CALL FOR PAPERS
				
				FIG Congress 2018 is the main event for all ten FIG 
				technical commissions. 
		The overall theme of the Congress is:
		Embracing our smart world where the continents connect: 
		enhancing the geospatial  maturity of societies 
		
		A few years ago, we identified the need for providing reliable, 
		evidence-based open and/or low-cost data which describe a “spatially 
		enabled” society. But today we realize that we have an additional task 
		to ensure that these data and tools are used intelligently by the 
		society and governments and through that to ensure the transition from 
		the stage of a “spatially enabled” society to the stage of a “spatially 
		mature” society: a society that is able to use the available spatial 
		information and tools in a smart way in order to achieve sustainable 
		prosperity for all. 
		Since the time that surveyors have identified the need for enabling 
		the society spatially a huge technological reform took place. This 
		includes the massive creation and consumption of data (structured or not 
		structured); the extended use of affordable smart devices (everyone now 
		can afford to buy a smart device and download spatial data); the 
		increasingly high downloading speeds; the Internet of Things; cognitive 
		computing for all to improve human decision-making; and the provision of 
		personalized information and the Internet of Me. We now realize that 
		societies are to a great extent spatially enabled. The challenge for 
		land surveyors and geospatial experts is that we will develop our skills 
		properly in order to increase the usability of these spatial data, to 
		process this available information and to develop fit for purpose tools 
		to enable societies to “uncover” the missing information and reduce 
		inequalities.
		What should be done to increase our skills?
		We need to be able to:
		
			- combine authoritative and non-authoritative data,
- establish FFP infrastructures,
- interpret & process data (inform once and use it several times 
			and for various purposes),
- increase the “usability” of spatial data, systems and land 
			tools,
- establish a mechanism for a consistent and repeatable update of 
			information to compare & monitor the “geospatial maturity” of our 
			society: the ability to retrieve the right information and use it to 
			optimize activities required to achieve the SDGs.
The theme of our FIG2018 Congress “Embracing our smart world 
		where the continents connect: enhancing the geospatial maturity of 
		societies” finds its meaning in the joint effort for the 
		“Geospatial Transformation of the World” and is aligned with the above 
		definition of “geospatial maturity” of societies.
		We aim to share the gained experience and knowledge in the surveying 
		profession- our progress in developing, retrieving and using spatial 
		information and land tools intelligently- among the various cultures and 
		societies, and to enhance the ability of all people and governments to 
		use information and tools properly to optimize activities required to 
		achieve the SDGs.
		Topics of interest
		Therefore proposals for papers are 
				requested in all topics of interest of the following 
				commissions:
				1. Professional Standards and 
				Practice 
				- FIG Commission 1
				2. Professional Education - FIG Commission 2 
				3. Spatial Information Management - 
				FIG Commission 3 
				4. Hydrography - FIG Commission 4 
				5. Positioning and Measurement - FIG 
				commission 5 
				6. Engineering Surveys - FIG 
				Commission 6 
				7. Cadastre and Land Management - 
				FIG Commission 7 
				8. Spatial Planning and Development 
				- FIG Commission 8 
				9. Valuation and the Management of Real 
				Estate 
				- FIG Commission 9 
				10. Construction Economics and 
				Management 
				- FIG Commission 10
		Papers are also invited on the areas of the FIG Task Force on Real 
		Estate Market Study, Standards Network, and on the History of Surveying 
		and Measurement (Permanent Institution of FIG). 
		
		In the open call for papers non-peer review and peer review papers are 
		invited from following 
		the detailed topics selected by FIG Commissions: 
		
		
		
			- Professional ethics
- International boundaries
- Women in Surveying
- Mutual recognition of qualifications or 
			professional status
		
			- Cross border education for smart surveyors 
- Innovative learning and teaching 
- Demand for and supply of professional education 
- Accreditation and quality assurance 
		
			- 
			SDI at all levels – local, regional, national and 
			globalE-Governance and SDI in supporting decision making – theory, 
			applications and best practice for the collection, dissemination, 
			analysis, applications, maintenance and visualization of data
- 
			SIM as basis for 
			land planning
- 
			VGI as smart 
			system to serve the world of tomorrow
- 
			Integration of 
			SDIs – cadastre, land use, utilities, environment, socio-economic
- 
			SDI 
			interoperability – standards, technical tools, metadata, portals
- 
			3D/4D Cadastre
- 
			Crowdsourcing for 
			innovation land and spatial information management
- 
			2D/3D/4D 
			geospatial models, algorithms, visualization, standards and 
			applications
- 
			Web and mobile GIS 
			– challenges, services and real-time capabilitiesBusiness models and 
			SDI, public-private partnerships and economic aspect
			
