Katerina ATHANASIOU, Efi DIMOPOULOU, Christos 
		KASTRISIOS and Lysandros TSOULOS, Greece 
		The interests, responsibilities and opportunities of states to 
		provide infrastructure and resource management are not limited to their 
		land territory but extend to marine areas as well. So far, although the 
		theoretical structure of a Marine Administration System (MAS) is based 
		on the management needs of the various countries, the marine terms have 
		not been clearly defined. In order to define a MAS that meets the 
		spatial marine requirements, the specific characteristics of the marine 
		environment have to be identified and integrated in a management system. 
		To explicitly define MAS, certain issues need to be addressed such as: 
		the types of interests that exist in marine environment, the best way to 
		capture and register those interests, laws defining these interests, and 
		their hierarchical classification, as well as how this classification 
		can be used to produce the principles for the implementation of MSP. In 
		addition, the registration of laws in a MAS that could automatically 
		define the constraints of the emerging Rights, Restrictions and 
		Responsibilities (RRRs) should be addressed, along with property/ tenure 
		object definition. Further questions need to be answered e.g., what is 
		the basic reference unit and how can this be defined, deliminated and 
		demarcated, capturing the 3D presence of marine parcel and is the 
		traditional definition of a cadastral parcel applicable in a marine zone 
		defined by United Nations Convention on Law of the Sea (Hereinafter: 
		UNCLOS) (United Nations, 1982) and how could the fourth dimensional 
		nature of marine RRRs be included. Addressing these questions 
		constitutes the basis upon which a MAS can be built. However, the most 
		crucial question is how the international standards and practices of 
		land administration domain can be used for managing the marine 
		environment. The aim of this paper is to examine the above questions, to 
		probe the ways the legislation can be included into a MAS and to present 
		how RRRs relating to marine space may be defined and organized, in order 
		to develop a MAS based on international standards by means of not only 
		trading in marine interests, but rather facilitating the management of 
		activities related to resources. 
		 
		1. INTRODUCTION 
		Over the last two decades, countries with extensive coastlines and 
		confined marine space, where they exercise sovereignty and powers, have 
		dealt with the concept of MAS. Among others Australia, Canada, the 
		Netherlands and the United States have developed systems for the 
		administration of marine interests and the sustainable management of 
		marine resources (Athanasiou et al, 2015). Their efforts are at a 
		development stage, based on practices adopted in the fields of Marine 
		Cadastre (MC), Marine Spatial Data Infrastructure (MSDI), Marine Spatial 
		Planning (MSP). 
		Many definitions have been given to MC, as Nichols et al (2006) 
		extensively described. It can be broadly defined as “an information 
		system that records, manages and visualizes the interests and the 
		spatial (boundaries) and non-spatial data (descriptive information about 
		laws, stakeholders, natural resources) related to them”. MSDI is 
		fundamental to the way marine information is developed and share for 
		competent marine administration. MSP is a planning frame for balancing 
		the rival human activities and managing their effects in the marine 
		environment. 
		Research has been carried out concerning the correlation between 
		these concepts and the way they interrelate. MC and MSDI relationship: 
		MC is defined as a management tool, which can be added as a data layer 
		in a marine SDI, allowing them to be more effectively identified, 
		administered and accessed (Rajabifard et al, 2005; Rajabifard et al, 
		2006; Strain et al, 2006; Widodo et al, 2002; Widodo, 2003; Widodo, 
		2004). Furthermore regarding the relation of MC and MSP, according to 
		Arvanitis (2016), there is a two-way relationship between MSP and MC: 
		“Both of them function independently. However, MSP is designed and 
		implemented safely and at a lower cost if it utilizes data from MC and 
		MC will register and control the different rights and licenses in marine 
		areas based on ecological environment when defined zoning from MSP 
		exist.” According to De Latte, 2015 “A MC is also different to a MSP as 
		referred to in the directive 2014/89; a MSP is intended to regulate the 
		use of the marine area/areas it covers; a MC is intended to describe and 
		delimit distinct MC parcels and to indicate all relevant public and 
		private rights, restrictions (including inter alia the restrictions 
		resulting from MSP) and charges on those parcels.” 
		MASs show the different perspectives of the various jurisdictions, 
		while the tools developed for the management of marine environment show 
		the increasing institutional and research interest on this topic. 
		However, there is a lack of a common standard regarding the management 
		of marine Rights, Restrictions and Responsibilities (RRRs) and their 
		spatial extent. Current research focuses on the development of a MC data 
		model that would serve as the basis of a MAS, taking into account 
		existing standards. Concerning modeling aspects, 83 Katerina Athanasiou, 
		Efi Dimopoulou, Christos Kastrisios and Lysandros Tsoulos Management of 
		Marine Rights, Restrictions and Responsibilities according to 
		International Standards 5th International FIG 3D Cadastre Workshop 18-20 
		October 2016, Athens, Greece Ng’ang’a et al (2004) describe a marine 
		property rights data model, Duncan and Rahman (2013) advocate the 
		integration of marine blocks with land volumes, Griffith-Charles and 
		Sutherland (2014) examine the creation of a 3D Land Administration 
		Domain Model (LADM) compliant MC in Trinidad and Tobago, while 
		Athanasiou, 2014; Athanasiou et al, 2015 deal with the conceptual 
		classification of the marine entities and relationships and explore the 
		adaptation of LADM to marine environment. Furthermore, in several 
		countries the management of marine cadastral units is included in the 
		LADM implementation. Among the existing standards that could relate to 
		marine environment special reference can be made to: 
		
			- The LADM, since it consists the first standard and approved base 
			model for the land administration domain (ISO 19152, 2012), 
			establishing a rigorous mechanism for managing legal RRRs, their 
			spatial dimension and the stakeholders. The implementation of this 
			standard to the marine domain seems feasible since the triplet 
			Object – Right – Subject, which consists the basis of LADM, applies 
			as well in the marine environment.
- The S-100 Universal Hydrographic Data Model, which provides the 
			framework and the appropriate tools to develop and maintain 
			hydrographic related data, products and registers. Following the 
			proposal made by Geoscience Australia in 2013 for the development of 
			a product specification for Maritime Limits and Boundaries, Canadian 
			Hydrographic Service & Geoscience Australia presented a model in 
			relation to LADM and marine environment. The report proposes the 
			extension of S-100 to support LADM, through the development of the 
			S-121 Maritime Limits and Boundaries (Canadian Hydrographic Service 
			& Geoscience Australia, 2016). 
In order to develop and implement the aforementioned models into the 
		marine environment, the unique features of the marine space must be 
		taken into account. This paper explores the range of laws that dictate 
		marine interests, identifies the marine legal object and provides the 
		legislative framework and the RRRs that relate to marine space, in order 
		to be optimally organized towards the development of a MAS based on 
		international standards. 
		2. INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS RELATING TO MARINE ENVIRONMENT 
		Standards are widely used, since they provide efficiency and support 
		in communication between organizations and countries as well as for 
		system development and data exchange based on common terminology. Domain 
		specific standardization is needed to capture the semantics of marine 
		administration. Such a standard will support marine registry and 
		cadastral organizations utilizing a Geographic Information System along 
		with a Data Base Management System and applications, in order to 
		implement and support marine policy measures. 
		Current discussions and efforts focus on the development and 
		implementation of marine data modeling taking into account practices 
		from Land Administration Standardization. Therefore, the registration of 
		interests encountered in the marine environment with their spatial 
		dimension may be modeled in accordance with terrestrial mapping methods 
		and standardization techniques (Canadian Hydrographic Service & 
		Geoscience Australia, 2016). The basis of the model will be the S-100 – 
		IHO Hydrographic Geospatial Standard for Marine Data and Information.
		
