FIG PUBLICATION NO. 14
      Working towards Liberalisation in  
 	 Surveying Services
      
 
The applications of NAFTA, the EU and MERCOSUR to the surveying profession and 
the response of the profession in the four MERCOSUR countries
Papers presented at a seminar held in Buenos Aires, Argentina on 15 April 
1996  
      Contents
      
      Preface
      The North American Free Trade Agrement (NAFTA) - 
	  its application to the surveying profession by Robert W Foster, 
	  Vice-President (USA), FIG 
      Experiences within the European Union of Developing a 
		  Regime for the Liberalisation of Trade in Services - with particular 
		  reference to the work of the Comité de Liaison des Géomètres Européens 
		  (CLGE) by Ernst Höflinger, immediate past chairman, FIG 
		  Commission 3 and Austrian delegate to the CLGE
      El Mercado Comun del Sur (MERCOSUR) 
	  by María Cristina Boldorini, Minister responsible for MERCOSUR, Government 
	  of Argentina 
      Joint Professional Activities 
		  and their Organisation within MERCOSUR  by Eduardo Marquez, 
		  Vice-President, Consejo Profesional de la Ingeniería, Arquitectura y 
		  Agrimensura de la Provincia de Corrientes, Argentina
      Responsibilities and Qualification of the 
	  Surveyor in Argentina by Carlos Gillone, President, Federación 
	  Argentina de Agrimensores 
      Surveying in Brazil by Miguel Prieto, 
		  President, Federação Nacional dos Engenheiros Agrimensores, Brazil
      Surveying in Paraguay by Rodolfo P 
	  Cáceres González, President, Asociación de Agrimensores del Paraguay 
      Surveying in Uruguay: Regulation and Professional 
		  Training by Nelma Bénia Llano, member of the Directing 
		  Committee of the Asociación del Agrimensores del Uruguay
      Orders for printed copies 
       
       
Preface
The first annual meeting of the International Federation of Surveyors (FIG) 
to be held in South America took place in Buenos Aires on 15 - 18 April 1996. It 
was hosted by the Argentinian member association of FIG, the Federación 
Argentina de Agrimensores (FADA). The meeting occurred at a time when 
liberalisation of trade in services was (and continues to be) high on the 
Federation’s agenda; and the opportunity was therefore taken to organise a 
half-day seminar to consider how the profession in three regions - North 
American, Europe and the southern American cone - and in the individual 
countries within one of these regions - the southern American cone - are facing 
up to the challenge. In particular the seminar studied and compared experiences 
in harmonising standards of academic education and professional training and in 
securing cross-border recognition of professional qualifications. 
This publication contains the papers that were presented at the seminar. It 
was attended by surveyors from all over the world, including seven South 
American countries and a particularly strong contingent from the home country, 
Argentina. 
The first two papers describe how surveyors are contributing and reacting to 
the liberalisation regimes that are already being developed by the North 
American Free Trade Agreement and within the European Union. The third paper 
summarise the achievements to date of MERCOSUR (the common market of the 
southern American cone, comprising Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay) 
which, having established its custom union, is now turning its attention to 
services. The fourth paper describes the work of the committee which four 
professions, including the surveying profession, in the MERCOSUR countries have 
established to harmonise qualifications and otherwise prepare for MERCOSUR’s own 
work to create a free market in services. 
The last four papers describe the education, practice and regulation of the 
profession in each of the MERCOSUR countries. They highlight the problems of 
creating common standards in countries whose educational, institutional and 
regulatory regimes differ not only from country to country but also from state 
to state within two of the countries; but they also show how, by working 
together in the interests of the profession, such problems can be overcome. 
       
The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) 
– its application to the surveying profession
by Robert W Foster 
1. The Agreement
1.1 On 12 August 1992 the trade representatives of Mexico, Canada and the 
United States concluded negotiations on the North American Free Trade Agreement, 
which was passed and signed by the respective governments in late 1993 and 
became effective on 1 January 1994. 
1.2 NAFTA is a comprehensive trade agreement intended to improve all aspects 
of doing business in North America by eliminating tariffs completely and 
removing many non-tariff barriers such as import licences. NAFTA facilitates 
cross-border investment by ensuring that investors receive treatment equal to 
that of domestic investors. Strong rules of origin assure that tariffs are 
reduced only for goods made in North America. Parties to NAFTA (the Agreement) 
have agreed to implement uniform customs procedures and regulations. 
Trade in Services
1.3 The US-Canada Free Trade Agreement of 1988 established the first 
comprehensive set of principles governing trade in services. NAFTA broadens 
these protections and extends them to Mexico. Virtually all services are covered 
in the Agreement, with the exception of aviation transport, maritime, and basic 
telecommunications. 
Intellectual Property Provisions
1.4 NAFTA provides high standards of protection for intellectual property 
covering patents, trademarks, copyrights, trade secrets, industrial designs and 
the like. The Agreement protects industry by reducing the risk that products of 
creativity and innovation could be unfairly exploited. 
Government Procurement
1.5 NAFTA includes a government procurement provision applying not only to 
goods but also to contracts for services and construction. 
Standards as Obstacles to Trade
1.6 NAFTA prohibits the use of standards and technical regulations as 
obstacles to trade by requiring that standards-related measures be applied in a 
non-discriminatory manner to both domestically produced and imported products. 
Companies and other interested parties may participate in the development of new 
standards in the other countries on the same basis as domestic entities. 
Temporary Entry
1.7 Uniform and transparent procedures to facilitate temporary entry of 
business persons to conduct trade in goods and services and investment 
activities have been developed under NAFTA between Mexico and the US. Existing 
US-Canada provisions are in place from the 1988 Agreement between those two 
countries. They provide for temporary entry for company executives and mangers, 
sales representatives, agents and buyers, after-sales service providers and 
professionals. Practitioners of 63 occupations including engineers, biologists 
and pharmacists are eligible to use NAFTA entry provisions. 
Dispute Resolution
1.8 NAFTA provides several procedures for the settlement of disputes 
involving the application or interpretation of the Agreement. A trilateral free 
trade commission will regularly review trade relations among the three countries 
and discuss specific problems. In disputes regarding environmental, safety, 
health-related or other scientific matters, dispute resolution panels may call 
upon experts for advice. Investors may take a host country directly to 
international arbitration for settlement of disputes involving monetary damages 
arising from violations of NAFTA’s investment provisions. The Agreement 
encourages the use of alternative dispute settlements, including arbitration, 
for commercial disputes between private parties. 
2. Professional Services
Licensing and Certification
2.1 On the subject of licensing and certification the Agreement states "With 
a view to ensuring that any measure adopted or maintained by a Party relating to 
the licensing or certification of nationals of another Party does not constitute 
an unnecessary barrier to trade, each Party shall endeavour to ensure that any 
such measure (a) is based on objective and transparent criteria such as 
competence and the ability to provide a service; (b) is not more burdensome than 
necessary to ensure the quality of a service; and (c) does not constitute a 
disguised restriction on the cross-border provision of a service". 
