| Article of the 
	  Month - June 2021 | 
		Identifying which human aspects play a crucial 
		role in land consolidation processes 
		
			
			Walter Timo de Vries, Germany
		
			
				|  | 
			
				| Walter Timo de Vries | 
		
		
			
			This article in .pdf-format (15 pages)
		
			
			The article examines the optimal conditions required for the 
			implementation of the SDB method and tests them in the area of the 
			middle Adriatic sea basin (Murter channel).   
		SUMMARY
		This paper introduces and analyses how which 
		human aspects play a role in land consolidation processes. The analysis 
		is based on a selected set of recent research results on land 
		consolidation practices, on the basis of which  - in an exploratory way 
		- a set of fundamental human aspects are derived, which together may 
		constitute a (human geodetic) framework. These aspects include: human 
		identity, human values, human sentiments, human recognition, human 
		dignity, human variation, human relations, and human choices. All of 
		these aspects are interrelated, but understanding, measuring and 
		interpreting each of these is relevant for specific parts of land 
		consolidation (and other division, allocation and re-distribution) 
		processes and collecting data for each requires different techniques and 
		methods. Further conceptual and empirical development is recommended to 
		understand better how these aspect influence the processes, 
		institutional acceptance and the outcomes of land consolidation.
		1. INTRODUCTION
		Geodetic engineers consider land consolidation a key task of geodetic 
		engineers. Land consolidation is a kind of land intervention, which 
		requires both a thorough understand of how to measure and demarcate 
		land, and an understanding of how to allocate or exchange ownership of 
		land. The former necessitates both specific mathematical and information 
		technical skills, which are typical for an engineer and prototypical for 
		a geodetic engineer. The latter requires a thorough understanding of 
		legal and organisational issues related to land rights, land ownership 
		and procedural aspects.
		The conventional association of the scope and utilization of land 
		consolidation is with agricultural economics and rural development. FAO 
		(2003) refer to land consolidation as a tool which can assist farmers to 
		amalgamate their fragmented parcels. For example, a farmer who owns one 
		hectare divided into five parcels may benefit from a consolidation 
		scheme which results in a single parcel. In many eastern European (FAO, 
		2004, Hartvigsen, 2014) land consolidation programs tend to have 
		primarily such an economic and/or and rural development focus (Bullard, 
		2007). More recently land consolidation is associated specifically to a 
		societal benefit or public value, such as food security (Bennett et al., 
		2015, Ntihinyurwa et al., 2019) or environmental protection (Abubakari 
		et al., 2016, Louwsma et al., 2014). Not the micro-economic agricultural 
		production values count in these cases, but the public values at a 
		larger – often national or regional - scale. The optimal output of a 
		land consolidation process then needs to be evaluated in terms of this 
		societal benefit, rather than a pure economic benefit.       
		
		Method-wise, Louwsma and Lemmen (2015) introduce land consolidation 
		as an instrument to counteract land fragmentation and the associated 
		negative impact on the productivity and costs of farming. The most 
		common interpretation of land fragmentation relates to physical aspects 
		of fragmentation, i.e. holdings with a large number of small parcels 
		scattered over a considerable area (Ntihinyurwa et al., 2019). Savoiu et 
		al. (2015) indicate that different types of land consolidation exist 
		which each require different methodologies of implementation and 
		different indicators of optimization. Vitikainen (2004) specifies such 
		indicators of land consolidation: defragmentation of parcel size and 
		location (improvement of agricultural and/or forest land division, 
		re-allotment of leasehold areas, enlargement of farm size), 
		reconstruction of urban areas (land use planning in village areas, 
		readjustment of building land), creation of accessibility to roads and 
		utilities (improvement of road network, drainage network), environmental 
		protection and planning (implementation of environment and nature 
		conservation areas), spatial and regional development (promotion of 
		regional development).  Demetriou et al. (2013) further specify 
		procedures and decision support systems to quantify the resultant 
		optimization parcel sizes.