- 
			The importance of NSDI
			
		
			- 
			Hydrographic standards and guidelines
- 
			Hydrographic Education, 
			Training and Professional Development.
- 
			New and emerging 
			science and technologies for hydrography (e.g. sensors, systems, 
			AUVs, electromagnetic wave propagation etc.)
- 
			Maritime and marine spatial 
			information management (including data processing and management of 
			hydrographic data, data structures, marine spatial data 
			infrastructures, marine information systems)
- 
			Hydrography and society (Offshore 
			surveying in support of energy, environment, submarine 
			telecommunications, ports and harbours, economies, national and 
			international political objectives)
			
- 
			Bathymetric mapping, sea level monitoring
- 
			Marine spatial information management including data processing and 
			management of hydrographic data
- 
			Data structures
- 
			Darine spatial data infrastructures
- 
			Marine information systems
			
 
		
			- 
			Standards, best practice guidelines, quality assurance and 
			calibration for measuring instrumentsNational or geospatial 
			reference systems and associated infrastructure 
			
- 
			Vertical reference frames, geoid and gravity
			
- 
			GNSS (GPS, GLONASS, Beidou, Galileo, Multi-GNSS), including CORS 
			networks
			
- 
			Terrestrial and airborne laser scanning, 3D data acquisition
			
- 
			Cost-effective surveying (GNSS and other survey methods)
			
- 
			Multi-Sensor-Systems (INS-GNSS, Mobile Mapping, etc.)
			
- 
			Ubiquitous positioning techniques and applications -such as RFID, 
			WiFi, AGPS, mobile phones, MEMS inertial sensors, Locata
- 
			Positioning 
			and metrology – technique, methodology, adjustment and analysis
			
- 
			Earthquake prediction
			
- 
			Vertical geodetic networks
			
		
			- Deformation measurement 
- Engineering surveys in managing natural disasters
- Precise height measurements  for engineering
- Recent industrial surveying and sensing technologies and 
			applications  
- Laser scanning applications 
- Machine control and guidance with surveying technologies 
- mobile Lidar
- UAV applications 
		
			- Land Registration models in urban and rural areas 
- From digital to smart – the new paradigm in land management 
- Role of smart devices for data capture in land registration 
			Ownership of data in smart communities 
- The internet of things providing added value in registration of 
			tenure in urban areas 
- New technologies for remote and in-situ data acquisition on land 
			rights / social media and third party data capture / crowdsourcing
			
- The role of the private and public sector in society driven land 
			registration systems 
- Security of tenure in smart societies 
- Global indicators for land tenure in different cultures Smart 
			procedures for smart land management 
- Cadastre 4.0 – Transparency, Participation, Collaboration 
- Impact of new technologies on land rights and cadastral systems 
			validation of third party data in society driven data acquisition
			
- Public trust in smart land registration systems / fraud 
			prevention by publicity 
- The role of blockchain technology for security of tenure and 
			systems 
- Voluntary guidelines in technology driven land registration Land 
			policy and reforms to support the SDGs 
- Compensation for value changes from rural and urban land policy
			
- Multi-dimensional and multi-temporal cadastre 
- Data protection and data security / rights of individuals 
- The land owner as equal partner in land registration  
		
			- 
			Environmental challenges in 
			megacities
- 
			Urban and rural land use planning
			
- 
			Planning policies and environmental 
			improvement
			
- 
			Informal settlement issues in 
			spatial development, planning and governance
			
- 
			Planning and managing urbanisation
			
- 
			Public-private partnerships in 
			planning and land development
			
- 
			Contributing to Global water 
			management utilization – Action and planning
			
- 
			Rural development and land consolidation
			
		
			- Tax Bases and Real Estate Taxation Systems
- Mass Appraisal Techniques
- Large Scale Acquisitions of Land (“Land Grab”)
- Trends in Real Estate Valuation Techniques
- Valuation methods for Unregistered Land an Limited Property 
			Markets
- Valuation Profession and Valuation Standards
- Real Estate Finance, New Credit Technologies and Investments
- Compulsory Purchase and Compensations in Property Acquisition 
			and Takings
- Real Property Practices and Sustainable Cities
		
			- Quantity Surveying and Cost Management 
- Project Procurement and Tendering (Bidding) 
- BIM - Building Information Modelling - the hottest one
- Construction standards and regulations including proposed 
			International Construction Measurement Standards (ICMS)
- Construction economics and global construction trend 
- Innovative house building and affordable housing 
- Sustainable construction and development 
		 
		 
		