2.2 The Agreement calls for the elimination of "any citizenship or permanent 
residency requirement ...". The Agreement also encourages the development of 
temporary licensing procedures, calling on each Party to the Agreement to 
consult with the relevant in-country professional bodies to obtain 
recommendations on procedures for temporary licensing, the development of model 
procedures, identification of engineering specialities, and other matters 
relating to temporary licensing. 
Development of Professional Standards
2.3 Parties to the Agreement are encouraged to develop standards for the 
licensing and certification of professionals with regard to (a) education - 
accreditation of schools or academic programmes; (b) examinations - qualifying 
examinations for licensing including alternative methods of assessment such as 
oral examinations and interviews; (c) experience - length and nature of 
experience required for licensing; (d) conduct and ethics - standards of 
professional conduct and the nature of disciplinary action for non-conformity 
with those standards; (e) professional development and re-certification - 
continuing education and on-going requirements to maintain professional 
certification; (f) scope of practice - extent of, or limitation on, permissible 
activities; (g) local knowledge - requirements for knowledge of such matters as 
local laws, regulations, language, geography or climate; and (h) consumer 
protection - alternatives to residency requirements including bonding, 
professional liability insurance and client restitution funds to provide for the 
protection of consumers. 
3. NAFTA and the Engineering Profession
Implementation
3.1 An example of the implementation of the Agreement by a professional group 
may be found in the Mutual Recognition Document (MRD) negotiated by the 
representative engineering organization (REO) from each of Mexico, Canada and 
the United States. The REOs were the Comité Mexicano para la Práctica 
Internacional de la Ingeniería, the Canadian Council of Professional Engineers 
and the United States Council for International Engineering Practice. 
3.2 The REOs have recommended to the NAFTA free trade commission the 
standards, criteria, procedures and measures regarding the mutual recognition of 
engineers contained in the document "Mutual recognition of registered/licensed 
engineers by jurisdictions in Canada, the United States of America and the 
United Mexican States to facilitate mobility in accordance with the North 
American Free Trade Agreement". At the same time the REOs have submitted the 
document to the jurisdictions within their purview to obtain its "timely 
implementation". The jurisdictions are (i) a state or territorial engineering 
licensing board in the United States of America, (ii) a provincial or 
territorial professional engineering association/ordre in Canada and (iii) the 
Dirección General de Profesiones de la Secretaría de Educación Pública and the 
state governments in the United Mexican States. 
3.3 The MRD is organised into the following sections: (i) preamble; (ii) 
representative engineering organisations - identifies the REOs; (iii) 
definitions - defines key terms; (iv) engineering practice - defines the 
practice of engineering; (v) temporary licensing - "REOs agree to develop fair 
and equitable procedures for temporary licensing ... for a maximum of three 
years" or "for the duration of a specific project"; (vi) licensing - "nothing in 
this document shall preclude any individual from pursuing licensure in any 
jurisdiction in Canada, Mexico or the United States through the exercise of 
existing procedures. A host jurisdiction shall ensure that applications ... are 
dealt with in a timely manner". No requirements for residency for licensure; 
(vii) immigration and visa issues; (viii) principles of ethical practice; (ix) 
provisions related to discipline/enforcement; (x) continuing competence - calls 
for engineers to maintain competence and practise only in areas of expertise in 
which they are competent; (xi) dispute resolution - provides for interpretation 
of the provisions of the MRD regarding discipline and sanctions, on the request 
of any REO; (xii) mechanisms and procedures; (xiii) ratification and 
implementation; (xiv) periodic review and renewal - REOs to convene every two 
years to review the document; and (xv) withdrawal - provides for withdrawal from 
the provisions of the document. 
3.4 Objections to the MRD have been expressed by at least one US jurisdiction 
(California board of registration for professional engineers and land surveyors) 
with the argument that engineers from Canada and Mexico would be allowed to 
practise in the US "without having demonstrated through examination that they 
have the competency to practise". 
3.5 The MRD was provisionally accepted by the national council of examiners 
for engineering and surveying (NCEES) in August 1995, with the clause allowing 
for a two-year application of the MRD followed by further review and 
consideration. 
4. NAFTA and the Surveying Profession
      
4.1 In June 1989 I represented the American Congress on Surveying and Mapping 
(ACSM) at the free trade forum held in Halifax, Nova Scotia on the Canada-United 
States Free Trade Agreement of 1988. The forum was attended by more than 40 
people from 17 different surveying and mapping institutions from the US and 
Canada as well as by representatives from the Canadian external affairs 
department and the US department of commerce. The forum concluded by adopting a 
resolution recommending that the Canadian Institute of Surveying and Mapping 
(now the Canadian Institute of Geomatics) and ACSM begin negotiations "for the 
purpose of reviewing the impact of the Agreement on the surveying and mapping 
community in Canada and the US, the review to include licensing standards; 
professional development; standards and specifications for surveying and mapping 
services and products; and conduct and ethics". 
4.2 Since then there has been liaison between the National Society of 
Professional Surveyors (NSPS), a member organisation of ACSM, and the Canadian 
Council of Land Surveyors (CCLS), with representatives of each board attending 
meetings of the other. A formal ACSM/CCLS committee for the purpose of forming 
an agreement similar to the engineers’ MRD has been established. Attempts to 
include members of the Mexican surveying and mapping community have been 
unsuccessful to date; though it is the intent of the Canadian and US members 
that any agreement should be a tripartite one. 
4.3 Although the committee is incomplete at this time and has yet to file a 
report of its deliberations, it appears that all elements of an agreement 
similar to the engineers’ MRD can be negotiated for surveying practice with the 
exception of property, or boundary, surveying. The differing structure of land 
titles in the various states and provinces, as well as the variety of 
educational and experience differences by statute and regulation of the many 
jurisdictions involved, have stood in the way of an agreement allowing surveyors 
to cross jurisdictional lines to perform property surveys other than through the 
usual processes of licensing by the several local authorities. 
Comment
4.4 Property surveying is a professional service provided typically by small 
business proprietors working within 30 to 80 kilometres from their offices. 
Discussions with surveyor-proprietors along both the US/Canadian and the 
US/Mexican borders indicate little interest in cross-border trafficking to 
provide services in foreign environments. The same may not be true for other 
forms of surveying. Engineering surveys, positioning, photogrammetry, mapping, 
GIS and GPS work may offer attractive opportunities for cross-border work; but 
for these activities there does not seem to be much difficulty in forging an 
agreement similar to the engineers’ MRD. The major obstacle to such a tripartite 
agreement many be the difficulty of engaging responsible representatives of the 
surveying and mapping community of Mexico. 
       
by Ernst Höflinger 
1. First Steps towards Liberalisation
1.1 The International Federation of Surveyors (FIG) reacted early to the 
implications of the Treaty of Rome for the surveying profession. In 1972 a 
liaison committee was set up, originally as part of FIG Commission 1, to 
represent the liberal profession of surveying in the then European Economic 
Community (EEC). In May 1990, following a detailed hearing by the European 
Commission, it was decided that the CLGE should represent the interests of the 
entire geodetic surveying profession within the EEC. 