		In the world of praxis land consolidation often relies on having 
		inter-personal, social and communication skills. These skills are often 
		only taught and learned after graduating from geodetic or surveying 
		engineering study programs. Nonetheless these skills and knowledge are 
		apparently considered crucial for geodetic engineers. After all, the 
		original meaning of geodesy is shaped by two Greek words, γεωδαισία or 
		geodaisia, literally meaning the "division of the Earth". So, the 
		original meaning of geodesy deals with activity of dividing rather than 
		the static status quo of division, although by most geodesy is primarily 
		associated with measurements of the earth’s shape, the boundaries 
		between parcels and zones and the gravitational field. de Vries (2017) 
		argues that constituting, defining and framing a new scientific field 
		called ‘human geodesy’ is necessary and relevant given the 
		transdisciplinary and human nature of dividing the earth. Hence there is 
		a strong need to understand and conceptualise what these skills mean in 
		the geodetic field. This article describes and classifies what these 
		human aspects are, and how and why they are relevant parts of the 
		geodetic profession. To underline this relevance it derives a 
		theoretical framework for what will be called human geodesy.
		This paper first provides short synopses of three research 
		experiences. These experiences in land consolidation are described at 
		different scales. Each of these specifically focused on the practices of 
		land consolidation rather than the regulatory and technical aspects of 
		land consolidation. The first research deals with land consolidation 
		practices in different parts of Bavaria, Germany. The second was a 
		comparative study between Bavaria and the Republic of Macedonia. The 
		third concerned a European-wide comparison on land consolidation 
		practices. The following section discusses, highlights and classifies a 
		number of aspects which can be considered related to people, their views 
		and their behaviour. From these a a set of principles are derived which 
		will be referred to as human geodetic operational principles. The 
		concluding section provide a general synopsis and a number of 
		recommendations for further research.
		2. RESEARCH EXPERIENCES IN LAND CONSOLIDATION FROM A GEODETIC 
		PROFESSIONAL PERSPECTIVE
		2.1 Land consolidation in Bavaria
		The study of Guggemos (2018) aims at comparing the theory (i.e. the 
		prescribed act and regulations) with the practical implementation of 
		land consolidation in Bavaria. Guggemos (2018) compares different 
		aspects of the land consolidation practices in different parts of 
		Bavaria, Germany. The institutional arrangement in Bavaria is that there 
		is a land consolidation act which applies for the entire Bavaria, but in 
		each region the rural development agencies can make their own decisions 
		on how and where to conduct a land consolidation project. The study 
		reveals that although there are only minor deviations between the law 
		and the practice, not because of a major infringement or deviation from 
		the law, but as a way to align discretionary space which the law 
		provides to the existing situation on the ground. It was found that the 
		biggest differences between theory and practice were connected to the 
		communication with stakeholders and the public. In Bavaria, as part of 
		the implementation of a land consolidation project, significantly more 
		is involved and communicated than is formally required by law - ranging 
		from the early involvement of the authorities to additional meetings, 
		working groups, corridor workshops and on-site inspections, to a two-day 
		meeting organized by the school of village and rural development. Often 
		the communication is most successful if local dialects are used.
		The increased attention for the human aspect of communication 
		complements a major shift in focus land consolidation projects in 
		Bavaria. Projects which solely focus on agricultural improvement are 
		steadily declining, whilst improving nature, environment and flood 
		protection is increasingly coming to the forefront. In these domains 
		both the number and variety of insights and priorities of stakeholders 
		is much larger than the pure agricultural economic interests. Hence, the 
		ability to speak at different registers and understand the epistemic 
		language of different domains is crucial.
		In addition, priority is currently being given to speedy procedures 
		of land consolidation. Given that historically land consolidation 
		projects could take more than 20 to 30 years to complete, currently the 
		simplified land consolidation procedure and/or the voluntary land 
		exchanges are preferred over the large-scale land consolidation 
		projects. In such smaller projects it is easier to communicate as a 
		group of stakeholders, as one can know each other and each other’s 
		priorities quite rapidly.