		2.1 LADM 
		The LADM, was approved on the 1st of November 2012 as an 
		international standard, ISO 19152, constituting the first adopted 
		international standard in the land administration domain. LADM provides 
		a formal language for the description of existing systems, based on 
		their similarities and differences. It is a descriptive standard, not a 
		prescriptive one that can be expanded. LADM is organized into three 
		packages and a subpackage (Lemmen, 2012). These are groups of classes 
		with a certain level of cohesion. The three packages are: Party Package; 
		Administrative Package; Spatial Unit Package and subpackage: Surveying 
		and Spatial Representation Subpackage. The model contains thematic and 
		spatial attributes. Furthermore in several attributes code lists are 
		used rather than character strings in order to ensure consistency. The 
		modification and adoption of code lists in national profiles is 
		possible. 
		From the 3D perspective, LADM supports both 2D 
		(LA_BoundaryFaceString) and 3D objects (LA_BoundaryFace) and 
		distinguishes legal and physical objects by introducing external classes 
		for BuildingUnit and UtilityNetwork. It covers the legal space while the 
		physical counterparts are not directly generated in LADM. At the 
		semantic level, legal entities are not enriched by classifying data in 
		relation to each other (Aien et al, 2013). Furthermore, LADM through the 
		VersionedObject class provides the attributes beginLifespanVersion and 
		endLifespanVersion, allowing the recreation of a dataset at a previous 
		point in time leading to a 4D visualization of the Cadastre 
		(Griffith-Charles and Sutherland, 2014). 
		The implementation of the model in marine environment is a user 
		requirements in LADM version A. Furthermore the scope of the standard 
		explicitly addresses the water when referring to land. Lemmen (2012) 
		states “With some imagination the laws (formal or informal) can be seen 
		as ‘parties’; in fact the laws allow people to have interests in ‘marine 
		objects’. The interests are RRRs”. The common denominator or the pattern 
		that can be observed in land administration systems as it is derived 
		from the LADM is with a package of party/person/organisation data and 
		RRR/legal/administrative data, spatial unit (parcel) data. The same 
		pattern is also applicable on marine space. 
		2.2 S-100 Universal Hydrographic Model 
		S-100 provides a contemporary hydrographic geospatial data standard 
		that can support a wide variety of hydrographic-related digital data 
		sources. It is fully aligned with mainstream international geospatial 
		standards, in particular the ISO 19100 series of geographic standards, 
		thereby enabling the easier integration of hydrographic data and 
		applications into geospatial solutions. 
		The primary goal for S-100 is to support a greater variety of 
		hydrographic-related digital data sources, products, and customers. This 
		includes the use of imagery and gridded data, enhanced metadata 
		specifications, unlimited encoding formats and a more flexible 
		maintenance regime. This enables the development of new applications 
		that go beyond the scope of traditional hydrography - for example, 
		high-density bathymetry, seafloor classification, marine GIS, et cetera. 
		S-100 is designed to be extensible and future requirements such as 3-D, 
		time-varying data (x, y, z, and time) and Web-based services for 85 
		Katerina Athanasiou, Efi Dimopoulou, Christos Kastrisios and Lysandros 
		Tsoulos Management of Marine Rights, Restrictions and Responsibilities 
		according to International Standards 5th International FIG 3D Cadastre 
		Workshop 18-20 October 2016, Athens, Greece acquiring, processing, 
		analysing, accessing, and presenting hydrographic data can be easily 
		added when required (IHO,2015). 
		Following the adoption of S-100, many product specifications are 
		under development by the IHO S-100 specialized Working Groups (WGs) 
		including S-101 for Electronic Navigational Charts (ENCs) and S-121 for 
		Maritime Limits and Boundaries. 
		The proposed S-121 is built upon the ISO 19152, which provides a 
		rigorous mechanism for handling legal RRRs. The intended purpose of 
		S-121 is “to provide a suitable format for the exchange of digital 
		vector data pertaining to maritime boundaries” and “for lodging digital 
		maritime boundary information with the United Nations for purposes 
		related to UNCLOS” (McGregor, 2013) What is more, as all ISO 19000 
		series product specifications, S-100 and the subordinate S-121 are 
		intended to interwork with all similar products. In that sense, S-121 
		may serve as the bridge between the land and marine domains while the 
		Maritime Limits and Boundaries following the S-121 standard may be used 
		in a MAS. 
		In S-121 each real world feature is an object with properties 
		represented as attributes (spatial and thematic) and associations which 
		establish context for the feature. The spatial attributes of the feature 
		describe its geometric representation, whereas the thematic attributes 
		describe its nature. The attributes associated with the geographic 
		feature depend on the intrinsic type of the feature, a concept derived 
		from LADM which is not included in the S-100 suite. A feature object may 
		only have one intrinsic type that is the physical dimension of the 
		feature in the real world based on the “Truth on the ground” principle. 
		Hence a feature may either be a point (Location), curve (Limit), area 
		(Zone) or volume (Space). Subsequently, the feature is described in the 
		dataset by the geometry property (point, line, area) which is used for 
		its cartographic representation. Finally, for the portrayal of each 
		geometry property, which is separate from geometric representation, a 
		variety of symbols may be used. For instance, the intrinsic type of a 
		football field is Zone. Depending on the scale of the cartographic 
		product, the geometry of the field may be area (large scale maps) or 
		point (small scale maps). Finally, for the portrayal of e.g. the point 
		geometry, can be used a simple point, a star or a variety of other 
		symbols. 
		 