1.2 The CLGE has directed its attention to those provisions of the Treaty of 
Rome which relate to rights of establishment and rights to practise, including 
the possible harmonisation of qualifications and the removal of impediments to 
the freedom to offer professional services. 
1.3 Dr Arthur Allan (University College London) was commissioned by the CLGE 
to undertake a study of the surveying functions performed by the profession in 
each member country and of the arrangements that exist for professional 
education and training. His first report was published in 1980. Consequent on 
developments concerning the mutual recognition of diplomas, an up-dated and 
enlarged report was deemed essential and was published in 1989. Because of 
further developments, and in particular the growth of what is now the European 
Union (EU), a third edition was published in 1995. 
1.4 The Allan report shows that the education and professional training of 
the surveyor are quite different in each country. The profession is so complex 
that a simple definition covering all its branches is virtually impossible. Many 
activities classed as surveying in some countries are parts of different 
professions in others. This situation makes valid comparisons across 
international frontiers difficult. 
1.5 Of the 15 countries which currently comprise the EU, 13 have regulations 
in some respect and eight of these relate to cadastral surveying. It is 
therefore considered reasonable to require some form of national licensing. 
1.6 The establishment of a common market was envisaged at the foundation of 
the EEC. Its realisation was initially delayed because of lack of confidence in 
the project; but was spurred on by the recession of the 1970s and 1980s and the 
competition that emerged from outside Europe. In December 1979, 23 European 
countries signed a convention on the recognition of higher education diplomas. 
The contracting countries declared their firm resolve to co-operate closely 
within the framework of their structures to accord mutual recognition to each 
other’s studies, certificates, diplomas and degrees. In 1993 the internal market 
was finally established, providing free movement of persons, goods, capital and 
services amongst 375 million people. 
2. The Current Status of the Geodetic Surveying Profession
2.1 A geodetic surveyor is a professional person with academic qualifications 
and technical expertise whose responsibilities are to practise the science of 
measurement; to assemble and assess land- and geographic-related information; to 
use that information for the purpose of planning and implementing the efficient 
administration of land; and to instigate the advancement and development of such 
practices. 
2.2 The initial provision of accurate and dependable surveys is an essential 
preliminary to virtually all economic development. This applies as much to the 
purchase or construction of domestic or commercial property as to the 
development of whole townships. A graduate geodetic surveying qualification or 
its equivalent is a pre-requisite to obtaining a licence or other right to 
practise. 
2.3 The application of the Treaty of Rome to the geodetic surveying 
profession is a complex matter. The profession has developed along different 
lines in each country and the scope of its activities therefore varies widely, 
as do legal systems applied to the surveying and valuing of property. 
Educational patterns also vary, partly because areas of study differ according 
to the scope of the profession and partly because in some countries professional 
qualifications are conferred by the state while in others this function is 
entrusted to the profession. Yet another problem is that in some countries the 
liberal professions perform cadastral and landed property surveys; in others the 
work is not reserved exclusively to the private sector; and in some countries 
there is no cadastral system at all. 
2.4 The European Secretariat for the Liberal Professions (SEPLIS) cites the 
OECD’s definition of "a liberal profession [which] is characterised essentially 
by moral and financial independence, a high level of education and practical 
training, and a code of conduct". SEPLIS concludes that the liberal professions 
should be a strictly regulated sector in which the public good and the client’s 
interests must be guaranteed; and that companies require as much protection as 
individuals regarding the quality of service offered by the liberal professions. 
In fact, the Treaty of Rome states that professional functions which are 
nationally regulated may not be performed by persons who are not authorised or 
licensed to undertake such functions. 
3. The Comité de Liaison des Géomètres Européens
3.1 The aims of the CLGE are (i) to represent the geodetic surveying 
community to the European Commission; (ii) to represent the liberal profession 
of the geodetic surveying community in SEPLIS; (iii) to advise the Commission on 
proposals for directives concerning the profession; (iv) to assist in the 
facilitation of free movement of geodetic surveyors throughout the EU; and (v) 
to co-operate with allied international and regional professional bodies. 
3.2 The CLGE contributed to the preparation of Directive 89/49/EEC - known as 
the first directive - which applies to any profession regulated in some way and 
whose qualification requires at least three years’ education at university or 
equivalent level. Professionals whose qualifications fall within the scope of 
this directive have the right to have their qualifications recognised in another 
EU country. Where the education and training of migrants differ substantially 
from those required by the host country, migrants have the choice between either 
an aptitude test or a period of supervised practice not exceeding three years. 
3.3 With Directive 92/51/EEC - known as the second directive - the Commission 
determined that recognition would be based on the principle of mutual trust but 
that bridges would need to be established between the second and the first 
directive to cover qualifications which fall under the latter system in some 
countries (academic studies of at least three years) and under the former in 
others (studies of less than three years). 
3.4 The CLGE originally drafted a special sectoral directive for geodetic 
surveyors. However, as the sectoral directive for architects took 18 years to 
negotiate, the CLGE abandoned its own draft and instead adapted for geodetic 
surveyors the general recognition expressed in both the first and second 
directives. This required it to carry out an overall investigation into the 
profession (the Allan report) and to prepare a profile of the European geodetic 
surveyor (the Profile report). 
4. How to Proceed
4.1 The Allan report, the Profile report and an envisaged report on quality 
assurance will provide the bases from which to ensure best practice in geodetic 
surveying which is fundamental to economic development. The general public, from 
individual clients to corporations and governments, place clearly defined 
requirements on their professional geodetic surveyors: for example, they would 
expect that (i) the title "European geodetic surveyor" applied only to a person 
who was qualified and experienced to academic and professional standards 
approved and accepted by the European Commission and (ii) truly competitive 
tenders could be obtained for effectively identical services from anyone who was 
formally designated a "European geodetic surveyor". 
4.2 National professional groups form the nucleus of the pan-European groups 
that, on the basis of national decisions, can determine mutually acceptable 
standards. This is one of the functions that could be undertaken by the CLGE. 
However, in view of the differences, including legal differences, in geodetic 
surveying in the EU countries, it would not be practical to aim for one standard 
academic professional programme. The first priority for the CLGE is therefore to 
define and accept criteria and a set of procedures for the individual 
certification of geodetic surveyors in the EU countries. Several members of the 
CLGE already have codes of conduct and other rules for their members which will 
be useful in setting up the norms. 
5. A System of Mutual Recognition
5.1 The CLGE should encourage a European system of individual certification 
for all geodetic surveyors’ professional activities that are not regulated by 
national laws. In designing a system of mutual recognition of qualifications it 
would do well to examine the system already well established for European 
engineers. 
5.2 The first step in developing the confidence of the general public must be 
to obtain approval of the requirements of a professional geodetic surveyor from 
the European Commission. Once mutually acceptable standards have been agreed and 
accepted, it will be necessary to create and administer a formal personal 
evidence of acceptability (PEA), a European register of membership and an 
appeals and review structure. The name of the body created to perform these 
functions might be the Federation of European Geodetic Surveyors (FEGS). 
