A Future Legal Coordinated Cadastre for Sweden?
(2005) International Symposium & Exhibition on Geoinformation 2005- Abstract
- This paper initially presents an introduction to the Swedish land administration system, particularly focusing on the parts of the Real Property Register that compose the cadastre. Here, a brief retrospect of the long tradition of land related registration follows by an account of the current components, functions and parties concerned. The second part of the paper then discusses a vision, expressed by the National Land Survey of Sweden, of implementing a legal coordinated cadastre. In short, that would mean making the boundary point coordinates, mirrored in the digital cadastral map, conclusive evidence of the location of boundaries. The aim of such a cadastre is to make possible more efficient and secure handlings with land within... (More)
- This paper initially presents an introduction to the Swedish land administration system, particularly focusing on the parts of the Real Property Register that compose the cadastre. Here, a brief retrospect of the long tradition of land related registration follows by an account of the current components, functions and parties concerned. The second part of the paper then discusses a vision, expressed by the National Land Survey of Sweden, of implementing a legal coordinated cadastre. In short, that would mean making the boundary point coordinates, mirrored in the digital cadastral map, conclusive evidence of the location of boundaries. The aim of such a cadastre is to make possible more efficient and secure handlings with land within cadastral work, physical planning, infrastructure projects etc. Due to the present hierarchy of evidence, the “monuments before measurements” principle stated in the Land Code, a future reform of that kind would give rise to great challenges in respect of technical, economical and legal aspects. Some of these issues have become subject of a doctoral study at Lund University, Sweden. The aim of the study is to identify and analyse probable consequences of an implementation of a Swedish legal coordinated cadastre. The question of legislation and legal security, both in regard to the public sector and private interests, will be especially emphasised. The last part of this paper breifly presents this ongoing doctoral study. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/1027737
- author
- Land, Kristin LU and Kristin Karlsson, Former name:
- organization
- publishing date
- 2005
- type
- Contribution to conference
- publication status
- published
- subject
- conference name
- International Symposium & Exhibition on Geoinformation 2005
- conference location
- Penang, Malaysia
- conference dates
- 2005-09-27 - 2005-09-29
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- additional info
- The author's surname was Karlsson at the time of publication.
- id
- 0d3508e0-37a1-4d58-b2af-d9a8650bc2cf (old id 1027737)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 13:49:39
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 21:16:34
@misc{0d3508e0-37a1-4d58-b2af-d9a8650bc2cf, abstract = {{This paper initially presents an introduction to the Swedish land administration system, particularly focusing on the parts of the Real Property Register that compose the cadastre. Here, a brief retrospect of the long tradition of land related registration follows by an account of the current components, functions and parties concerned. The second part of the paper then discusses a vision, expressed by the National Land Survey of Sweden, of implementing a legal coordinated cadastre. In short, that would mean making the boundary point coordinates, mirrored in the digital cadastral map, conclusive evidence of the location of boundaries. The aim of such a cadastre is to make possible more efficient and secure handlings with land within cadastral work, physical planning, infrastructure projects etc. Due to the present hierarchy of evidence, the “monuments before measurements” principle stated in the Land Code, a future reform of that kind would give rise to great challenges in respect of technical, economical and legal aspects. Some of these issues have become subject of a doctoral study at Lund University, Sweden. The aim of the study is to identify and analyse probable consequences of an implementation of a Swedish legal coordinated cadastre. The question of legislation and legal security, both in regard to the public sector and private interests, will be especially emphasised. The last part of this paper breifly presents this ongoing doctoral study.}}, author = {{Land, Kristin and Kristin Karlsson, Former name:}}, language = {{eng}}, title = {{A Future Legal Coordinated Cadastre for Sweden?}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/6214427/1027748.pdf}}, year = {{2005}}, }