		Figure 1. S-121 classes related to LADM
		The proposed S-121 is a product based on S-100 which has many 
		similarities to the LADM, as it imports from LADM primitives not 
		supported by S-100, but differences as well. In example, GM_Curve and 
		GM_Surface from the ISO 19152 class LA_SpatialUnit are useful for a MLB 
		standard and therefore have been imported to the S-121. A fundamental 
		difference between the LADM and the S-121 is the use of the 
		Multi-primitive MultiSurface features in the land environment, whereas 
		in the marine environment it is a requirement from S-100 to use complex 
		features instead. In detail, when an object is crossed by another, in 
		land the crossed feature is defined as a multi-surface, whereas in the 
		marine environment each spatial primitive is a simple rather than a 
		complex one. Another issue is the use of 3D objects which LADM addresses 
		with the LA_BoundaryFace and LA_BoundaryString, whereas, due to the 
		limitations of S-100 which does not address 3D objects, S-121 handles 3D 
		objects as 2D objects with vertical extent (2.5 dimensions) (Canadian 
		Hydrographic Service & Geoscience Australia, 2016). 
		2.3 INSPIRE 
		For cross-border access of geo-data, a European metadata profile 
		based on ISO standards is under development using rules of the 
		implementation defined by the Infrastructure for Spatial Information in 
		the European Community – INSPIRE (ISO 19152, 2012). INSPIRE (Directive 
		2007/2/EC) focuses strongly on environmental issues, while the LADM has 
		a multipurpose character. One important difference is that INSPIRE does 
		not include RRRs in the definition of cadastral parcels. 
		From the spatial perspective, according to ISO 19152 (2012) there is 
		a compatibility between LADM and INSPIRE. More specifically, four 
		classes are relevant in the INSPIRE context: 
		
			- LA_SpatialUnit (with LA_Parcel as alias) as basis for 
			CadastralParcel; 
- LA_BAUnit as basis for BasicPropertyUnit;
- LA_BoundaryFaceString as basis for CadastralBoundary;
- LA_SpatialUnitGroup as basis for CadastralZoning. Regarding the 
			marine space, the expression and the definition of the above classes 
			needs to be examined. 
INSPIRE data specifications are being developed across 34 themes. A 
		number of INSPIRE themes have a marine relevance, something that 
		researchers have already pointed out (e.g. Longhorn, 2012). Two of the 
		themes, i.e. Ocean Geographic Features (OF) and Sea Regions (SR) are 
		related exclusively to marine environment. According to Millard (2007), 
		”INSPIRE is not marine nor land centric”. Themes are considered 
		independent of whether or not refer on land or at sea, and therefore 
		data can be brought together across land-sea boundaries. INSPIRE 
		provides a level of interoperability to deliver integrated land-sea 
		datasets. But the data models (by design) will not solve the needs of 
		all communities e.g. navigation. The marine themes on their own do not 
		give all the information on the marine environment. According to Lemmen 
		(2012) “firstly, it is possible that a European country may be compliant 
		both with INSPIRE and with LADM and secondly, it is made possible 
		through the use of LADM to extend INSPIRE specifications in future, if 
		there are requirements and consensus to do so”. Given that IHO S-121 
		”Product Specification for Maritime Limits and Boundaries” is based on 
		LADM, it is inferred that INSPIRE can cooperate as well with S-121 
		mainly in the spatial dimension. 
		3. LEGAL FRAMEWORK OF THE MARINE ENVIRONMENT 
		When considering the legal framework for the marine environment, 
		certain factors must be taken into account: the laws that define the 
		interests, the hierarchical classification of these laws considered as 
		reasonable (Cockburn and Nichols, 2002), how should this classification 
		be used to derive the principles for the implementation of MSP and how 
		the registration of laws in a MAS can automatically define the 
		constraints of the emerging RRRs. 
		Given the particular nature of the legal system of the marine space 
		and the necessity of an organized setting for its use, based on already 
		predetermined planning, the rights that may appear are defined in a 
		unique way by the law. Unlike land, maritime space does not allow the 
		rights’ creation as a private enterprise product and seeks for a 
		regulation with a direct correlation to the creation of the right and 
		the need to impose its creation. The term "law" refers to the wider 
		legislative framework which is the basis of MAS. Laws and regulations 
		create or describe rights and then provide the means to implement or 
		enforce them. Thus, in order to develop a MAS, the registration of laws 
		is considered reasonable. This section presents both the institutional 
		framework that defines the legal status of the marine space and the 
		legal framework that defines the application of these laws.
		The international law defines the kinds of RRRs that may exist within 
		the marine space, which falls under the sovereignty of a state. A 
		considerable part of international law is consent-based governance. This 
		means that, with the exception of those parts that constitute customary 
		law, a state is not obliged to abide by this type of international law, 
		unless it has expressly consented to a particular course of conduct. 
		This is an issue of state sovereignty. Treaties may require national law 
		to conform to respective parts and they are commonly transposed into 
		national legislation by typical law. 
		The European Union Law (mainly the EU Directives) aims to establish a 
		common framework and a common approach for the development of an 
		Integrated Maritime Policy. Memberstates should implement the EU 
		Directives transposing them into national law. The choice of appropriate 
		form and method to implement relies at their discretion (Article 288, 
		Treaty of Functioning of the European Union). For example in Greece, an 
		EU Directive is commonly incorporated into the national legislation by a 
		typical law. 
		3.1 International level 
		Although domestic law is playing an important role in regulating the 
		management of the sovereign areas of a State, in the marine environment 
		international law has been the primary basis for the implementation of 
		maritime policies and boundaries. 
		Historically, the world’s oceans operate under the principle of 
		freedom of the seas. The multitude of claims, counterclaims, sovereignty 
		disputes between the States with coastlines, the rapid improvement in 
		technology and the increasing interest in exploring the marine 
		environment has caused the need for an effective international regime 
		governing the world’s oceans. The most intensive efforts have taken 
		place at the 20th century. In 1982 the UN concluded to the UNCLOS, which 
		forms the cornerstone of the legal mechanism and describes the rights, 
		obligations and types of interests of states. 
		One of the ways established has been through the division of marine 
		space into different zones where the coastal states enjoy sovereignty or 
		sovereign rights and thus the jurisdiction to establish their laws and 
		policies, in compliance with UNCLOS guidelines. The exercise of these 
		rights is subject to a registration system of Management of the marine 
		area. According to Cockburn et al (2003), UNCLOS influences a ratified 
		nation’s MAS in several ways, like breadth, depth, what rights can be 
		included in the ocean areas and hence what spatial information is 
		contained therein and has an effect on the evidence that can be used for 
		boundary delimitation. UNCLOS has created a complex three-dimensional 
		mosaic of private and public rights (Ng’ang’a et al, 2004), which the 
		party members have to incorporate into their national legislation, with 
		the enactment of new and/or modernization of national laws and 
		regulations. 
		The Convention is the background of exercising any marine activity 
		and therefore the reason to create a MAS, since it creates a sovereignty 
		status on the marine space. 
		3.2 European level 
		The main EU legal instruments that refer to the integrated management 
		of the Mediterranean marine space, which e.g. Greece has been called/is 
		called to follow, without having incorporated all of them into its 
		national law, are the following: 
		The integrated marine management term dates back to 2006, in Green Paper 
		Need for a link among diverse EU policies affecting the marine 
		environment. Since then (De Latte, 2016): 
		