5.3 The PEA would be primarily intended to certify that an individual’s 
qualification conformed to the standards required in the host state. 
Consequently it would apply more to the migrant than to the itinerant surveyor. 
Because the qualification would have to be of a generally acceptable standard, 
it should not relate to specialisms such as cadastral or other licensed 
requirements which demand a comprehensive knowledge of state law, together with 
total fluency in the language of the country, in addition to the professional 
surveying qualification. It is equally important for each country to safeguard 
its position with regard to land tenure, land law, remembrement and other 
aspects of the geodetic surveying profession. Therefore the PEA would not 
certify qualifications per se; although it might well be argued that higher 
quality is more likely to be obtained from geodetic surveyors if that were the 
case. 
5.4 Cross-border practice could be assisted considerably where geodetic 
surveyors were members of an FEGS; although they would still be subject 
ultimately to state laws and regulations. Membership of an FEGS should not 
detract from national institutional membership and advantages, as it would not 
normally be obtainable without such membership. 
6. Running into Obstacles
6.1 The simultaneous existence of 15 different educational systems in EU 
member countries creates barriers against free movement. Different educational 
systems produce different professional quality. 
6.2 Recognition of diplomas is carried out partly by the universities and 
partly by the competent authorities of the member countries. Except for the 
professions (architects and six others in the fields of law and medicine) that 
have their own sectoral directives, free movement and recognition of diplomas 
depend on the existence of national reports and descriptions of educational 
systems and professional bodies in the member countries. 
6.3 Professional recognition is valued by the host country. If the 
qualification of a migrant does not correspond to that of the host country, the 
migrant has to acquire, partly or wholly, the missing education or 
qualification. The qualification of the migrant may be unknown in a host country 
where professional education is not regulated. 
6.4 Due to Articles 55, 56 and 66 of the Treaty of Rome, freedom of movement 
and establishment do not apply to activities connected with the exercise of 
official authority. These are mostly activities connected with nationality, so 
they cannot be executed by foreigners. In some member countries cadastral 
surveying, even when executed by private practitioners, falls within this 
category. 
7. Overcoming the Obstacles
7.1 In order to remove hindrances to freedom of movement and establishment de 
jure, sectoral directives for certain professions and general directives on 
diplomas for the other professions have been enacted. In order to overcome 
hindrances de facto, information on national systems of education and practice 
has to be distributed. This means, as a result of cross-border negotiations, 
producing reports such as the CLGE’s Allan and Profile reports. 
7.2 The more individual countries can obtain acceptance of each other’s 
criteria, the closer they move to defining a common standard and the more rapid 
the process becomes. But a passport is also required, to provide proof of 
identity, to record personal inter-state movement and to request that the bearer 
be allowed to proceed with his professional business without let or hindrance. 
The PEA would obviate the need to produce diplomas of graduation. It is 
therefore essential that there should be a central registry to record and revise 
all the variable as well as the permanent conditions of the PEA. The registry 
would also arrange for the prevention of misuse of the PEA by accident or fraud. 
7.3 It is intended that, by the year 2000, matters such as restrictions on 
foreign investment and ownership, residency requirements for local partners and 
directors, national licensing and qualification standards will all be harmonised 
and current national restrictions eased. 
8. Outlook and Conclusions
8.1 Let’s take a look over the border of the European internal market. A new 
Commission white paper aims to help central and eastern European countries adapt 
their legislation to that of the internal market so that their economies can be 
integrated with those of the EU. Under the GATS Agreement of 1994 countries who 
are members of the World Trade Organisation are to bring the same kind of 
discipline to the provision of services as GATT has brought to the manufacturing 
industry. By the year 2000 world trade in professional services is due to be 
liberalised. 
8.2 Inter- and intra-state co-operation and competition within prescribed 
criteria can promote higher professional standards and better marketing 
conditions. Within Europe the need for fully qualified geodetic surveyors will 
become more widely appreciated and their services will be used not only by the 
public and other professionals generally in Europe but also worldwide. 
8.3 Freedom of establishment, the rights of the professional migrant and good 
cross-border practice will be determined only by negotiation. Enforcement can be 
achieved only once mutual overall acceptance has been publicly agreed. 
8.4 There is no real alternative, in a sane and healthy society, to the 
regulation of professions, subject to their being clearly defined. 
8.5 The education and training of a specialist group such as geodetic 
surveyors cannot be isolated from the vocational route it seeks to follow, nor 
from the activities of the allied professions with which it has to deal. 
Geodetic surveying is intertwined with civil engineering, architecture, property 
ownership and land administration. 
       
by María Cristina Boldorini 
1. MERCOSUR - the Present Situation
1.1 On 26 March 1991 the Presidents of the Federal Republic of Brazil, the 
Republic of Paraguay, the Oriental Republic of Uruguay and the Republic of 
Argentina signed the Treaty of Asunción which established the Mercado Comun del 
Sur - MERCOSUR. After only four years of its existence, and having completed the 
schedules of work for the transition period, MERCOSUR has achieved the status of 
a free trade area and customs union, following the December 1994 Ouro Preto 
Agreements. This represents outstanding progress in terms of integration, with 
MERCOSUR being the first customs union in the Americas. Since the Ouro Preto 
Protocol came into force on 15 December 1995 MERCOSUR has had a new 
institutional framework and international legal status and is in a position to 
negotiate agreements with third countries or blocks of countries. 
1.2 In its initial stages MERCOSUR had to function against an extremely 
complex international background. Despite the crisis facing the developing 
countries caused by the withdrawal of international credit and the collapse of 
the Mexican economy, the coherence and realism of the Agreements signed by the 
four participating countries was such that they became crucial factors in 
countering the potentially negative effects of the crisis. 
1.3 Within the framework of its strategy to open up to trade, MERCOSUR has 
adopted an active foreign policy by negotiating with other countries or groups 
of countries. Considerable work has been done within the Latin American 
Association for Integration (ALADI). An economic association agreement has been 
signed with Bolivia. During the sixth MERCOSUR Council held in August 1994 in 
Buenos Aires, the Presidents of the participating countries and the President of 
the Republic of Chile signed a declaration formally initiating negotiations for 
the conclusion of an economic association agreement providing for the 
establishment of a free trade area so as to create an enlarged economic zone in 
the southern cone of South America. A framework agreement covering both trade 
and non-trade aspects was agreed in the light of this declaration. Progress has 
also been made in negotiations with other ALADI member countries, with which 
free trade agreements are expected to be signed. 
1.4 In parallel to this, and in a wider American context, the foundations 
were laid at the Miami summit of the Americas in December 1994 for establishing 
a continental free trade area from 2005. The meeting of trade ministers in 
Denver in June 1995 led to the formation of seven working groups which have 
begun preparations on a range of trade areas. The second ministerial meeting in 
Cartagena in May 1996 set up four new technical groups (government purchases, 
services, intellectual property rights and competition policies) and established 
new guidelines for the work of the existing groups. 