		2.2 Comparative study Bavaria vs Republic of Macedonia
		In order to evaluate to which extent and how context plays in 
		conducting land consolidation projects in 2018 a study was made 
		comparing land consolidation practices in Bavaria with those in Republic 
		Macedonia (de Vries et al., 2018). The study aims at comparing two cases 
		with significantly different histories and policy settings: Land 
		consolidation in the free State of Bavaria in Germany, where land 
		consolidation has been a practice for over 100 years, even though its 
		usage is gradually declining; and, land consolidation in Republic 
		Macedonia, where the land consolidation law has been recently 
		re-designed, and where land consolidation is a relatively new tool in 
		the land management practice. The comparison entails institutional and 
		legal frameworks, practices in relation to start, execution and 
		completion of land consolidation projects. Data were compared through 
		extensive document analysis, expert interviews and site visits of land 
		consolidation projects in both Bavaria and Republic Macedonia.
		The comparison reveals that many operational practices of land 
		consolidation are highly dependent on local historical decisions, which 
		cannot be easily adapted. Land consolidation legislation has regularly 
		changed in both Bavaria and Republic Macedonia, even though the current 
		Bavarian legislation seems relatively stable.  Still, adaption has 
		taken place, for example to accommodate other interests than 
		agricultural ones, including rural development objectives at large and 
		environmental concerns in particular. Also, the organisational 
		structures through which land consolidation is to be carried out has 
		changed over time. Where originally the rural development agency took a 
		leading role, currently much more authority has been transferred to the 
		local land consolidation committees. The main reason and justification 
		to adopt these gradual changes was to handle different kinds of 
		uncertainties: process uncertainty arising from possible resistance of 
		stakeholders who might obstruct the process by prioritizing individual 
		benefits over common benefits.
		Although in both Bavaria and Republic Macedonia land surveyors and 
		geodesists (potentially) play an active role in land consolidation 
		processes, their role and institutional embedding is completely 
		different. In Bayern land surveyors are employed by the agency for rural 
		development and are tasked to help co-design the land re-allocation plan 
		and stake out new boundaries. It is even so that land surveying and/or 
		geodesy education are pre-requirements for a position at the rural 
		development agency. In Republic Macedonia the Ministry for Agriculture, 
		Forestry and Water Economy, department for land consolidation, does not 
		employ land surveyors or geodesist. Instead they rely on agricultural 
		specialists for most of the land consolidation tasks and decisions. In 
		general the geodesists are employed by private firms, who carry out 
		certain tasks which are subcontracted by the Ministry. One of the 
		anticipated tasks for land surveying firms includes the conduct of 
		pre-land consolidation feasibility studies, a tasks for which they are 
		not principally educated. As a result, they need to be upgraded by the 
		MAINLAND project in order to be able to conduct such a task.
		Coercing participants to join and/or participate land consolidation 
		projects to achieve public objectives is possible in Bavaria, yet highly 
		contested in Republic Macedonia. There is still a significant difference 
		between Bavaria and Republic Macedonia in the manner in which coercion, 
		enforcement and sanctioning can take place in case of non-participation 
		or non-compliance to land consolidation projects and re-allotment plans. 
		A vital role exists in Bavaria for the committee of stakeholders who 
		ultimately decide, whereas in Republic Macedonia the final decision for 
		start of land consolidation project is rooted in the Ministry. This 
		might hamper the sense of ownership related to the decision, but at the 
		same time this may also reflect a fundamental difference in how to 
		ensure compliance.
		The degree to which the rural development agencies in Bavaria are 
		accepted and respected by local stakeholders is high. This is however 
		not a given and a characteristic which is automatically achieved simply 
		by the legislation itself. Many agencies have active press and/or 
		marketing officers and staff member whose primary task it is to explain 
		the role and functions of the agency. The MAINLAND project in Republic 
		Macedonia is also taking this extension and awareness raising function 
		seriously in order to raise legitimacy.  Hence, in both Bavaria and 
		Macedonia legitimacy is a crucial issue. Both countries justify this by 
		stating that land consolidation may often be contested by local farmers. 
		It is therefore vital to speak at eyesight and frequently explain and 
		discuss the pros and cons of land consolidation with local stakeholders 
		in order to ensure legitimacy.
