FIG PUBLICATION NO. 82
Mapping the World a Better Place:
The FIG's Volunteer Community Surveyor Programme - VCSP
FIG Young Surveyors Network and UN-Habitat/GLTN
FIG REPORT
Authors:
Roshni Sharma & David Elegbede
Contributors:
Darion Mahadeo, Israel Taiwo, Chethna Ben, Angela Anyakora
FOREWORDS
Foreword by FIG President Diane Dumashie:
THE VOLUNTEER COMMUNITY SURVEYOR PROGRAM (VCSP) is a significant
milestone in the FIG
Young Surveyors Network activities. This publication presents the program’s
purpose, impact, and the global collaborative cooperative efforts between
the FIG Young Surveyors Network and FIG strategic partner, the Global Land
Tool Network (UN Habitat – GLTN). The VCSP is designed to encourage young
surveyors to volunteer their time and skills to humanitarian and
environmental causes to “Map the World a Better Place”. The program
facilitates the deployment of young surveyors who volunteer to support land
administration in Africa and Asia.
The program exemplifies the current vision of FIG, to ‘Serve society for
the benefit of people and planet’. Outlined is the very idea of establishing
sustainable development through a humanitarian surveyor lens. Young
surveyors participating in this program have the opportunity to make a
lasting and positive impact for people. The global to local impact resonates
across the surveyor’s working for people in their local places.
The VCSP has built upon FIG’s partnership agenda. Notably, it
collaborates not only with the important global partner GLTN but also with
FIG corporate member Trimble, both organisations have provided incredible
support. Additionally, it has also outreached to 12 other partners that
includes government ministries, academics, and civic society organizations.
The results of the VCSP empowers surveyors of all ages. While passion and
adventure are expected from FIG young surveyors, the program has also
highlighted their qualifications, skills, and professional maturity. Further
the VCSP chair leadership, all have since risen into professional leadership
positions.
The Journey of VCSP has been impressively led. Since its inception in
2017, the VCSP has achieved remarkable milestones. Initially deploying 12
Volunteer Community Surveyors (VCSs) across 7 countries, it has now expanded
to an additional 30 VCSs with contributions in 9 countries. But, the impact
extends beyond borders. Through cocreated platforms, such as Wisdom
Workshops and e-Volunteering mapathons, participants from over 45 countries
have come together to learn and share knowledge and drive change.
Behind this success lies a network of passionate young surveyors. They
collaborate, innovate, and co-create, leaving their mark on the world. There
were so many who, working together with partners, became the architects of
change and are rightly acknowledge. FIG community thanks them all.
The VCSP stands as a testament to the collaborative spirit that binds us
professionally together. At its core, this program is about capacity
building – equipping young surveyors with the skills, professional networks,
and opportunities to make a positive impact on our world. As they volunteer
their time and expertise, they not only map physical landscapes but also
shape a better future for humanity.
We would like to acknowledge the efforts of the authors in providing this
publication and the contributions from the wider YSN community whether
through their tireless work, unwavering support, and creative ideas. Seeking
to address issues such as land equality in tenure security, climate action
and ultimately poverty alleviation, with the aim articulated by the UN
Habitat agenda – to “leave no one behind”.
The VCSP has shown that, together, we continue to map not just land but
also hope,
opportunity, and a brighter future for generations to come.
Diane A Dumashie,
FIG President (2023–2026)
Foreword by
Secretary to the Global Land Tool Network, Robert Lewis-Lettington,
THE INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION OF SURVEYORS (FIG) has been a central
partner in the Global Land Tool Network (GLTN) from the Network’s very
earliest days, and continues in that role today. Its
membership and activities emphasise applied skills and practical solutions
to challenges in the land management and administration professions. This
emphasis is also a defining characteristic of GLTN. The Network was founded
on, and still lives by, a clear set of objectives and principles. Our
central premise is that inclusive land tenure security advances a number of,
if not most, sustainable development objectives. Much of the world’s
population does not enjoy tenure security, frequently because the
administrative and technical tools to provide it are not available or are
not effective and sometimes because the relevant legal and policy frameworks
do not provide for those tools.