1.5 In Madrid on 15 December 1995 the inter-regional framework co-operation 
Agreement between MERCOSUR and its participating countries and the European 
Union and its member countries was signed. Letters of reciprocation have been 
exchanged, providing for the provisional application of the Agreement until it 
comes into force, particularly in areas relating to trade and institutional 
frameworks. The Agreement was due to be formally initiated during the 
Argentinean Presidency of MERCOSUR, at the first meeting of the MERCOSUR - EU 
joint committee in Brussels on 11 and 12 June 1996. 
1.6 As regards the future of the integration process, at the December 1995 
meeting of MERCOSUR’s Common Market Council in Punta del Este the participating 
countries agreed to intensify their efforts to build the common market so as to 
achieve concrete progress by the year 2000. The MERCOSUR 2000 action programme 
was approved, defining the priority objectives and lines of action to be adopted 
by MERCOSUR in the next five years Rather than representing a policy commitment 
or establishing deadlines for fulfilment, this programme reflects the political 
will of the countries to strengthen integration. 
2. Services in MERCOSUR
2.1 Services were covered by the provisions of the Treaty of Asunción, the 
instrument which established MERCOSUR. Article 1 of the Treaty instrument 
specifically refers to the fact that the common market involves the free 
movement of goods, services and factors of production. The free movement of 
services is thus a policy commitment of the Treaty and was therefore included in 
the Las Leñas Schedule, approved by the Common Market Council in June 1992. 
Working sub-group Nº 10 established an ad hoc services committee which began 
work in December 1992 and carried on throughout the transition period. 
2.2 The four governments made their initial offer of services in the General 
Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) at individual levels, before they had 
begun to co-ordinate their positions within MERCOSUR. There are accordingly 
differences in the magnitude and scope of the individual offers. The work of the 
ad hoc services committee has enabled a start to be made on exchanging opinions 
and information and, in particularly, extending knowledge of the different 
regulations in force in the services sector within the MERCOSUR countries. 
2.3 MERCOSUR's initial commitment was to the establishment of a customs union 
whose most important trade policy instruments are the common external tariff and 
the minimum requirements necessary for its uniform application in the 
participating countries. The transition period was therefore mainly taken up 
with defining these instruments, which meant that services were not dealt with 
in the same depth. For the Republic of Argentina, however, services are a 
priority on the negotiating agenda; and this concern has been made known to the 
other members on various occasions. It was Argentina which promoted the 
formation of the new ad hoc services group during the customs union stage, an 
initiative embodied in Common Market Group (CMG) Resolution 20/95 of August 1995 
which defined the structure of the executive body of MERCOSUR. 
2.4 Within the MERCOSUR 2000 action programme services play a major role, 
since they inevitably represent the second freedom that must be granted for 
unrestricted movement within the region. The CMG also approved the agenda of the 
new ad hoc services group which made it responsible for preparing a draft 
framework agreement for trading in services in MERCOSUR, which must be 
consistent with the rules of the General Agreement on Trade in Services of the 
CMG. This legal instrument should be finalised in September 1996. 
2.5 In carrying out its mandate the ad hoc group has so far held two meetings 
and specific progress has been made in the negotiations. Preparation of the 
future Protocol has begun, incorporating various aspects, particularly the 
principal of intra-zone most favoured nation treatment and fulfilment of a 
liberalisation programme compatible with Article V of the GATS within a period 
of ten years. In this liberalisation programme work will be based on positive 
lists, starting with a list of initial commitments that will include significant 
coverage of service sectors. These initial commitments will have their own 
liberalisation programmes which must begin on the date the Protocol comes into 
force. In order to achieve the free trade area the participating countries will 
also hold annual negotiating rounds in which new service sectors will gradually 
be incorporated into the liberalisation programme. The third meeting of the ad 
hoc group will make a start on the sectors likely to be included in the list of 
initial commitments. 
2.6 None of the four participating countries has, as part of its initial 
offer within the framework of the GATS, consolidated any commitments relative to 
surveying services ("Professional services - others", according to the list of 
sectoral classification of services drawn up by the Secretary of the CMG). 
       
by Eduardo Marquez 
1. Introduction
1.1 As the signatory governments of MERCOSUR have subscribed to an 
integrationist policy whose development and consolidation depend on the 
activities of the different sectors of their communities, professionals in the 
technological area have, from the outset of the drafting of national agreements, 
been specifying activities - and we are pioneers in this area - for identifying 
and solving problems relevant to the free movement of labour and services. 
1..2 The professional colleges and councils of Brazil and Argentina held 
their first meeting in February 1989 in Porto Alegre, Brazil, when they signed a 
document expressing (i) support for the process of integration; (ii) a 
commitment to a joint analysis of the MERCOSUR Protocols; (iii) the need to be 
the spokesmen for their profession and to participate in the work of the border 
committees; and (iv) an intention to promote periodic meetings to reconcile 
professional legislation and harmonise technical standards. 
1.3 At a regional meeting held in March 1989 in Paso de los Libres, 
Argentina, specific questions relating to professional practice in engineering, 
architecture and surveying were discussed. An organisational meeting held in 
April 1989 in Buenos Aires established a committee responsible for centralising 
all work in the area of integration and particularly to act as an intermediary 
between the professional colleges and councils and the government authorities. 
Three working committees were also established to analyse the professional 
registers and to provide a permanent communication system. 
1.4 The third bi-national meeting took place in August 1989 in São Paulo, 
Brazil. An agreement for the development of professional technical activity 
defined the basic conditions for professional practice in the Common Market. A 
committee was formed to manage and supervise activities pursuant to the 
agreement. Subsequently both Brazil and Argentina experienced economic crises 
and elections which temporarily suspended the development of relations and the 
bi-national meetings. But a useful movement towards institutional reinforcement 
was begun with the establishment in October 1989 of the Co-ordinating Committee 
of Professional Councils and Colleges of Engineering, Architecture and Surveying 
of the North-East/Coastal Region (Arg.) (COPIAR). Its basic objectives included 
the co-ordination of activity to ensure the participation of professionals and 
their respective organisations in the process of integration with neighbouring 
countries. 
1.5 In April 1991, with MERCOSUR in place, work was resumed with vigour. The 
professional institutions of Brazil, Uruguay and Argentina participated in a 
meeting in April 1991 in Porto Alegre. It suggested the creation of a sub-group 
within the framework of the Common Market Group to co-ordinate registration 
systems. It also agreed to a comparative review of professional legislation and 
to encourage the universities to study equivalence. Issues relating to a 
provisional register of professionals to facilitate the exchange of services 
were dealt with on a local member basis. 
1.6 With the common objective of sharing the same duties and rights within a 
system of free movement of goods and services, and bearing in mind the 
complexity of and differences between the professional organisations of each 
country, the meeting in August 1991 in Córdoba, Argentina, created co-ordination 
mechanisms to guide the process of harmonising the relevant regulations of 
MERCOSUR. The meeting in November 1991 in Montevideo, Uruguay established the 
highest institutional body achieved so far - the Commission of Integration of 
Surveying, Agronomy, Architecture and Engineering for MERCOSUR (CIAAAIM - 
subsequently changed to CIAM). 