			- COM (2007)575 - Communication of 10 October 2007 - Integrated 
			Maritime Policy for the European Union (Blue Book)
- Directive 2008/56/EC of 17 June 2008 establishing a framework 
			for community action in the field of marine environmental policy – 
			Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD) 
- MARINE KNOWLEDGE 2020: 
- BLUE GROWTH / BLUE ECONOMY:
- accompanying Communication COM(2014)254 of 8 May 2014 – 
			Innovation in the Blue Economy 
-  Directive 2014/89/EU of 23 July 2014 establishing a 
			framework for maritime spatial planning (EU Official Journal of 28 
			August 2014) 
- Directive 2007/2/EC of 14 March 2007 establishing an 
			infrastructure for spatial information in the European Community – 
			INSPIRE directive.
- After that the INSPIRE Marine Pilot Project has been launched to 
			help stakeholders of the Marine Strategy Framework Directive 
			2008/56/EC to understand how the obligations of the INSPIRE 
			Directive 2007/2/EC relate to the data and information management 
			aspects of the MSFD. 
The European Maritime Policy is still under development. The most 
		recent activity on the MC in European Union is the agreement on the need 
		for a common study on the importance of MC to the European economy. 
		3.3 National level 
		As a result of the structure of international law it is estimated 
		that around 50% of the world’s oceans fall within the national 
		jurisdiction of coastal states, whereas the remaining 50% represent part 
		of the Area (Prescott and Schofield, 2005). Greece is a state virtually 
		surrounded by sea located in the central part of the Mediterranean sea. 
		In the western part of Greece lies the Ionian sea. The maritime front of 
		this part of the mainland and of the nearby islands generate rights of 
		continental shelf and EEZ (not yet declared) for Greece which overlap in 
		with the corresponding rights of Italy, Albania and Libya. In the East, 
		Greece shares maritime borders with Turkey and Cyprus. In the south of 
		Crete lies the Libyan /South Kritiko sea, which covers the area 
		bordering with the Cretan, the Libyan and the Egyptian coasts. Therefore 
		the maritime neighbors of Greece are Albania, Italy, Libya, Egypt, 
		Turkey and Cyprus. 
		Concerning the international law, Greece ratified the 1982 Convention 
		on 21 July 1995 (Law 2321/1995). Thereafter the maritime borders are 
		defined as follows: 
		
			- The breadth of Greece’s territorial sea was set at 6 nautical 
			miles (NM) from the natural coastline in 1936 in the Mediterranean 
			Sea basin (Law 230/1936 as amended by Presidential Decree 187/1973, 
			which constitutes the Greek Code of Public Maritime Law). It has 
			been declared that Greece reserves its right under international law 
			to establish a 12 NC territorial sea at a time deemed appropriate. 
			However, the limit of 10 NC in the national airspace was maintained 
			explicitly based on previous legislation (Decree of 6 September 1931 
			in conjunction with Law 5017/1931).
- Regarding the Continental Shelf the distance between the Greek 
			coasts and the coasts of her neighboring states are less than 400NM, 
			and therefore Greece needs to agree its limits with the above 
			states. So far, Greece has concluded agreements with Italy (1977) 
			and Albania (2009) based on the median line principle. It is noted 
			that Greece has not declared an EEZ. 
With respect to the legal framework for the management of the marine 
		environment, national legislation and regulation inevitably reflect the 
		specific interests, concerns and structures of the State. The manner in 
		which international Treaty law becomes part of national domestic law (or 
		is transformed into domestic law) is different for each State. Greece 
		has ratified UNCLOS and has enacted a number of laws for the areas she 
		exercises sovereign rights. What characterizes the Greek coastal and 
		marine area is the non-unified national strategy and the attempt to 
		resolve the issues presented by creating piecemeal provisions. There is 
		no comprehensive strategy to deal with the fractured and incomplete sets 
		of data that are the legacy of the complex administrative and legal 
		structures. The introduction of the General Framework for Spatial 
		Planning and Sustainable Development and the Special Framework for the 
		coastal area and the islands are a great advantage for these problems to 
		be solved. The creation of specific legislation on the shore and the 
		foreshore is an important part of spatial, urban and environmental 
		planning for the coastal area. 
		4. MARITIME ZONES AND LIMITS 
		4.1 Legal regime UNCLOS 
		codifies different maritime zones a coastal state may claim. The 
		maritime zones are measured from the baselines which normally coincide 
		with the low-water line (normal baseline) as marked on large-scale 
		charts officially recognized by the coastal State but can be any 
		combination of normal, straight, archipelagic and bay-closing lines. 
		Each zone grants certain rights to the coastal State and carries certain 
		obligations to the foreign States and vessels. The general principle is 
		that the closer to the coast the greater the degree of rights for the 
		coastal State, which consequently curtails some or all of the freedoms 
		for the foreign States and vessels. In detail: 
		
			- Internal Waters (IW), which cover all water on the landward side 
			of the baselines. The internal waters are considered part of the 
			State’s territory and the coastal State exercises full sovereignty 
			over them (UNCLOS, Article 8), similar to that on the land 
			Sovereignty is applied over the air space, water column, seabed and 
			subsoil, and postulates that foreign vessels and states are deprived 
			of all of the high seas freedoms, with the exception of Article 
			8(2). 
- Territorial Sea (TS), measured from the baseline seaward, the 
			breadth of which may not exceed 12NM. The coastal State’s 
			sovereignty is extended beyond its land territory and internal 
			waters in the territorial sea (Article 2), also extending in the air 
			space over the territorial sea as well as to its bed and subsoil. 
			Sovereignty postulates that foreign vessels and states are deprived 
			of all of the high seas freedoms, but within this zone foreign 
			vessels enjoy the right of innocent passage (Article 19). 
- Contiguous Zone (CZ), a zone adjacent to the territorial sea 
			which may not extend beyond 24 NM from the baselines. In the 
			contiguous zone the coastal State has the jurisdiction to regulate 
			and put laws into in order to prevent and punish infringements of 
			its customs, fiscal, immigration or sanitary laws committed within 
			its land territory or territorial sea (Article 33). Moreover, in 
			order to control traffic of archaeological and historical nature 
			found at sea, the coastal State may, in applying the above relating 
			to the contiguous zone, presume that their removal from the seabed 
			in the zone referred to in that article without its approval would 
			result in an infringement within its territory or territorial sea of 
			the abovementioned laws and regulations. Within contiguous zone the 
			coastal state has no further rights and the high seas freedoms 
			remain unaffected for the other states. 
- Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), which is adjacent to the 
			territorial sea and may not extend beyond 200 NM from the baseline. 
			In the Exclusive Economic Zone the coastal state has exclusive 
			sovereign rights for the purpose of exploring and exploiting, 
			conserving and managing the natural resources, both living or 
			non-living and the jurisdiction to establish artificial islands or 
			installations and to conduct scientific research. Coastal state is 
			responsible for the protection of marine environment. Foreign 
			vessels enjoy three of the six high seas freedoms, namely the 
			freedoms of navigation, the freedom of overflight and that of laying 
			submarine cables and pipelines (Article 87).
-  Continental Shelf (CS) which is again adjacent to the TS 
			and extends to the outer limit of the continental margin, which is 
			and is formed through the combination of the geological parameters 
			stipulated in article 76 of the Convention UNCLOS. More 
			specifically, the continental shelf is delineated by combining the 
			following three lines:
			
