| FIG PUBLICATION NO. 63 The Africa Task Force2009–2014 FIG PUBLICATION Dr. Diane A DumashieChair FIG Africa Task Force
 
 
 
 The aim of this publication is to present the objective and work design 
	of the FIG Africa Task Force (ATF), identify the interlinking themes, 
	summarise the contents and outcome of each workshop and make recommendations 
	for the way forward. The FIG Africa Task Force was established at FIG’s 32nd 
	General Assembly held in Eilat, May 2009. The key purpose of the Task Force 
	was to enable the surveying profession in Sub-Saharan Africa to deal with 
	social responsibility in terms of contributing to achieving the Millennium 
	Development Goals (MDGs). Dr. Diane Dumashie (RICS, United Kingdom) chaired the Task Force, led and 
organised its activities together with members of the ATF. An African member 
association collaborated with the Task Force to deliver the three workshops 
organized. In this regard, the Task Force and FIG Council are grateful for and 
appreciated the support provided by the three local hosts: Institution of 
Surveyors Kenya (ISK), University of Cape Town & South African Council of 
Professional and Technical Surveyors (PLATO) and Ghana Institution of Surveyors 
(GhIS). This publication represents the results from the activities of ATF over the 
period 2009–2014. ATF developed a workshop manual, resulting from deliberations 
at workshops, roundtables and published outcomes of three workshops. These 
workshops addressed the challenges Sub-Saharan African FIG Member Associations 
face in addressing their capacity issues. In this regard, the role of the 
surveyors as change agents engaging with the politicians and local communities 
is of key importance. Each of the workshops emphasised the importance of good 
land governance and the role of the Sub-SaharanAfrican Surveying Profession in contributing towards meeting the key challenges 
of poverty alleviation, economic growth, and environmental sustainability. Our 
sincere gratitude to Dr. Diane Dumashie and her ATF members for the leadership 
and efforts in realizing the object and purpose of the Task Force. We also 
thanked FIG Honorary President Prof Stig Enemark, and the leaderships of ISK, 
PLATO and GhIS for their advice, support and contributions. Finally, we 
acknowledge and sincerely thank the inspiration and efforts of the participants 
of the workshops that ensured the success of this Task Force. The background 
thinking for the recommendations is a direct output of their ideas and 
enthusiastic and active participation. On behalf of FIG Council, our sincere 
thanks to all who participated, contributed, supported and encouraged the work 
of this Task Force.
 Diane A Dumashie,  Chair, FIG Africa Task ForceCheeHai Teo, FIG President (2011–2014)
 
 The key purpose of the FIG Africa Task Force was to enable the surveying 
profession in Sub-Saharan Africa to deal with social responsibilities in terms 
of contributing to achieving the MDGs, as articulated in the Terms of Reference 
(Appendix A). In this regard, the role of the surveyors as change agents 
engaging with politicians and local communities is of key importance. This 
relates to the professional status of surveyors that, in turn, is based on the 
principles of social responsibility and justice. The task force considered and 
presented new and creative tools to revitalise and strengthen members and their 
organisations within Sub-Saharan Africa. The focus has been be on building the 
capacity of the surveying organisations and individual surveyors to act as 
agents of positive change and encourage the process of development and growth 
for the benefit of Africa and its people. The philosophy behind the FIG Africa Task Force has been to empower leading 
professionals of the surveying profession in Sub-Saharan Africa to take 
ownership of this agenda and to act as agents of change. This objective has been 
pursued through a process of participatory development of various methods and 
tools as presented in the Workshop Manual 2010–2014 (Appendix B). Ultimately, 
the task force activities should be seen as a capacity development process. In 
this context, the FIG Africa Task Force activities and outcomes aimed to share 
and apply knowledge and understanding, and to enable the workshop participants 
to take on a role of leadership in relation to meeting the MDGs, where each 
workshop echoed specific MDG themes. Within the framework of capacity development and professional ethics the task 
force looked at developing relevant tools in three key areas: 
	Peri-urban development – to develop tools to plan for access rights to 
	sanitation and water infrastructure in emerging informal settlements. 
	Workshop in Mombasa, Kenya, 2010.Recruitment and involvement of young surveyors and women – concentrating 
	on ways and means to breaking down entry barriers into the land profession, 
	for young people and women. Workshop in Cape Town, South Africa, 2011 Environmental resilience – to develop a response to local natural 
	resource environmental degradation by integrating the principles of 
	sustainable development into all stages of the building cycle process and by 
	encouraging practices to stem the loss of environmental resources. Workshop 
	in Elmina, Ghana, 2013.  Through the design of the workshops, the process has been participatory in 
order to ensure that the participants take ownership of the outcome. The 
programme and proceedings for each of the three workshops are available 
(Appendix C). For each of the three workshops the further sharing of knowledge 
has been pursued through a four step process:  
	Design and delivery of participatory workshop;Development of tangible tools and outcomesProvision of report for presentation and discussion at the FIG General 
	Assembly at the following Working Week and a full workshop report published 
	at the FIG ATF website; Facilitating a roundtable at the FIG Working Week for discussion of the 
	further work to develop tools within the specific theme to be included in 
	the volume of the “ATF Workshop Manual 2010–2014”. Following this process the task force has finally concluded by providing this 
publication summarising the activities of each of the three workshops, and 
outlining key recommendations. In short, the FIG Africa Task Force process of 
participatory capacity development has enthused the workshop participants and 
enabled them to facilitate the process of further empowering the surveying 
profession in Sub-Saharan Africa to cope with their professional and social 
responsibilities. From these deliberations key recommendations have been devised to propose the 
continuation of the philosophical and methodological approach of the FIG Africa 
Task Force. The task force resolves that land professionals in Sub-Saharan 
Africa should build upon the ATF term (2010–14) to continue to apply their 
collective knowledge and build their capacity to address the emerging UN 
Post-2015 agenda that will supersede the current UN Millennium Development Goals 
that are in place over the period (2000–2015). It is imperative that African land professionals remain engaged in 
initiatives that will enable them to make a difference. Renewed commitment to 
continuing this initiative is crucial. For the first time, through the post 2015 
development goals, targets specifically relating to land and societal 
development will be drafted; thus providing an excellent opportunity to optimise 
and continue the task force deliberations encapsulated in the Vision: By 2030 Africa land professionals will provide global thought leadership 
and promote professional leadership qualities amongst its members and within 
their Associations  It is therefore recommended that the work of task force continues within an 
appropriate funded platform that enables capacity development for land 
professionals within three broad areas to make a difference. These broad areas 
or themes relate to: Communication, Collaboration and Connectivity, and are 
presented in more detail in section 5. Read the full FIG Publication 63 in pdf 
 Copyright © The  International Federation of Surveyors 
(FIG) 2014., May2014All rights reserved
 International Federation of Surveyors (FIG)Kalvebod Brygge 31–33
 DK-1780 Copenhagen V
 DENMARK
 Tel. + 45 38 86 10 81
 E-mail: FIG@FIG.net
 www.fig.net
 Published in EnglishCopenhagen, Denmark
 ISSN 1018-6530 (printed)
 ISSN 2311-8423 (pdf)
 ISBN 978-87-92853-14-1 (printed)
 ISBN 978-87-92853-15-8 (pdf)
 Published byInternational Federation of Surveyors (FIG)
 Front cover photos left: Mombasa 2010; mid: Cape Town 2011; right: Elmina 2012
 Back cover photo: Busua Beach, Ghana
 All cover photos ©Stig Enemark
 Design: International Federation of Surveyors, FIG and Lagarto
 
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