2. CIAM
2.1 The Montevideo Agreement established an executive committee of four 
members, one for each country adhering to the Treaty of Asunción. Its mission 
was (a) to organise the plenary meetings; (b) to set agenda; (c) to publicise 
details of meetings; (d) to contact organisations responsible for defining 
technological, management, environmental, control and materials classification 
standards, etc; (e) to liaise with universities in developing academic 
reciprocity agreements to facilitate qualification mechanisms for free 
professional practice; (f) to organise a four-monthly publication to be 
circulated in the four countries; and (g) to compile information for a manual of 
university qualifications. 
2.2 Its role was defined as transitional, until such time as better 
agreements were defined. Proposals for each area included: 
Equivalence: to propose an agreement to the corresponding authorities whereby 
a host country could accept the scope of the qualification awarded by the 
country of origin providing this did not exceed the responsibility granted by 
the host country. 
Registration: professionals should (i) respect the regulations that govern 
activity in the host country and (ii) keep their qualifications up-to-date so as 
to conform to ethical and disciplinary regulations in their country of origin. 
Control of registration: in countries where there are no colleges or councils 
measures would be introduced for exercising ethical and disciplinary control. 
Situation of companies: companies that operate within the framework of 
MERCOSUR should respect the registration procedures of each country (and it was 
proposed to unify them). 
2.3 Professional institutions which signed the Montevideo Agreement would 
submit measures for achieving its objectives to the corresponding authorities in 
their respective countries. 
2.4 The following points were suggested for inclusion on the agenda of 
forthcoming meetings: (a) an analysis of universities with respect to 
differences in qualifications and curricula; (b) a study of differences in the 
regulation of professional practice and the drafting of proposals governing 
provisional professional practice; and (c) determining strategic objectives for 
CIAM. 
3. Current Situation and Future Prospects
3.1 The establishment of COPIAR as a regional border institution and CIAM as 
an instrument for co-ordinating professional activity at the level of the four 
MERCOSUR signatory countries is enabling joint decisions to be reached on the 
basis of study and analysis of different social, economic, legal, cultural and 
technological situations. Some aspects of professional legislation and 
institutional organisation within the MERCOSUR countries should be considered in 
this light. 
3.2 Brazil: the sector is highly organised in 24 Regional (State) 
councils (CREAs) and a Federal council (CONFEA), created by Federal law and with 
considerable social integration. The CREA/CONFEA system determines the 
categories of professional activities and establishes a schedule of fees which, 
although not binding, has been adopted by 75% of those registered. The working 
regulations specifically establish a technical responsibility note (ART). A 
register of companies is maintained declaring the technical capacity of their 
professional staff. 
3.3 Uruguay: liberal activities are not subject to state control and 
the professional organisations are organised on a voluntary basis. The situation 
is similar in Paraguay, where there is no state control and 
qualifications are registered in local offices where professional work is 
carried out. There are voluntary professional organisations; but these receive 
little support. 
3.4 In Argentina registration is undertaken by autonomous councils and 
colleges and there are significant differences in social integration and in 
legal and procedural frameworks. National professional organisations are 
determined by agreements between the legally established provincial bodies. 
3.5 These asymmetries can be overcome, as is being shown by COPIAR and CIAM 
through their resolutions and their influence, encouraging and co-ordinating the 
practical adaptation of the various structures and fostering policies based on 
an awareness of the existence of MERCOSUR. 
3.6 The task now is to specify and consolidate the involvement of 
professionals and their institutions in the rewarding and complex task of 
integration in a region which covers an area of 11,800,000 sq kms and has a 
population of 190 million people - equivalent to France, Germany and Italy 
together - with a GDP of around US$400,000 million and a substantial import and 
export trade. The way forward must inevitably involve complete harmonisation and 
the acceptance of professional responsibilities vis-a-vis the political 
decisions of the MERCOSUR countries as expressed in the Treaty of Asunción: (a) 
the free movement of goods, services and factors of production and the 
abolishment of customs duties and other restrictions; (b) the establishment of a 
common external tariff and the adoption of a common trade policy; (c) the 
co-ordination of macro-economic and sectoral policies; and (d) the commitment to 
harmonise legislation in the relevant areas. For the professional sector this 
means freedom to exercise professional activity and non-discrimination on 
grounds of nationality. 
3.7 The necessary legal/institutional involvement must be brought about 
through professional incorporation into a working sub-group or through the 
creation of a specific sub-group or groups within the Common Market Group (CMG), 
established by the Treaty of Asunción and fully ratified in the Ouro Preto 
Protocol. This is recognised in CIAM in Resolution Nº 1 which states: 
"Henceforth to establish recognition of CIAM meetings as specialised meetings 
for harmonising the conditions of professional practice within the framework of 
item 7 of the Minutes of the 4th meeting of the Common Market Group...". 
3.8 If, in the process of integration and the resulting liberalisation of 
professional services, we adopt a stance based on negative aspects of classical 
corporate structures or on false barriers to registration as a palliative for 
depressed domestic markets - or, even worse, on the disastrous consequences of 
an anarchic system of deregulation and the conduct of civil servants who, 
through ignorance or omission, hinder the creative participation of 
professionals, we will be giving way to difficulties which stand in the way of 
the as yet untrodden paths of joint and sustained development. However, if we 
recognise that integration is an integral part of economic, social and political 
development we will, with our intellectual armoury, be well equipped to meet the 
challenge of achieving competitive and distributive economies which depend on 
technological progress. 
       
Responsibilities and Qualification of 
the Surveyor in Argentina
  
by Carlos Gillone 
1. The Professional Responsibilities of the Qualified Surveyor
1.1 These are defined in Ministry of Education Resolution Nº 432 of 28 March 
1987 and cover the determination of land and property including political and 
administrative jurisdictions; the execution of divisions and sub-divisions; 
cadastral surveys; land titling; planimetric, topographic, cartographic, 
hydrographic, photogrammetric and geodetic surveys, including interpretations of 
aerial and satellite images and the preparation of plans, maps and charts; land 
use classification and land use planning; property assessments and valuations; 
and arbitrations. 
2. Professional Education
2.1 Syllabuses in 14 state and private universities offering degrees in 
surveying have been adapted to the above responsibilities. The following list of 
subjects (credits) taught in the Faculty of Engineering at Buenos Aires 
University gives a general idea of the syllabuses. 
Obligatory subjects: mathematics applied to surveying; descriptive geometry; 
topographic drawing; compensation calculation; topography I - III; geodetics I - 
II; photogrammetry I - II; cartography; cadastres and valuations; surveying and 
professional practice; rural information; cadastral surveying I - II; and 
introduction to geographical information systems. 
Optional subjects: transport; town and country planning; planned geometry; 
physical geometry and geology; electronic measurement; geodetics III; 
photo-interpretation; micro-geodetics; hydrographic surveys; underground 
surveys; hydraulics, agriculture and sanitation; cadastres; assessments and 
valuations; economics; cadastral surveying III; numerical analysis; introduction 
to environmental engineering; and language. 