				- 91 Katerina Athanasiou, Efi Dimopoulou, Christos Kastrisios 
				and Lysandros Tsoulos Management of Marine Rights, Restrictions 
				and Responsibilities according to International Standards 5th 
				International FIG 3D Cadastre Workshop 18-20 October 2016, 
				Athens, Greece 
- The distance-constrained line which cannot exceed the 350NM 
				from the baseline o The depth-constrained line which may not 
				extend beyond 100NM from the 2,500 meter isobath and 
- The formula line extending 60NM from the foot of the 
				continental slope. 
 
However, the said geological parameters apply to the delimitation of 
		the area beyond the 200NM, known as the Extended Continental Shelf, as 
		up to the 200NM limit the continental shelf is another distant 
		constraint maritime zone. The rights over the continental shelf are 
		exclusive and pertain to the exploration and exploitation of natural 
		resources of seabed and subsoil. Unlike EEZ, which has to be proclaimed 
		by the coastal State, the sovereign rights of the coastal State over the 
		continental shelf exist ipso facto and ab initio. In other words coastal 
		State’s rights over CS “do not depend on occupation, effective or 
		notional, or on any express proclamation and, therefore, can be 
		exercised at any time” (Article 77). 
		
			- High Seas are all parts of the sea that are not included in any 
			of the above maritime zones. Over High Seas, all freedoms are 
			retained for every state. Mention should be made of “The Area” which 
			comprises the sea-bed, ocean floor and subsoil below the high seas 
			with the exception of that which is part of the state’s continental 
			shelf (including the continental shelf which lies beyond 200NM from 
			the baselines). The Area with its resources is common heritage of 
			mankind and must be used for the benefit of all states. It is 
			pointed out that some states, instead of taking full advantage of 
			the rights (and the consequent responsibilities) of the contiguous 
			zone, have chosen to declare “Archeological Zone” for the control of 
			traffic of objects of an archaeological and historical nature found 
			at sea. The removal of such objects from the seabed in that zone 
			without approval result in an infringement within its territory or 
			territorial sea of the laws and regulations referred to in article 
			33. Likewise, instead of declaring EEZ, states have chosen to 
			declare “Fisheries Zone” for the regulation of fishing based on 
			their exclusive sovereign right foreseen by UNCLOS for exploring and 
			exploiting, conserving and managing the living resources up to the 
			limit of 200NM from the baselines. It is noted that the above two 
			zones are not described as separate maritime zones in UNCLOS. 
4.2 Methods of delimitation 
		Coastal states may delimit their maritime zones unilaterally at the 
		maximum allowable breadth, or, when one state’s zones overlap with the 
		respective zones of a neighboring state, up to the median/equidistant 
		line between the coastlines of the coastal states. The dominant method 
		for the unilateral delineation of maritime zones to their maximum 
		allowable breadth has been that of the conventional line constructed as 
		the combination of the ‘envelope of arcs’ for the natural coastline and 
		the ‘replica line’ (or tracé parallèle) for straight baselines. To 
		implement the envelope of arcs from a point on the normal baseline, an 
		arc is drawn at a distance equal to the breadth of the maritime zone 
		(Boggs, 1930) and the, so called, envelope line is the locus of the 
		intersections of the farthest arcs. On the other hand, the replica line 
		is created with the transfer of the straight line segments seawards at a 
		distance equal to the zone’s breadth. The outer limit of the maritime 
		zone is formed by the combination of the two lines (Kastrisios, 2014).
		
		With respect to the bilateral delineation of maritime limits, the 
		geographer must define the median line ‘every point of which is 
		equidistant from the nearest points on the two baselines’ (UNCLOS, 
		Article 15). More precisely, “median/ equidistant line is the method to 
		be followed when the territorial seas of two coastal states overlap 
		(UNCLOS, Article 12). The same principle was present in the 1958 
		Convention on the Territorial Sea and the Contiguous Zone with respect 
		to the contiguous zone (TSC, 1958, Article 24) and in the 1958 
		Convention on the Continental Shelf with respect to the continental 
		shelf (CSC, 1958, Article 12). However, the 1982 Convention remained 
		silent with regards the CZ, whereas for the continental shelf and the 
		exclusive economic zone (the latter was introduced into international 
		law with the 1982 Convention) the principle of equity was adopted 
		(UNCLOS, Article 74)” (Kastrisios and Tsoulos, 2016b). Towards achieving 
		an equitable solution the median line serves as the reference for the 
		final delimitation. In detail, “for the delimitation of maritime zones 
		beyond the 12 mile zone, the states would first provisionally draw an 
		equidistant/median line and then consider whether there are 
		circumstances which must lead to an adjustment of that line’ (ICJ (Qatar 
		v. Bahrain), 2001. 
		Either unilaterally or bilaterally, outer limits may be constructed 
		graphically on paper charts, semi-automatically with one of the existing 
		GIS software (e.g. CARIS LOTS) or fully automatically with the most 
		recent developments in the field (Kastrisios and Tsoulos, 2016a; 
		Kastrisios and Tsoulos, 2016b). 
		5. MARINE LEGAL OBJECT 
		For the development of a MAS the association of legal attributes with 
		maritime limits and boundaries’ information or marine parcels is 
		necessary, in order to determine under whose authority or international 
		treaty a particular limit or boundary is defined, and the restrictions 
		around this specific marine parcel according to the legislation. 
		From an administrative modeling viewpoint where the focus is on 
		abstracting the real world as a principle, sea is not a legal entity 
		until an interest is attached to it. Therefore, the very close 
		relationship between each interest and its spatial dimension in the real 
		world should be identified and registered in information systems. These 
		elements form a unique entity, the marine legal object. 
		Cadastres deal with entities consisting of interests in land that 
		have three main components: spatial (spatial units), legal documents, 
		and parties (Aien et al, 2013). The same applies in the marine 
		environment. 
		5.1 Types of RRRs 
		The operation of a LAS is based on the relationships between parties 
		(stakeholders) and property units. Property is conceptualized as 
		consisting of the rights, objects, and subjects. Nichols (1992) 
		suggested that property with its emphasis on ‘rights’ is a subset of 
		land tenure, which is a much broader term with emphasis on RRRs. In the 
		marine environment, property describes the resource, individual/s with 
		an enforceable claim, and type of resource use claims (Ng’Ang’A, 2006). 
		Moreover, other than the State owned parcels in the territorial sea, 
		parcel 93 Katerina Athanasiou, Efi Dimopoulou, Christos Kastrisios and 
		Lysandros Tsoulos Management of Marine Rights, Restrictions and 
		Responsibilities according to International Standards 5th International 
		FIG 3D Cadastre Workshop 18-20 October 2016, Athens, Greece boundaries 
		are determined according to usage only (e.g. minerals, aquaculture) and 
		not as a property. There is not a market in ocean parcels where parcels 
		are subdivided and consolidated and sold off, nor is the system designed 
		to support this (Barry et al, 2003). Therefore in oceans a different 
		legal regime is shaped. The following types of RRRs can be found: 
		
