by a change of approach to the certification of documents. This will 
bring a recognition of the adoption of risk management.  8.5.6 Microfilming and video imaging are technologies which have a 
role in cadastral reform. Microfilming is an important tool for maintaining a 
backup record of title and cadastral map records. However it is still a manual 
system with often slow access time. Video imaging, records images of title and 
cadastral maps on video laser disks provide very good archiving of records and 
rapid access and copying. However the records have no 'intelligence' since they 
are simply images. It is not possible to search textual data within the record 
for example.  8.5.7 The choice of technologies will depend on resources and the 
subject land, be it urban, rural or remote. This is usually a function of land 
value. The adoption of technology should be phased, based on the urgency of the 
task, the geography, the desired standards and the use of the private sector. It 
may well require the re-engineering of manual systems before the use of new 
technologies. Field operations should also be phased and the technologies may 
range from GPS to the plane table. The steps may well commence with large scale 
photomaps for planning and adjudication purposes.  8.5.8 In summary, the major observations by the delegates were :  
  A National Spatial Data Infrastructure should be established to ensure a 
  uniform approach for maximum integration and security of data, effective 
  resource use and the development of a comprehensive land information system.
  Topographic and cadastral data bases should be homogenous and uniformly 
  based on the national geodetic network to ensure future data set integration.
  Early consideration should be given to the appropriate methodology for the 
  updating and upgrading of all cadastral systems.  9. Resource implications 9.1 Cadastral reform or improvement has major human, technological and 
financial resource implications.  9.2 The meeting noted that some nations have, for example, one 
university educated professional land surveyor for every 5,000 population. These 
numbers support a sophisticated computerised cadastral system. On the other hand 
some countries have as few as one land surveyor for every 100,000 population, 
even though the cadastre was not complete and was of a more simple design.  9.3 Even recognising that the more developed nations may have systems 
which are more dependent on highly trained professionals, the discussion within 
the meeting did recognise that human resource issues are one of the major, if 
not the major, limitation in developing cadastral systems in developing 
countries.  9.4 The meeting identified that inadequate financial resources are a 
major limitation to improving cadastral systems. It was however noted that 
cadastral systems do provide governments with an important source of revenue 
generation but that revenue generation is heavily dependent on maintaining an 
efficient system.  9.5 Human and financial resources were recognised as major limitations 
in developing cadastral systems.  10. The role of the private sector and NGOs 10.1 The meeting discussed the trend in many countries towards a more 
commercial approach to operating cadastral systems and to the increasing use of 
the private sector where this can be shown to be more cost effective and more 
productive. In cadastral surveying the use of the private surveyors requires 
adequate quality control mechanisms to ensure the integrity of the national 
spatial data archive.  10.2 Whereas in many countries this has traditionally been achieved 
through a system of licensing individual surveyors and conveyancers, and careful 
scrutiny of their work by government officials, there is a growing trend towards 
quality assurance and less rigorous government monitoring. In an increasing 
number of countries, government mapping agencies are themselves being made to 
compete in the market place and to recover much if not all of their costs.  10.3 Semi-privatisation of national mapping agencies has occurred at a 
time when governments and international agencies such as the United Nations are 
seeking to make greater use of NGOs. On the global stage organisations such as 
the International Federation of Surveyors (FIG) have been collaborating with 
United Nations agencies while at the national level Institutions or Associations 
of Surveyors have a role as intermediaries between government and the community 
and in ensuring the professional standards of practitioners.  11. Recommendations The following recommendations assume the definition of cadastre as adopted in 
the FIG "Statement on the Cadastre" which is a broader interpretation than that 
adopted in some jurisdictions.  To the United Nations 1. To assist in the establishment of inter-regional forums for 
officials and experts in cadastre and associated forms of land administration 
with annual meetings to promote cooperation in the exchange of technical 
knowledge, expertise, education and training.  2. To produce a set of guidelines for cadastre and associated forms of 
land administration along the lines of those recently produced by the United 
Nations Economic Commission for Europe but based on a taxonomy of regional 
needs, for instance with special reference to the practices in South East Asia.
 3. To support a workshop to develop a clearer definition of the form 
and range of land rights and the responsibilities and obligations which attach 
to land rights specifically within the Asian and Pacific region.  4. To produce a set of guidelines to determine the costs, benefits, 
risks and value for money of cadastral systems to assist national governments in 
evaluating support for cadastral projects.  5. To investigate the desirability and feasibility of establishing 
regional support centres to address the education and training needs of 
cadastral system managers and related professionals within each region.  6. To encourage the participation of private, national and 
international funding agencies in supporting investment in improvements to 
cadastral and land registration systems, especially in developing countries.  7. To use the forthcoming HABITAT II conference to promote the role of 
cadastres and land registration systems in economic and social development in 
the debate and deliberation of world leaders.  To national governments 1. To recognise the essential role of land and property in economic 
development, environmental management and social stability.  2. To recognise that the operation of land markets which rely on a 
cadastre as basic infrastructure is a significant source of revenue generation. 
However it should also be recognised that maintaining and increasing such 
revenue is dependent on improvements to both the surveying and mapping and land 
registration functions.  3. To recognise the fundamental role that cadastral maps, either in 
paper or computer form, play in a national spatial data infrastructure. As such 
it is very important that cadastral surveying and mapping is based on a national 
geodetic framework common to all spatial data sets thereby permitting the 
integration of spatial data, particularly topographic data, and supporting the 
establishment of land and geographic information systems.  4. To recognise the essential and close relationship between cadastral 
surveying and mapping and land registration in the efficient and effective 
operation of cadastral systems. While recognising that in some jurisdictions 
these organisations may be separated, improved efficiency and a reduction in 
duplication demand an integrated approach to managing and operating the 
cadastre.  5. To recognise the important linkage between the government, private 
and educational sectors in establishing and maintaining appropriate cadastral 
systems.  6. To support the United Nations activities in institutional building 
and capacity development in the operation of cadastral systems.  7. To strengthen NGOs, and particularly professional organisations and 
learned societies concerned with cadastral activities in order that they may 
effectively contribute to the development and maintenance of cadastral systems.
 To Non Government Organisations 1. To recognise the important contribution that NGOs can make at both 
a national and international level in technology transfer and information 
exchange. NGOs can also play an important mediating role since they usually 
represent the collective interests of the government, private and/or educational 
sectors.  2. To increase cooperation with United Nations agencies in collecting 
and exchanging information on the cadastre, standards in land information, 
producing guidelines, institutional building and capacity development.  3. To encourage their members to establish educational and research 
programmes in cadastre and land administration in their national higher 
educational systems.  
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