- Infrastructure Engineering - Research Publications
Infrastructure Engineering - Research Publications
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ItemOrganising land information for sustainable land administrationBennett, R ; Wallace, J ; Williamson, I (ELSEVIER SCI LTD, 2008-01)
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ItemSpatially enabling coastal zone management: drivers, design elements, and future research directionsBENNETT, ROHAN ; RAJABIFARD, ABBAS ; Vaez, Sheelan (Leuven University Press, 2010)This paper provides an insight to the drivers, design elements and issues associated with spatially enabling the management of coastal zones, in particular coastal property rights, restrictions and responsibilities. Coastal zones are encumbered by hundreds of property rights, restrictions, and responsibilities. These are created to manage coastal population increases, climate change, and to deliver good governance. Currently, the interests are managed disparately across and between governments: sustainability requires these interests to be managed in an integrated fashion. Spatial enablement can deliver information integration and minimizes the need for redesigning legal, institutional and administrative frameworks. This is recognized in international, regional, and national coastal forums. Emerging concepts including Marine Cadastres, Marine SDI, Seamless SDIs, and Property Objects will inform the solution, however, this paper suggests further research is required to fully understand the complete legal, administrative and technical arrangements in the coastal zone. Moreover, methods for streamlining the integration of property and non-property information are required, particularly the harmonization vertical datums. Finally, the feasibility of spatially enablement needs to be assessed.
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ItemManaging Rights, Restrictions and Responsibilities Affecting LandBENNETT, R ; WALLACE, J ; WILLIAMSON, I (ICMS Pty Ltd, 2006)
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ItemA toolbox for mapping and managing new interests over landBENNETT, ROHAN ; WALLACE, JUDE ; Williamson, Ian Philip ( 2008)The drive for sustainable development has led governments to create new interests over land. The role of cadastral and registration systems in the mapping and management of these new interests is unclear. Whilst these systems have always played an important role in the administration of land parcels and ownership, the new land interests are increasingly being mapped and managed elsewhere. As a result administrative inefficiencies and transaction complexities are growing. Existing cadastral and registration systems have the capacity to improve the situation; however, a guiding framework for their inclusion is needed. This paper introduces a framework of principles that articulate the roles of cadastres and registration systems in the management of new land interests. Importantly the framework is holistic and reflects other components essential to good land administration. These include the roles of land policy, legislation, flexible tenures, institutions, spatial data infrastructures and capacity building. The principles will systematize the management of land interests across different jurisdictions.