			- State Interests 
 The state RRRs are defined through the international Treaties (and 
			bilateral agreements for states with maritime neighbors) and 
			transposed into national legislation with laws. When referring to 
			sovereign rights, we mean the power of the state and/or the 
			sovereign entity (as regards the marine space, the sovereign entity 
			is always the coastal state) to act as they deem appropriate for the 
			benefit of their citizens. The legal term of the aforementioned 
			power is "exclusivity of jurisdiction" that is according to the 
			international law the state has complete control of its affairs 
			within its territory, without being accountable for the means of 
			exercising this control. The extent or the kind of the sovereign 
			rights differentiate according to the specific zone of the marine 
			space we are referring to. The full sovereignty or the sovereign 
			rights of the coastal state means that, apart from the coastal 
			state, private entities (natural or legal persons) can exercise an 
			activity or use part of the marine space only by means of 
			transferring of a right from the State for a specific activity under 
			contract or licensing. This kind of rights are recorded by a MAS.
-  Public Rights 
 Public rights refer mainly to the constitutional right of every 
			citizen of the state having an unlimited/ without obstacles access 
			statewide (terrestrial and marine space). These rights are not 
			secured for an individual interest but for a public interest. They 
			may be described as protecting the public interest in the use and 
			conservation of social resources.
- Environmental RRRs 
 We refer to provisions that relate to the protection and 
			conservation of water resources, places of preserved areas and 
			cultural heritage. These places are pre-determined by law and the 
			rights involved are of supreme importance and mandatory, in 
			comparison to the following functional interests (Athanasiou et al, 
			2015). These RRRs include among others the protection of 
			archaeological and historical objects found at sea, the protection 
			of Marine Protected Areas and the general MSP restrictions.
- Usage and Exploitation Rights 
 Progressively functional rights tend to acquire a private nature, 
			associated with individual stakeholders that coexist with the state 
			rights. In a wide sense, this term sets the limits of rights, which 
			involve mainly the different ways of use, management and 
			appropriation. In other words, in the marine environment the rights 
			are limited in terms of space, duration and most importantly the 
			extent, the content that refers only to the different kind of uses 
			and management. The stakeholders are not owners but only beneficial 
			“users”. (Athanasiou et al, 2015). When private property rights are 
			used as a basis of interpretation, these rights do not represent 
			full ownership let alone absolute property rights; they can be 
			classified into usage and exploitation rights. Usage rights are 
			associated only with space, and exploitation rights are associated 
			with the resources as well. Usage rights may be granted by a legal 
			person that has been delegated the authority to provide usage 
			rights. Rights granted in this manner are subject to 94 Katerina 
			Athanasiou, Efi Dimopoulou, Christos Kastrisios and Lysandros 
			Tsoulos Management of Marine Rights, Restrictions and 
			Responsibilities according to International Standards 5th 
			International FIG 3D Cadastre Workshop 18-20 October 2016, Athens, 
			Greece restrictions in terms of the nature of the usage rights (e.g. 
			type and temporal aspects of use) and the spatial extent linked to 
			the usage rights (sometimes defined by boundaries). Functional 
			rights are granted either by leasing contracts or through licensing. 
			It has to be noted that the authority of granting remains national 
			and no freehold ownership is involved. These rights are associated 
			with specific stakeholders.
S-121 model maintains the class LA_RRR from LADM and the 
		specializations of LA_Right, LA_Restriction, LA_Responsibility, through 
		realization relationships. The class LA_Mortgage is not expressed in the 
		model, since there is not applicable in the marine environment. 
		5.2 Types of legal documents defining marine legal object 
		
			- Laws 
 The legislation which defines all RRRs of the marine space and is 
			the basis upon which the content of the administrative resources is 
			developed. The term "law" leads to the main division between 
			substantial and typical law (i.e. the legislation produced by the 
			legislative power of the House of Representatives). Thus, the 
			substantial law includes the principles of Common Law and equity, 
			the administrative acts of the Administrative Authorities 
			(Ministerial and Presidential Acts) as well as acts of legislative 
			content. Needless to say, the European Law (Treaties, Regulations, 
			Directives, Decisions) and the International law are main legal 
			binding sources.
- Administrative Sources 
 The legal sources which include the administrative regime of the 
			RRRs are defined. The administrative sources are: the legal 
			contracts that relate to the disposal of the functional rights of 
			the State to private entities (as defined by the legal framework). 
			The functional rights of the State granted are either by means of an 
			administrative contract (administrative long leases or public works 
			contracts) or the right is conferred by an administrative act, most 
			usually by a license agreement.
The administrative sources that need to be recorded in a MAS are 
		different depending on each activity. For several resources the 
		processes relating to registration of issue are standard. For example in 
		Greece the registration associated with exploration for and extraction 
		of gas and petroleum is highly refined. It is of high importance that 
		all the activities that take place in the marine space need to be 
		recorded accurately. This systematic recording could help to identify: 
		the multiple licenses required for specific activities, regulated access 
		rights, existing legal gaps. 
		S-121 model keeps the class LA_AdministrativeSource in its structure. 
		It is proposed the registration of administration sources and laws in 
		different classes. The fact that all different rights find their base in 
		some kind of transacting document is represented by the association 
		between S121_RRR and S121_AdministrativeSource and this transacting 
		document is recorded in the latter class. However in marine environment 
		the existence of rights may be not emerged through the transaction, but 
		from the law implementation. 
		5.3 Defining marine cadastral unit 
		A plethora of research works and papers in literature deal with the 
		definition of the marine parcel. Ng’ang’a et al (2004) make two 
		alternative hypotheses about the marine parcel: “(1) that there either 
		exists a multidimensional marine parcel that can be used as the basic 
		reference unit in a MC, or (2) that there exists a series of (special 
		purpose) marine parcels that can be used as basic reference units for 
		gathering, storing and disseminating information. In either case then, 
		whereas the definition and spatial extent of a parcel is still not 
		clarified, there still exists a parcel.” 
		Another definition of marine parcel refers to: “A confined space 
		having common specifications for its internal, mainly used as reference 
		to locate a phenomenon. A marine parcel facilitates the distinction 
		between contiguous territories and provides information concerning this 
		phenomenon through appropriate codification” (Arvanitis, 2013). 
		For the definition of the marine parcel certain issues must be taken 
		into account: 
		