		2.3 European-wide study on land consolidation practices
		The 2019 study of de Vries et al. (2019) compares land consolidation 
		practices for 20 countries. Similar to the studies of Guggemos (2018) 
		and  de Vries et al. (2018) the main focus of the study was on 
		revealing the practice of land consolidation. In this study the practice 
		is derived from an analysis of the experiences of senior professional 
		land consolidators, captured through so-called narrative vignettes, i.e. 
		short personal stories of experiences, opinions and perceptions. The 
		study concludes that despite regional differences in preferences, 
		attitudes and opinions about whether land consolidation is an 
		appropriate instrument, there seems to be some consensus that land 
		consolidation projects should currently be highly pragmatically 
		oriented, whereby one has to be very sensitive to the needs and 
		characteristics of local contexts and stakes, and whereby one needs to 
		be very clear on both short-term and long-term wins.
		A crucial conclusion form a human perspective in this study is that 
		becoming a practical land consolidator requires a steep learning curve, 
		which is heavily reliant on personal and long-term experience. 
		Knowledge, skills and experience go hand-in-hand for land consolidators. 
		Land consolidation requires specific human skills: a high ability to 
		compromise, the ability to communicate with responsible persons, a deep 
		interest in all people living and working in the area, the ability to 
		deal with people, being able to motivate and inspire stakeholders, 
		having a personality which is never discouraged from setbacks and which 
		is open for new challenges and have a personal vision.
		3. CLASSIFYING THE HUMAN ASPECTS
		All three research experiences indicate that human and social aspects 
		are crucial in land consolidation and that professional land 
		consolidators need to be able to understand and work with these.  
		Hence, it is important to understand which human aspects play a role, 
		and how one can detect, capture and analyse these on the one hand, and 
		apply the insights as geodetic engineers on the other hand.  The 
		different human aspects are discussed hereunder.
		3.1 Human identity
		The experience form land consolidation projects indicate that 
		changing relations to land are often taken personally. There is a strong 
		sense of land tenants that the land relates to a sense of history, 
		heritage, home, and family. One could capture this strongly felt 
		relation as human identity. People identify with the place where they 
		grew up, where they made their first experiences and relations, and 
		where they heard the stories from their past from their elders and 
		ancestors.  Human identity is very location specific, and as a 
		result it plays a strong role in the division of land and how people 
		would allocate land if they were amongst their peers in identity. 
		Golubović (2011) describes human identity as ‘where one (a person or a 
		group) belongs, and what is expressed as “self-image” or/and 
		“common-image”, what integrate them inside self or a group existence, 
		and what differentiate them vis-à-vis “others”’. The concept itself has 
		various dimensions, yet it is not a neutral concept. It varies along 
		with people and with space, and as a consequence, it plays a role in the 
		division of space. It also has a close connection to cultural heritage 
		to both social and physical (landscape) preferences (Krupowicz et al., 
		2019).
		Human identity is the human geodetic equivalent of gravity in 
		physical geodesy. Similar to gravity is it omnipresent and it softens 
		gradually with distance. At the same time there are also micro 
		differences which can be very influential for local outcomes. Yet, how 
		does one capture human identity as a geodesist? It has to be done using 
		methods which are directly related to how individuals, who have a stake 
		in land division matters, identify with the land and also take decisions 
		in the process of individuation, i.e. the degree to which individuals or 
		groups of individuals can be differentiated from each other.  Here 
		one can make use of interactive methods of data collection, i.e. through 
		interviews, focus groups, interactive ranking methods. In addition one 
		can make use of observational methods and seek patterns in how 
		individuals speak, behave, react, use metaphors and symbols and refer 
		consistently to places of value and significance.
		3.2 Human values
		Closely related to identity but different in both data collection and 
		analysis is the aspect of human values, or perhaps better the collection 
		of normative values, beliefs and views. In land consolidation processes 
		it became obvious that stakeholders do not just have different views and 
		opinions on how the processes of re-distribution should be carried out 
		and which preferences for certain outcomes existed, but that these views 
		and opinions were rooted in more or less coherent belief systems, i.e. 
		normative frameworks of what is considered good or bad, right or wrong.  