Partnering with FIG, and in particular the FIG Young Surveyors’ Network,
to establish the Volunteer Community Surveyor Programme has been a rich and
rewarding experience for GLTN. From the earliest pilots in 2017 through to
fuller implementation in support of GLTN’s Phase 3 Programme from 2020 to
2023, we have improved skills, shared knowledge and built professional
experience for thirty five young surveyors, as well as for tens, if not
hundreds, of GLTN implementing and community partners in seven countries. In
most of these countries, community level work on land administration has fed
directly into national level legal and policy reform processes, amplifying
direct benefits for hundreds into improved frameworks that benefit millions.
Through the skills and knowledge that the young surveyors bring with them,
GLTN partners have access to the latest developments and thinking in land
administration. By applying their skills and knowledge in some of the most
challenging contexts and with very practical objectives, young surveyors are
able to adapt and refine them and to deepen their understanding of the
importance and role of their profession. The development of ‘wisdom
workshops’ and ‘e-volunteering’ as supporting components to the central in
country deployments has provided a more holistic project that has allowed us
to navigate disasters such as the COVID pandemic, as well as to respond even
when facing conflict or insecurity. These supporting components have also
naturally led to the development of the knowledge portal, which we hope to
launch in the course of 2024.
The various chapters presented here provide a diverse and detailed source
of information on the development and implementation of the Volunteer
Community Surveyor Programme. This has provided FIG and GLTN with the
opportunity to reflect on their combined experience. Without hesitation, we
will work to continue and expand the Programme and to use it for all of the
existing objectives but also to further the integration of, and connections
among, the global land management and administration community. That common
cause will support the further development of a progressive and inclusive
land management and administration profession that contributes to an
improved and fit for purpose legal and policy framework. Whether the
challenge is climate adaptation, food security, poverty, inequality or human
security, inclusive and effective land administration providing tenure
security and that implements good land governance and management is an
essential prerequisite. Today’s young professionals are tomorrow’s leaders.
We are pleased to support and encourage them and to play a part in enabling
them to help those most in need.
Robert Lewis-Lettington
Secretary to the Global Land Tool Network,
Land, Housing and Shelter Section, UN-Habitat
Foreword by initiator and the first Chair of VCSP Eva-Maria Unger
AS THE INITIATOR OF THE VCSP and the former chair of the FIG Young
Surveyors Network (YSN), it is with a deep sense of pride and gratitude to
read this publication detailing the journey and successes of the Volunteer
Community Surveyor Programme (VCSP). And with this – big time congrats to
the whole team who have been working so hard on the VCSP! This programme, a
collaborative initiative of the FIG, FIG Young Surveyors Network, FIG
Foundation and the UN-Habitat Global Land Tool Network (GLTN), stands as a
testament to what can be achieved when passion, expertise, and a shared
vision come together to address some of the world’s most pressing challenges
in land administration.
I remember that in one of my reports to the FIG General Assembly I called
each Young Surveyor a ‘Star in the Sky’ and this is also how this journey
began with ‘stars’ who participated in the STDM Training of Trainers (ToT).
This ground-breaking initiative left us wanting to do more – to take the
rich experiences and knowledge each Young Surveyor, each star, has gained to
the actual ground, where it matters most. With support of great mentors such
as Teo CheeHai (FIG President at the time), John Hohol (FIG Foundation
director at the time), Louise Friis-Hansen and Claudia Stormoen
Pedersen (FIG Office) together with a dedicated team of UN-Habitat GLTN
(Clarissa Augustinus, Oumar Sylla, Danilo Antonio and John Gitau) we could
make these stars even shine brighter.
31.05.2017 – this was the starting point to the VCSP, a volunteer program
designed to connect the skills, talents, and education of young surveyors
with the needs of communities worldwide, through GLTN’s country-level
implementation plans and partnerships. The VCSP is more than just a
volunteer program-It is a platform for societal impact, professional
development, and, most importantly, mpowering young surveyors to contribute
their skills towards significant global challenges.