			- The third dimension: The inherent volumetric 3D nature of marine 
			space is apparent. Marine RRRs, such as aquaculture, mining, 
			fishing, and mooring and even navigation, can coexist in the same 
			latitude and longitude but in different depths. The question is if 
			the 3D representation is necessary for a MAS. So far, the geomatics’ 
			community supports the idea of the 3D registration and visualization 
			of marine interests. According to Ng’ang’a et al, 2004 “…Clearly, 
			the right to explore for minerals may have an impact on the surface 
			of the land, but it will also affect a 3D cross-section of the 
			parcel below the land’s surface. Policy-makers would no doubt 
			benefit from an understanding of the upper and lower bounds of the 
			exploration rights, and how these may affect the environment or 
			other property entitlements within the same parcel.” Additionally, 
			the registration of the restrictions that are defined by the laws 
			and structure the marine legal object are related with the third 
			dimension for most activities. They define in which vertical or 
			horizontal distance is allowed to exercise other marine interests. 
			Furthermore the multipurpose nature of the MAS demands access to 
			additional types of information (geology, hydrology etc.), except of 
			the RRRs, in relation to marine spatial extents. The use of the 
			third dimension is considered important. However the existing MAS 
			have only used the third dimension for the representation of the 
			seafloor. 
- The fourth dimension: It is clear that time has always played an 
			important role as the fourth dimension in cadastral systems. In 
			marine environment most activities can coexist in time and space and 
			can move over time and space. Therefore the registration of the 
			fourth dimension will capture the temporary nature of many 
			particular rights. 
- Spatial Identifiers: Every land parcel or property recorded in a 
			land registry or a cadastral information system must have an 
			identifier. In fact identifiers are the most important linking data 
			elements in land administration databases. There are various ways 
			for referencing land parcels and property. (Kalantari et al, 2008). 
			In the Hellenic (Land) Cadastre for each individual property a 
			12-digit code number is assigned, the “KAEK” , which is unique 
			nationwide. Arvanitis (2016) proposes the use of a unique code to 
			the marine parcels. “The 12-unit code will be based on the 
			legislated zone, the Sea, the Greek Prefecture, the Head Office of 
			the Port Authority Jurisdiction / Municipality, the use and number 
			of the marine parcel”. The code will be unique and will record the 
			existence of multiple uses in the third dimension. 96 Katerina 
			Athanasiou, Efi Dimopoulou, Christos Kastrisios and Lysandros 
			Tsoulos Management of Marine Rights, Restrictions and 
			Responsibilities according to International Standards 5th 
			International FIG 3D Cadastre Workshop 
Athanasiou (2014) incorporates the elements of the unique code to the 
		spatial unit class in order to spatially define the MA_MarineParcel. The 
		attributes are: The unclosZone, with possible values - territorial sea 
		and EEZ, the physicalLayer, the seaType (in Greece for example, the sea 
		is divided in 8 different pelages) and the port authority – the values 
		of these attributes are from proposed code lists. Furthermore the 
		marineBlockCode is added, which is defined as “N°WGS84, 
		E°WGS84/codeOfSubdividedGrid“ (Figure 2). 
		
		Figure 2. Marine Parcel Package (Athanasiou, 2014)
		5.4 Spatial dimension and associated issues 
		The basic reference unit, could be spatially defined as: a 
		multidimensional marine parcel or a series of (special purpose) 
		volumetric marine parcels (Ng’ang’a et al, 2004) or as sea surface 
		objects, water volume objects, seabed objects, and sub seabed objects 
		(Rahman et al, 2012) (Figure 3) or as a single piece of marine space 
		deriving from the determined and standard division of the maritime 
		surface using a grid of specific dimensions and subdivisions if needed 
		(Figure 4). It is specified by geodetic coordinates of the surrounding 
		boundaries. This method is already in use for defining the blocks in the 
		domain of minerals exploitation. The combination of these methods is 
		feasible. (Athanasiou et al, 2015) 
		
			
				|  Figure 3. 3D nature of marine parcel (NOAA, 2014)
 |  Figure 4. Grid System for Oil and gas exploitation in USA 
				(BOEMRE, 2011)
 | 
		
		The selection of the geodetic datum on which the coordinates will be 
		dreferred, is one of the issues that should be taken into account in the 
		development of a MC. A geodetic datum specifies the reference ellipsoid 
		and the point of origin from which the coordinates are derived. 
		Different states, even different mapping authorities of the same state, 
		use different geodetic datums. 
		Consequently, coordinates derived from one system do not agree with 
		the coordinates from another datum, with their differences between 
		adjacent states, as Beazley (1994) points out, amounting to several 
		hundred meters. In addition to the horizontal datums, the utilization of 
		different vertical datums has a significant impact as well. Hydrographic 
		Services, which are assigned with the task to map the marine 
		environment, as their priority is the safety of navigation they depict 
		depth soundings from a mean low water level, such as the Lowest 
		Astronomical Tide (LAT), or the more conservative Lowest Low Water 
		(LLW)". On the other hand, the Land cadastral services usually use the 
		Mean Sea Level (MSL). The difference between the two needs to be 
		precisely calculated. One of the factors affecting the calculation is 
		the distance of the permanent tide gauges from the location. The 
		different sea levels and the precise calculation of the sea level have 
		also a significant impact to the development of a MC. In detail, the 
		delineation of the coastline may vary greatly depending on the vertical 
		datum, which consequently has a significant impact to the outer limits 
		of the maritime zones over which the states exercise their rights. For 
		instance, as Leahy (2001) describes, for a foreshore of 0.5% gradient, a 
		difference of 0.5m in sea water level results 100m error in the location 
		of the coastline, a value that may exceed 200m in some cases. In extreme 
		cases and depending on the techniques followed for the delineation of 
		the coastline, Leahy calculated that the horizontal displacement of the 
		coastline may reach 3NM when (the coastline) has been derived from 
		topographic maps of scales 1:100.000. 
		And here comes another issue; where does the data come from? Is it 
		data acquired in situ using techniques according to specifications, or 
		data derived from paper charts/maps compiled years ago with obsolete and 
		error prone techniques? Another issue with the different sea levels is 
		the potential reclassification of a sub-surface feature to a low-tide 
		elevation, which may expand the maritime zones of the coastal state 
		[Article 13(1)]. 
		We pointed out the importance of the precise delineation of the 
		baselines as they are the reference where from the maritime zones are 
		measured. However, it is not the only issue that affects the precise 
		division of marine space. As nicely put by Carrera (1999), “marine 
		boundaries are delimited, not demarcated, and generally there is no 
		physical evidence, only mathematical evidence left behind”, hence the 
		reference surface used for the delimitation of the outer limits and 
		boundaries is another source of error. While technical publications, 
		e.g. TALOS, state their preference towards the ellipsoidal earth, 
		something of the kind is not stated in UNCLOS. The maximum relative 
		error with approximating the earth as a sphere is 0.5%, but if projected 
		plane was to be used for creating buffers of the baselines (e.g. 
		Mercator projection) the produced error would be significantly greater.
		