		In these normative frameworks one can differentiate two types: 
		Professional (epistemological) views and beliefs and personal views and 
		beliefs. Professional epistemological aspects and values reflect the 
		commonly accepted professional views and experiences, connections and 
		professional networks, educational backgrounds and professional 
		ambitions, whereas personal views and beliefs are much more connected to 
		life experience epistemologies and values. Personal values reflect 
		perceptions on reality, senses and associated behaviour generated 
		through events, constraints and successes in life, learning experiences, 
		natural resistance to change (location, type of living), personal 
		visions, personal ambitions, localised interests and world views created 
		out of localised perceptions.
		This wide spectrum human values is the human geodetic equivalent of 
		spectral values when observing land through digital images. The way to 
		collect such values is for example by systematically comparing 
		preferences and rankings of opinions on certain statements and 
		propositions, and then distilling comprehensive belief and values 
		systems. Q methodology, accompanied by principle component analysis 
		and/or factor analysis may be appropriate for such data collections and 
		analysis (Chandran et al., 2015, de Vries, 2018).  These are indeed 
		elaborate processes which require a combination of both quantitative and 
		qualitative methods
		3.3 Human sentiments
		In the process of land consolidation many land consolidators 
		expressed that they had to deal with human sentiments. There are many of 
		those, and many of the sentiments are time and location specific, yet 
		all of these influence the manner in which people are behaving and 
		reacting during a consolidation or re-allocation process. Human 
		sentiments which may emerge during such processes include happiness, 
		consent, comfort, frustration, anger, amongst others. Benson (2016) 
		describes the aspect of anger using the anger iceberg metaphor, 
		displaying that anger is just the tip of an iceberg connected to other 
		types of emotions, such as grief, embarrassment, anguish, annoyance, 
		disappointment, rejection, stress, anxiety, worry, envy, insecurity, 
		hurt, depression, guilt, regret, disrespect, annoyance. The metaphor of 
		the anger iceberg is a good way to show that many sentiments are 
		multidimensional and are connected to multiple aspects of anger. As 
		indicated in the land consolidation practices, one needs to be able to 
		collaborate with different stakeholders who may not always be happy and 
		who may express their emotions in all sorts of ways. 
		For a human geodesist there are two questions to be dealt with: first, 
		how does one recognize the (multi-dimensional) sentiments and secondly 
		how does one deal with for example resistant or angry citizens which may 
		obstruct the process of execution?  Regarding the first question, 
		experienced practitioners say it is important to listen and observe 
		carefully. Physically expressed sentiments (loud voice, anger face, 
		flared nostrils in case of anger) are obvious but are often short-lived, 
		but the more subtle and low intensity emotions and micro-expressions 
		(visible through ironic nods, neutral faces, repeating the same question 
		over and over) may be more significant in dealing with people in a 
		long-term trajectory. For the second question there are various guides 
		and recommendations –also from mediation and customer behaviour 
		literature. In short one should: remain calm, do not take all reactions 
		personally, being patient, use listening skills, sympathize with the 
		anger instead of arguing back, and apologize in the right way if 
		necessary or appropriate and let the stakeholder derive his or her own 
		solution. Handling human sentiments is the human geodetic equivalent of 
		adjustment in mathematic geodesy. Adjusting the sentiments within the 
		boundaries of the legal, social and operational context is the key 
		purpose of human geodesists.
		3.4 Human recognition
		A core overarching concept which may be most relevant for human 
		geodetic conceptualisation is the concept of recognition. The word 
		‘recognition’ itself has both a passive and active meaning: One the one 
		hand it refers to recognizing as a practitioner which sentiments exists 
		as well as the sentiment of feeling recognized, heard, appreciated. 
		Whilst equality is an often used normative term referring to the equal 
		distribution of land portions, family and social relations tend to be a 
		main factor why the physical divisions are often not so equal in size. 