Syllabuses in other faculties differ in regard to specialised subjects and 
the length of the course. They lead to different qualifications; but all relate 
to the same responsibilities: geographical engineer, engineering surveyor and 
surveyor. 
3. Validation of Foreign Qualifications
3.1 One approach would be to consider which subjects have to be studied to be 
able to practise each area of responsibilities and then to establish a table of 
corresponding credits. A more thorough approach would involve studying the 
syllabus for each subject to see which aspects matched which areas of practice. 
This would make it possible to get away from an overall comparison by 
qualification. There are significant differences between Brazilian, Uruguayan, 
Chilean, etc. surveyors so, in this way, a migrant could, according to his 
credits, practise particular activities in the host country. However, this 
system would only be valid as long as syllabuses remain unchanged - in which 
case the table of corresponding credits would have to be adjusted. 
3.2 Authorisation or registration to practise the profession is granted in 
various ways. Legally established provincial surveying councils grant 
registration and oversee ethical conduct. They do not assess knowledge. 
Registration entitles the surveyor to practise in all areas of responsibility 
and is automatically renewed on payment of a quarterly or half-yearly fee. 
Legally established multidisciplinary collegial associations of engineers, 
architects and surveyors are also responsible for registration. Professional 
surveying councils, also established by law, are responsible for professional 
rather than legal aspects of practice. They form part of the Permanent 
Consultative Committee on the Practice of Surveying (COPEA). 
3.3 This is satisfactory for the present; but for the future minimum and 
maximum syllabuses must be agreed, considering the MERCOSUR countries as a 
geographic whole. Inevitably there will be differences in the legal subjects: 
for example, Argentina attaches great importance to its definition of 
measurement. Other matters to be addressed will include immigration, residence, 
registration, provisional contributions and professional ethics. 
3.4 Resolution Nº 6 adopted by the Commission for the Integration of 
Surveying, Agronomy, Architecture and Engineering for MERCOSUR (CIAM) proposed 
that commissions made up of specialised professionals should define equivalence 
between qualifications for the different professions represented within CIAM and 
submit their findings, via CIAM’s executive committee, to the corresponding 
government bodies. 
3.5 Resolution Nº 9 established five groups, including one for surveyors, to 
analyse problems of professional practice. The number of groups was expanded to 
12 by Resolution Nº 18. Resolution Nº 19 made provision for the creation of 
sub-groups, thereby facilitating the participation of specialists from other 
technological areas. 
3.6 Resolution Nº 12 aimed to progress studies leading to the harmonisation 
of professional practice, by promoting the regulation of university professions 
in the scientific and technical area; recommending the adoption of national 
legislation which delegated to the professional organisations the management and 
control of professional registration and the monitoring of compliance with 
standards of ethics; and in so doing recognising the importance of fostering 
respect for ethical duties and co-ordinating the interests of professionals, 
their clients and the communities they serve. 
3.7 To date no reciprocity in exercising the practice of the surveying 
profession has been established between the MERCOSUR countries. It is therefore 
essential to accelerate what has been proposed in resolutions regarding the 
working commissions of equivalent professions. 
       
by Miguel Prieto 
1. Professional Legislation
1.1 Specific reference to surveyors in legal documents in Brazil date back to 
1880. Regulation and control of the surveying profession are now subject to 
legislation (Federal Law 5,194 of 1966) and are vested in the Federal council of 
engineering, architecture and agronomy and the regional councils (one per state) 
of engineering, architecture and agronomy, referred to as the CONFEA/CREA 
system. 
1.2 The regional councils comprise representatives appointed by the teaching 
and professional institutions on honorary three year mandates. Specific matters 
in the various subject areas are dealt with by special councils of 
representatives from the same subject area. The special councils are responsible 
for keeping the powers granted to them under review; overseeing the professions; 
applying codes of ethics; examining breaches of legislation: maintaining 
registers of companies and the technical responsibility notes; and registering 
lists of professional fees. There are special councils for surveying on the 
regional councils of the states of São Paulo, Minas Gerais, Matto Grosso do Sul, 
Piauí and Bahia. 
2.   The Teaching of Surveying
2.1 The surveying course in Brazil, applicants for which must have completed 
the 1st and 2nd levels of schooling (11 years), was established in 1957. Up to 
that date surveying was only taught at intermediate level. Since then schools 
have been set up in Araraquara and Pirassununga in São Paulo, Viçosa and Belo 
Horizonte in Minas Gerais, Salvador in Bahia, Campo Grande in Matto Grosso do 
Sul, Teresina in Piauí and Criciúma in Santa Catarina. The schools in Teresina 
and Viçosa are part of the Federal universities; the others are private. 
2.2 At present the minimum curriculum involves 3,600 contact hours, plus an 
obligatory supervised training period of five years, arranged as follows: 
1,125 contact hours of basic subjects including mathematics, physics, 
chemistry, mechanics, data processing, drawing, electricity, materials 
resistance and elements of transport. 
240 contact hours of general subjects including humanities and social 
sciences, economics, administration and environmental sciences. 
390 contact hours of general professional subjects including hydrometry and 
bathymetry, soil mechanics, hydrology, hydraulics, construction materials, 
sanitation, transport and irrigation and drainage. 
1,140 contact hours of specific professional subjects including topography, 
special topography, geodetics, astronomy, photogrammetry and 
photo-identification, cartography, assessments and reports, land division, 
cadastral surveys and roads. 
705 contact hours of supplementary subjects including town planning and city 
layout, adjustment of observations, topographic drawing, cadastral surveying, 
scientific methodology, legislation and professional ethics, remote sensing and 
photo-interpretation, geology and geomorphology and an interdisciplinary 
graduation project. 
2.3 By means of these well-structured courses that form part of the full 
engineering courses surveyors are equipped to plan, supervise and execute aerial 
photogrammetry, bathymetry, geodetic surveys, topography, parcelisation of urban 
and rural land, cadastres, property valuation, road surveys, water capture and 
supply surveys, drainage and irrigation surveys, cadastral surveys and surveys 
for sanitation systems; and to prepare reports and assessments. They work in the 
private and the public sectors and in specialist companies. 
3. The Labour Market
3.1 Recent changes in Brazil's economy have brought greater political and 
economic stability, with a considerable fall in inflation. At the same time the 
way in which the public sector operates has changed. The Estado Tocador de 
Obras has been superseded by an executive authority which began by granting 
concessions for the generation, exploration and maintenance of road, rail, 
hydroelectric and other large infrastructure work. Now it is also in a position 
to plan such work, as the rules are becoming clear and established. The private 
sector is more advanced. Major companies are coming into the country and those 
already established have increased their investment and expanded their 
resources, stimulating the economy and generating more opportunities for work in 
all sectors. 
3.2 MERCOSUR will require its member countries and their allies to 
participate in the achievement of its objectives. The execution of 
infrastructure work over a large area of South America is one of the crucial 
factors for the success of this enormous plan. The integration of the provision 
of services by professionals in the MERCOSUR countries is being dealt with by 
the Commission of Integration of Surveying, Agronomy, Architecture and 
Engineering for MERCOSUR (CIAM). 