		Unfortunately, UNCLOS remains silent in many of its provisions 
		regarding the technical aspects of the delimitation, including the 
		horizontal and vertical datums, which the states need to consider and 
		agree with neighboring states towards an effective MC. 
		6. CONCLUSIONS 
		Recent research focuses on regulating the establishment of basic 
		principles, semantics, rules and procedures relating to the creation of 
		a MAS. So far, standardization is a requirement to support the 
		development of a National Land Information System. The same applies to 
		the marine environment, since the term land encompasses the water 
		element, as ISO 19152 states. S-100 gives the appropriate tools and 
		framework to develop and maintain hydrography related data, products and 
		registers. The extension of this standard to support the LADM, in order 
		to include the registration of additional types of marine data, 
		specified by the law is addressed through the development of S-121. 
		S-121 may serve as the bridge between the land and marine domains while 
		the Maritime Limits and Boundaries following the S-121 standard may be 
		used in the marine administration domain. Part of the S-121 project 
		development would be the specialization of the generic code lists of the 
		various attributes to marine environment for every State. Furthermore 
		given that IHO S-121 is based on LADM, it is inferred that INSPIRE can 
		cooperate as well with S-121 mainly in the spatial dimension. To this 
		purpose, the connection and the utilization of the terrestrial mapping 
		methods and standardization techniques must be examined. 
		Additionally, this paper refers to several issues that are related to 
		the definition of the marine legal object and need to be considered in 
		the development of a MAS.
		
			- Organize national legislation, taking into account EU 
			orientations and directives. Government should enact appropriate 
			legislation and maintain a database referenced to a common spatial 
			system that is supported by appropriate standards. Furthermore, laws 
			and regulations that promote conflict in marine space need to be 
			identified with the resolution of spatial definitions within 
			legislation. 
- The use of a unique code of identification for each marine 
			parcel is considered necessary for the establishment of a single 
			management system. The selection of the geodetic datum on which the 
			coordinates will be referred, is one of the major issues that should 
			be taken into account in the development of a MC, as well as the 
			level of accuracy in the delimitation of the marine legal objects.
- Regarding the Greek case, a conclusive approach becomes 
			progressively a matter of priority, which could support the State 
			and the European MSP initiatives. The delimitation of maritime 
			boundaries with its neighbors needs to be agreed upon, in order to 
			define the area where the MAS applies. In addition, the creation of 
			a national ocean’s policy would be the first step towards the 
			development of a MAS managing the complex regime of legislation and 
			overlapping jurisdictions. 
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		BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES
		 Katerina Athanasiou is currently a Master 
		Student of Geoinformatics at School of Rural and Surveying Engineering, 
		National Technical University of Athens. She graduated from the same 
		institution in 2014. Her bachelor thesis referred to the development of 
		a Marine Administration Model for Greece, based on International 
		Standards. 
		Efi Dimopoulou is Associate Professor at the School 
		of Rural and Surveying Engineering, NTUA, in the fields of Cadastre, 
		Spatial Information Management, Land Policy, 3D Cadastres and Cadastral 
		Modelling. She is the Programme Director of the NTUA Inter- Departmental 
		Postgraduate Course «Environment and Development» and President of the 
		Hellenic Society for Geographical Information Systems (HellasGIs). 
		Christos Kastrisios is Lieutenant Commander of the 
		Hellenic Navy and PhD candidate in Cartography at the National Technical 
		University of Athens (NTUA). After his graduation from the Hellenic 
		Naval Academy (HNA) in 2001 he served on board frigate and submarines of 
		the Hellenic Navy Fleet, until 2008 when he was appointed to the 
		Hellenic Navy Hydrographic Service (HNHS). His assignment at the HNHS 
		includes various posts including that of the deputy director of 
		Hydrography Division and his current position as the Head of the 
		Geospatial Policy and Foreign Affairs Office. He is the national 
		technical expert on the Law of the Sea, representative and member in 
		NATO and IHO working groups and member of national and international 
		geospatial societies. He holds a Master’s degree in GIS from the 
		University of Maryland at College Park. He is part-time lecturer at the 
		HNA and NTUA. 
		Lysandros Tsoulos is professor of Cartography at the 
		School of Surveying Engineering - National Technical University of 
		Athens [NTUA]. In 1975 he joined the Hellenic Navy Hydrographic Service 
		[HNHS] where he worked for 17 years (Directorate of Cartography and the 
		HNHS Computing Center). In 1992 he was elected member of the faculty at 
		the School of Surveying Engineering - NTUA. He is the director of the 
		NTUA Geomatics Center and the Cartography Laboratory. His research 
		interests include cartographic design, composition and generalization, 
		GIS, digital atlases, spatial data and map quality issues, spatial data 
		standards and the law of the sea. Currently he is president of the 
		Hellenic Cartographic Society and member of national and international 
		scientific committees. 
		CONTACTS
		Katerina Athanasiou
		National Technical University of Athens
		School of Rural & Surveying Engineering
		9, Iroon Polytechneiou
		15780 Zografou
		Athens
		GREECE
		Phone: +30 6948 879545
		E-mail: 
		catherineathanasiou@gmail.com
		Efi Dimopoulou
		National Technical University of Athens
		School of Rural & Surveying Engineering
		9, Iroon Polytechneiou
		15780 Zografou
		Athens
		GREECE
		Phone: +30 210 7722679
		Fax: +30 210 7722677
		E-mail: efi@survey.ntua.gr 
		Website: http://www.survey.ntua.gr
		Christos Kastrisios
		Cartography Laboratory
		Faculty of Rural and Surveying Engineering
		National Technical University of Athens
		9, Iroon Polytechneiou
		15780 Zografou
		Athens
		GREECE
		Phone: +30 6936 799258
		E-mail: christoskas@hotmail.com
		Lysandros Tsoulos
		Faculty of Rural and Surveying Engineering/ Cartography Laboratory
		National Technical University of Athens
		9, Iroon Polytechneiou
		15780 Zografou
		Athens
		GREECE
		Phone: +30 210 7722730
		Fax: +30 210 7722734
		E-mail: 
		lysandro@central.ntua.gr 
		Website: http://www.survey.ntua.gr