		One of the key social relations affecting choices of division of land is 
		the man-woman relation. In many societies decisions on land are mostly 
		taken by men, and usually men tend to have more de facto rights on land 
		than women (despite having dual registration of both men and women). 
		Recognition of women, or the lack thereof, can be explain the reasons 
		why equal distribution is often not reached.  Castleman (2013) 
		defines recognition as “the extent to which an individual is 
		acknowledged by others to be of inherent value by virtue of being a 
		fellow human being.” This acknowledgement is crucial when evaluating the 
		extent to which women are ‘heard’ and included in socially constructed 
		decisions, including the issue of what to do with land and how to divide 
		land.
		Measurement and analysis of recognition is not obvious. The logic of 
		recognition is similar to the projection and transformation logic in 
		mathematical geodesy. One has to understand and recognize a particular 
		issue, subject or object using a different perspective than the plain 
		description of the issue, subject or object itself. Recognition is 
		transactionary. One has to recognize that another person exists with an 
		equal right to exist despite possibly having different ideas, values, 
		beliefs, priorities and viewpoints.
		3.5 Human choices
		Human choices can be either rational, bounded-rational, discretionary 
		or random. In land consolidation processes one often expects rational 
		choices, usually related to argumentations that a re-distribution leads 
		to better shaped parcels and allow for more agricultural efficiency and  
		optimized economic benefits. Appealing to those rational arguments is 
		the most fundamental reason for rational choices.  In practice, 
		however, people do not always opt for the most rational choice, either 
		because they rely on another type of argumentation, or they rely on 
		other sources of information, or they have a fundamental non-rational 
		objection to the suggested solution. In these cases the choice may be 
		either bounded-rational (usually if information is disputed or not 
		available) or random. Discretionary choices emerge if there is a certain 
		room of freedom of options to choose from. de Vries and Zevenbergen 
		(2011) argue that discretionary decision space emerge because acts and 
		regulations cannot regulate each and every step and condition in varying 
		contexts. There always remains some room to make decisions which are 
		connected to either ad hoc preferences or random choices.     
		
		Human choices are the human geodetic equivalent of geodetic coordinates. 
		As nodes and points in an endless space of options they form the meeting 
		grounds of different perspective and insights. They are most visible, 
		detectable and measurable through observing human behaviour and through 
		such as stated choice methods, for example.
		3.6 Human relation
		People usually do not only take fully individual decisions. They are 
		influenced by the groups in which they live and/or work. Hence, the 
		social environment and the kind of relations that people have influence 
		the outcomes in many land related intervention processes. The kinds of 
		social aspects which are relevant include: group and peer pressure, 
		group influence, group examples, group belonging, group support, 
		inclusion / exclusion, participation, contribution. Land consolidators 
		in the research about practice also indicated that it is important to be 
		recognized by the group of stakeholders one is working with. This 
		requires for example the ability to speak the local dialects and/or 
		languages, having a deep interest in all people living and working in 
		the area, having local connections and affinity with the social 
		networks, and understanding the principle that in local regions 
		communities ‘get by with a little help from my friends’. 
		Understanding human relations is the human geodetic equivalent to 
		understanding datums and reference systems. People relate to other 
		people through some form of reference. In absolute terms people relate 
		to families, but in more relative terms people can also relate to peers, 
		friends, neighbours, colleagues and (representative) politicians. These 
		relations are crucial to survive and to create influence and agency.
		3.7 Human variation
		A crucial issue for all geodesists is measuring and assessing 
		certainty and uncertainty of observations and specifying errors and 
		variations in errors. Indeed, humans are full of errors and 
		uncertainties, especially in their behaviour towards formal procedures, 
		towards bureaucracies, towards their peers, etc.  Human geodesists 
		should thus be most aware of the human error, and have the ability to 
		deal with mistakes and errors, to take responsibility in case of 
		unclear, being reflective, and to acknowledge stress or happiness 
		associated with uncertainty. Being reflective and responsible are 
		perhaps the best instruments for dealing with human errors and human 
		variations of standpoints, positions, beliefs. Variations of these 
		occurs especially in the course of time. When land consolidation 
		projects take a long time there may not only be a change on viewpoint of 
		a single person, but the single person may also not be part of the 
		project anymore. In these cases one has to deal with newly arising 
		viewpoints. The geodetic equivalent is obviously the ability and 
		techniques to specify errors, error ellipses and reliability.