I remember how nervous we all have been when the first volunteer was sent
off but as
soon as we got the first feedback from both the volunteer and the receiving
organisation
we knew we are on the right path.
The pilot phase of the VCSP, initiated in mid-2017, was definitely a leap
of faith but the successful deployment of 11 young surveyors across various
GLTN projects worldwide the pilot was successfully completed. This initial
group of volunteers not only met but exceeded our expectations,
demonstrating the profound impact that skilled and motivated young
professionals can have on community development projects.
This has laid the groundwork for scaling up the initiative and with this
also my term as FIG YSN chair ended and I happily handed over the programme
with the idea of not interfering in the further development.
Now, 6 years later, the success of the VCSP pilot and its subsequent
phases fills us (and now I write on behalf of the whole initiator team) with
immense pride – not just in the program itself but in every young surveyor
who has contributed their time, skills, and passion to this cause. Their
dedication is a reminder of the power of volunteerism and the impact that
skilled professionals can have on the world.
With deepest gratitude and respect,
Eva-Maria Unger
Developer and Coordinator during Pilot Phase,
Volunteer Community Surveyor Programme (VCSP)
Former Chair, FIG Young Surveyors Network (2014–2018)
Foreword by VCSP Lead 2019-2021 Claire Buxton
IT IS NOT OFTEN ONE CAN CLAIM to have traveled the world from the comfort
of their desk chair. And while the COVID-19 pandemic was a strange,
uncertain, and devastating time, I was lucky enough to find fulfillment and
comfort in the company of my VCSP team. This is a record of the efforts of
many volunteers who share a vision. One that gives young surveyors hope that
they can do more good in the world while using, and building on, their own
skillset.
Being an ‘action’ person, from a private consulting background, the
written word can sometimes be too academic for my attention-span. This
publication is a refreshing change for me, and I hope you find the same
refreshment. One of the greatest lessons that I got from Hartmut Mueller who
was my FIG mentor while I led this program, was recognising the importance
of recording the experiences of the Volunteer Community Surveyors, partners,
which in term, honours the efforts our VCSP team who dedicated hours of
their lives to make the program thrive. As you will read here, this program
has improved the careers of a growing number of young surveyors and improved
the lives of the communities they have volunteered within: either from afar
or on the ground.
I urge you to support the growth of this program so that when the VCSP is
still going in a decades’ time or more, we can collectively look back and
remember that we did something that was beyond our own status quo and that
effort causes a great wave of positive influence, all starting from the FIG
Young Surveyors.
Claire Buxton (BSurv, CLS, LCS),
VCSP Lead 2019–2021
Summary
Embark on a transformative journey with the Volunteer Community Surveyor
Program (VCSP) and witness how young surveyors are mapping a better world.
Supported by GLTN, VCSP has deployed 42 surveyors to 9 countries, making a
tangible impact on global dynamics that lead to insecure tenure, from
supporting post-earthquake reconstruction efforts in Nepal to facilitating
land registration initiatives across Africa and the Asia Pacific. Young
surveyors have gained hands-on experience in fieldwork, data collection and
community engagement, shaping their careers and perspectives. These
experiences have not only influenced their career paths but also instilled
in them a deeper sense of purpose and commitment to humanitarian surveying.
Chapters
1 What is the VCSP
2 Overview of VCSP in-country deployments
3 The experience of volunteer community surveyors
4 Looking to the future: Humanitarian surveying as an opportunity for young
surveyors
Read the full FIG Publication 82 in pdf
Copyright © The International Federation of Surveyors (FIG),
May 2024.
All rights reserved.
International Federation of Surveyors (FIG)
Kalvebod Brygge 31–33
DK-1780 Copenhagen V
DENMARK
Tel. + 45 38 86 10 81
E-mail: [email protected]
www.fig.net
Published in English
Copenhagen, Denmark
ISSN 2311-8423 (pdf)
ISBN 978-87-93914-10-0 (print)
ISBN 978-87-93914-11-7 (pdf)
Published by
International Federation of Surveyors (FIG)
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