Comparison Between West and East: Week 1: Introduction To Land Administration
Comparison Between West and East: Week 1: Introduction To Land Administration
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- The institutions and agencies people build
- The process these institutions and agencies manage
Concept of Land
- Two aspect:
1. Physical (buildings and resources): Land that is marked by fencing
2. Cognitive (theory and concept): A parcel that has an ownership right attached
to it
Week 4:
How we capture or define the spatial extent of land rights: A broadly land
information, and cadastral & cadastral survey are ways to collect that information.
Concept of cadastre: is the core or basis of a land administration system and is Commented [a1]: Dividing land into smallest unit, which is
defined as a parcel based and up-to-date land information system containing a land parcel, assigning right restriction and responsibilities to
record of interests in land (e.g. rights, restrictions and responsibilities). the land parcel.
Cadastres or parcel map and registration system are the techniques used to
manage land administration, are the focus of modern land administration, but
only part of a society’s land management component
Cadastral survey: A process to create land parcels
Key concepts:
1. Cadastre: all the records of land, associated with land rights, restrictions and
responsibilities.
2. Cadastral map: an extract of cadastre, create a cadastre through creating a set
of cadastral maps or plans
3. Cadastral system: equal to the term of “Land administration system”
4. Digital cadastral database: digital representation of a cadaster, a relatively new Commented [a2]: Only digitizing the boundary lines of the
term with the introduction of computers. Information are not accurate as cadastral
cadastral plan, only showing the layout of land parcels.
5. Cadastral surveying: the process of creating cadastral plans.
Comparison:
Types of Goods
1. Moveable goods:
any society individual people have control over certain goods; If control over
these goods is complete, and the ‘right’ one has over them is then called
‘ownership’. Ownership is transferrable.
2. Immovable goods:
Land, trees, many other plants and most buildings cannot be moved; It might
not be a complete control, but still one can possess a strong right in a piece
of land
Key features:
1) Title depends on the act of registration, not on documents or on judicial
orders
2) The register is ‘parcel based’, and these parcels are well defined (usually
through ‘title plans’)
3) The registrar will, change the name of the right holder listed with the
parcel, dispossessing the previous right holder
4) If anyone who is of good faith will lose his or her rights because of this, he
or she will be compensated for the loss
Main principles:
1) Mirror-principle: the register is supposed to reflect the correct legal
situation Commented [a7]: Make sure up-to-date information
2) Curtain principle: there is no need for further (historic) investigation
Commented [a8]: No need to look into history of this land
beyond the register
3) Guarantee principle: Whatever is registered is guaranteed to be the truth
for a third party of good faith and a rightful claimant who does not appear
on the register will be compensated
Types:
English system: general boundaries; Torrens system: fixed boundaries
2. Deed registration: the deed is registered, it is not the legal proof of ownership, Commented [a9]: Record the track of the transaction
it only proves this transaction had happened
Features: Commented [a10]: Not necessary need cadastral maps,
1) Does not guarantee that the intended changes did really occur need to check the history.
2) the object the deed refers to is not very well described
3) Accepting the deed by the registrar can be very quick
3. Mixed (mostly in European countries)
1) The title register is called ‘land book’
2) Good cadastral surveys
3) A well-functioning deeds registry
4) This system usually does not give a real state guarantee to the registered
owner
Reading: Chapter 5
Land administration: the process of determining, recording, disseminating
information about the ownership, value, and use of land, when implement land
management policies.
Main focus of LA: information.
Land management paradigm:
WEEK 5:
Spatial data and its importance
Spatial data infrastructure: an infrastructure that describes, explains, locates or
otherwise makes it easier to retrieve, use or manage spatial information and is
an integrated, on-line mechanism to deliver spatial data and services and
information for applications, better business and policy decision-making, and
value-added commercial activities.
SDI components:
People: applications that people use spatial data for -> System [Access Network:
connect to data (eg. Webs that provides access to spatial data), policy: who can
access, how much will cost to access data, what level of access, standards: Data
standard, helps to model spatial data; Access standards]-> Data
------ access network, policy, and standards are all changeable ----- which are
dynamic
SDI provides access and other information, for example:
Phase:
1) Provides basic information:
Focused on establishing an online presence for services
Online presentations of the services and related land information
Non-transactional
Increases clients’ convenience, and reduction in the workload on front
office employees
2)
Focus on connecting the internal systems to online interfaces
Allowing clients to transact with the land administration system
3)
Integrate different information into one web interface
One-stop shopping for client
4)
Integration of scattered services with different land administration
partners and suppliers
External integration across different partners of land administration
happens last
System-to-system transaction
Example: e-plan
5)
Assessing, monitoring, and maintaining e-land administration.
Developing methods and performance indicators.
Examining clients' needs.
Investigating infrastructures that underpin the use of e-land
administration.
Difference: SDI vs E-Land administration system
SDI: Access to data
E-land: improve and facilitate land administration process
Answer: b
Answer: a. b. c. d
Week 6:
Needs for evaluation in LAS:
Many of the LAS around the world are seriously flawed, in one or more of the
following ways:
Complicated procedures
Over-designed / over-engineered
Poor adaptation to local contexts
Unclear allocation of authority between different agencies
THEREFORE, Evaluation in LAS is needed
Evaluation:: define objectives, measure objectives and provide feedbacks
key words: systematic; provide feedback
Methods of evaluation
Questionnaires
Interviews
Observations
Tests
Focus groups
Document analyses
Can divided into two ways:
Commented [a11]: Peer review: external
OR:
Commented [a12]: Feedback: formative
Exam: summative
RRRs
What would evaluation activities seek to determine about RRRs?
RRRs are information about interests in land. This is central to the meaningful
operation of LAS.
They need to be managed fairly and efficiently • They need to clearly support
above-the-line interests • They can be linked with relevant below-the-line
interests
Typical measures of quality and management would be common; additionally, as
it is a type of spatial data, measures of how well it is integrated would also be
necessary.
REVISON: Fore week 3
FOR WEEK 4:
Answer: A
Answer: C, D