		3.8 Human dignity
		The essential question in human geodesy is: with which justification 
		does one divide? The contemporary discourse is that division of land and 
		resources should be done in a ‘responsible manner’ (de Vries et al., 
		2015, de Vries and Chigbu, 2017), should be ‘equitable and fair’ (Magel  
		and Miosga, 2015) and ‘fit-for-purpose’ (McLaren et al., 2016). However 
		what do these words mean and which values are beneath these terms? From 
		a human rights perspective, but also reflected in the discourses on how 
		to execute land consolidation effectively, the term and concept ‘human 
		dignity’ emerges. Human dignity reflects an individual or group's sense 
		of self-respect and self-worth, and it is connected to ideas of 
		sanctity, autonomy, personhood, physical and psychological integrity and 
		empowerment. In simple words, it is crucial in land related projects 
		that one cannot treat everybody in exactly the same way. Each person and 
		each group is different.
		Yet, measuring or determining variations in this rather philosophical 
		and ethical aspect of human dignity is not evident. One has to use the 
		proxies of degree of perceived or comparative levels of autonomy, 
		self‐respect, worthiness, and self‐esteem. Moreover, if there is any 
		indication that certain people or certain regions are treated with lower 
		levels of human dignity than others, than one has to step in. Of course, 
		each person is treated equal according to many constitution, but this 
		does not take away the fact that each person is different and has 
		individual views and opinions, has their own family and friends, and is 
		always living in unique circumstances. For land consolidators this 
		aspect is relevant. One needs to take every project as a separate task. 
		One cannot copy simply from previous projects how to deal with people or 
		what to assume stakeholders will want.
		This distinctive feature related to the human dignity aspect can one 
		perhaps best compare with quality norms and assessments in surveying. 
		These are also rather normative and to a certain degree subjective. 
		There are indeed variations in acceptable quality, but one should always 
		strive for a minimal degree of quality before one accepts the 
		measurement.
		4. DISCUSSION
		Figure 1 summarizes the eight fundamental human aspects from the land 
		consolidation experiences. I will refer to these aspects as fundamental 
		human geodetic aspects. Many of these concepts are inter-related, but 
		each concept offers a specific comprehension of human activities and/or 
		humanly driven causes and effects.
		
		Figure 1. Human aspects in 
		land consolidation
		Having identified and specified the fundamental human aspects of land 
		consolidation as part of a broader scientific notion of human geodesy, 
		the next step is to review how these aspects are inter-related, and what 
		kind of main principles can be posited such that the fundaments of human 
		geodesy are demarcated.  This can be done using a number of 
		dichotomous questions, which can be connected to each of the aspects, 
		and which can derive a number of operational guidelines on when and how 
		to include human geodetic aspects in land consolidation projects.
		4.1 Location specific or non-location specific insights
		To a large extent human identity, human relations and human choices 
		are predominantly location-specific, because they all relate to a 
		specific feeling, belief of behavior which can be connected to a certain 
		area on the ground. Often this is translated in the name of the 
		community with which one identifies, a local dialect, or an historical 
		string of family relations. On top of that local choices may be strongly 
		determined by geomorphology and/or topography. In contrast, human 
		variation and human dignity are far less location specific because these 
		could apply to any location. Human dignity is for example used to state 
		that respect and appreciation should apply anywhere, and should be 
		treated equally in all areas. Finally, human sentiments are often 
		location specific, as they have to deal with specific reactions to plans 
		or types of communication, but at the same time this aspect is very 
		person dependent. There are simply people who express their sentiments 
		more or less regardless of the location of the context, despite the fact 
		that cultural theories would also make a difference between origins.
		4.2 Long term versus short term insights
		Another difference is related to the duration of particular aspects. 
		Human identity and human values are for example long-lived, whereas 
		human sentiments are much shorter lived. The implication of these 
		difference is that measuring and accounting for each aspect has to be 
		done at different time scales.
		4.3 Land consolidation processes-related or non-process related 
		aspects
		Each land consolidation process, big or small, guided or voluntary, 
		urban or rural, has a number of process steps. Hartvigsen (2015) 
		specifies the following generic process steps as: pre study, initiative 
		submitted to a government agency, initial public meeting, re-allotment 
		planning, project approval, preparation of registration, execution of 
		re-allotment and registration. Some of the aspects play a different role 
		in each of these generic process steps. The aspect of human identity 
		needs to be captured in the pre-study and is required in the 
		re-allotment planning. The goal is to conserve the identity and cultural 
		heritage and not to delete it through the land consolidation. The 
		aspects of human recognition is for example especially crucial during 
		the public meetings. All people need to be heard and equally taken 
		seriously. Human values are especially crucial in the project approval 
		stage, because it is at this stage that values which are intrinsic in 
		the new plan and which are explicit in the legislation are 
		institutionalized.
		4.4 Automatic feature extraction and use of big data versus specific 
		data for each project
		Some of the human aspects can be captured and/or assembled through 
		feature extraction of big data, including data collected through remote 
		sensing (Wagner and de Vries, 2019, Lee and de Vries, 2020). A synthesis 
		of twitter, facebook or Instagram message could for example evaluate 
		certain human sentiments and derive and/or predict operant value 
		systems. Similarly human relations could be derived from different 
		social network media, such as facebook (for private relations) or 
		Linkedin (for professional networks). In addition, many human values 
		could be captured by online value capturing tools such as Q Methodology 
		(de Vries, 2018) or through automated machine leanring from remote 
		sensing images. Hence, the collection of many human aspects are no 
		longer dependent on specific surveys and direct interviews, but can also 
		be collected through automated means.
		5. CONCLUSION
		Many of the human aspects in land consolidaiton are already 
		practiced. In that sense one could argue that if land consolidaiotn is a 
		human geodetic activity, human geodesy already exists implicitly, 
		because many practitioners in land consolidation tend to be geodesists 
		who implement projects using all kinds of human related concepts, 
		methods, techniques, epistemologies and axiologies.  However, up 
		till now the scientific fundaments of human geodesy are still scattered 
		and undocumented. This paper provides a first overview of which aspects 
		are relevant for human geodetic practitioners, and also addresses how 
		and why these aspects are intrinsically connected to other concepts, 
		tools and techniques of the geodetic profession and the geodetic 
		science. For each of the aspects there exists a physical, mathematical 
		or engineering geodesy equivalent. This justifies that human geodesy is 
		connected and understandable from a geodetic perspective – rather than 
		from another disciplinary perspective. Given this, the goal of 
		specifying and unravelling these concepts in more detail is to start a 
		more fundamental discussion on the principal paradigms and basic 
		assumptions of human geodesy. Once these are derived, human geodesy can 
		be broadened and widened further with its own identity and a truly 
		recognized part of both geodesy (as an engineering science / discipline) 
		and human sciences.  In addition, the description and 
		classification of aspects could be used for further empirical analysis.
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BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES
		Prof. dr. ir Walter Timo de Vries, wt.de-vries@tum.de , is chair land 
		management and Study Dean Geodesy and Geoinformation at the department 
		of Aerospace and Geodesy at the Technical University Munich.  His 
		research interests include smart and responsible land management, public 
		sector cooperation with geoICT and capacity development for land policy. 
		Key themes in his most recent publications advances in responsible and 
		smart land management and land administration, land consolidation, urban 
		and rural development and neocadastres. 
		CONTACTS
		Walter Timo de Vries
		Technical University of Munich
		Lehrstuhl für Bodenordnung und Landentwicklung / Chair of Land 
		Management
		Department of Aerospace and Geodesy
		Arcisstraße 21, 80333 München  
		GERMANY
		Tel.  +49  89 289 25799
		Website: 
		https://www.lrg.tum.de/bole/startseite/