3.3 A country as huge as Brazil, with a land area of over 8,000,000 sq kms, 
requires information on the resources it contains, where they are located and 
how they should be exploited so that future generations have a healthy country 
in all respects. It also requires appropriate mechanisms for planning its space 
and visualising and quantifying the best means to control harmonious development 
in its huge and different regions. Surveying is essential for identifying and 
solving some of the country's basic problems involving the public authorities 
and including (i) socio-economic planning, with systematic mapping of the 
territory; (ii) delimiting borders; (iii) delimiting indigenous reservations; 
(iv) planning and establishing settlements and agrarian reform systems; (v) 
sanitation and irrigation plans and works; (vi) hydro-electric projects and 
works, telecommunications and town planning; (vii) river, sea, rail, road and 
air transport route plans and works; and (viii) plans with an impact on the 
environment, land occupation and the protection of water sources. 
3.4 New projects open up huge fields of work. Major works of infrastructure, 
however, are not the only area in which the surveyor can act. Throughout the 
country there are countless land divisions and other property developments which 
can be carried out not only by companies but also by liberal professionals. 
Industry requires specialised topography for precision settings and as-built 
surveys. The adaptation of title deeds to standards enabling them to be used as 
effective guarantees for loans in the financial market is another potential area 
of work. At present they do not come up to these standards since the 
overwhelming majority do not relate to the Brazilian geodetic system but consist 
of an infinite number of deeds with descriptions made on the basis of isolated 
polygons and arbitrary systems. These are the best cases: some are not even 
covered by geometric description by azimuths and distances in systems of 
arbitrary co-ordinates. One of the steps which must be taken to resolve this 
problem is the establishment of a sworn surveyor for each district. 
3.5 Geoprocessing is a significant field of work for surveyors, bearing in 
mind that each municipality of over 100,000 inhabitants is a potential client 
and that smaller municipalities can merge to form regional geoprocessing 
companies. This is an area which is not only expanding but which will, when 
consolidated, represent an inexhaustible source of survey work in sectors such 
as transport, power distribution, water and sewerage distribution, and paper and 
cellulose manufacture. 
3.6 Surveyors work in private companies which specialise in consultancy and 
engineering projects and in companies involved in construction, mining, 
reforestation, land division and consolidation, topography, and aerial 
photogrammetry. Other areas of the private sector requiring the support of 
surveyors include mining, planned agriculture (particularly hemp cultivation and 
citriculture), civil engineering and industrial assembly. Surveyors are 
increasingly to be found in maintenance and quality control in industry. They 
act as expert witnesses and assistants in both the lower and the higher courts. 
3.7 There are no accurate statistics on the labour market for surveyors; but 
available data suggest that very few are unemployed, reflecting the healthy 
labour market for these professionals. 
       
by Rodolfo P Cácares González 
1. History and Training of Surveyors
1.1 The war of the Triple Alliance (1870) left the defeated Paraguay in a 
disastrous economic situation. In order to survive and develop, the country had 
to resort to the sale of state-owned land, its only asset. Various official 
committees were sent to Buenos Aires and Europe to negotiate the sale of land, 
which had to be identified and marked out before sales were finalised. Because 
surveyors were in short supply in Paraguay, the purchasers brought their own 
surveyors to do the work. These foreign professionals, who were ignorant not 
only of the language but also of the terrain, needed local assistants - most of 
whom made the most of their experience to become empirical surveyors to add to 
the numbers of foreign surveyors and Paraguyans trained abroad, particularly in 
Argentina. 
1.2 The national department of engineers, the embryo Ministry of Public 
Works, was created by a Law dated 18 August 1888. Article 3 stated that "the 
qualification of public surveyor shall be awarded by the department and all 
qualifications awarded abroad shall be validated by means of examinations". 
Article 8 stipulated that "surveyors who are currently practising shall apply to 
the department within six months for their qualifications to be reviewed. Those 
who fail to comply with this provision shall be suspended until they comply with 
the aforesaid requirements". Article 7 of the Law made provision for drawing up 
regulations which would define surveyors’ working methods and responsibilities. 
1.3 A Decree dated 12 July 1910 stated that "Measurement, division and the 
marking of boundaries of land shall be performed by civil engineers and 
qualified surveyors"; though Article 3 excludes the measurement of land of less 
than 700 ha outside the capital, which work could be done by unqualified 
surveyors. 
1.4 The National University of Asunción was established in 1889. A Decree 
passed in 1921 created the school of surveying. In 1926 the school was 
incorporated into the newly-formed faculty of physical sciences and mathematics, 
the teaching staff of which was basically made up of white Russian professors 
who had fled the Bolshevik revolution and who were made responsible for training 
the new professional public surveyors. The first of these probably graduated 
around 1927 or 1928, though there are no records of this. 
1.5 University activity was interrupted between 1932 and 1936 because of the 
Chaco war against Bolivia. The few surveyors and survey students of the time 
played a significant role in the conflict, as cartographers in a totally unknown 
region. 
1.6 Surveyors started to graduate regularly from 1938. Unfortunately for the 
profession, the faculty reorganised its syllabuses and created a course for 
topographers in 1955 which abolished the syllabus for public surveyors. The 
curriculum and responsibilities defined for the topographer were virtually 
identical to those for the public surveyor; though the intention was probably to 
create assistants for civil engineers, preferably for work connected with 
highways. Topographers were thus the somewhat less prestigious successors to 
surveyors: they were authorised to perform cadastral or private surveys (as were 
civil engineers) and without doubt the topography course became a stepping stone 
towards the civil engineering profession. 
1.7 This syllabus has remained virtually unaltered ever since so that, in 
addition to changing the name of the qualification awarded, it is also essential 
to up-date the curriculum by incorporating photogrammetry, land registration, 
cartography, satellite geodesy and geographical information systems, and also to 
intensify the study of the cadastral component of surveying and valuations. 
1.8 The other approach to training professional surveyors is via the 
Institute of Geographical Sciences. This Institute, accountable to the 
Vice-Chancellor’s office of the National University, was created in 1979 at the 
behest of the military geographic institution, now the department of military 
geography. The qualifications awarded are graduate in geographical sciences 
after four years of study and engineer in geographical sciences after six years. 
The subject structure is a little cumbersome, since it covers the complete field 
of geographical sciences which is difficult to apply in liberal professional 
practice. Graduates of this Institute are authorised to perform cadastral and 
private surveys. 
1.9 The (private) Catholic University of Nuestra Señora de la Asunción also 
ran a degree in topography with a well-balanced syllabus; but it failed to 
attract many students and had to be discontinued. The only technical school in 
the country is run in the department of military geography, which awards the 
degree of bachelor of geography. Various public institutions run courses for 
assistant topographers or refresher courses for topographers from time to time. 
2. The Practice of Surveying
2.1 The following professionals are authorised to perform private, 
administrative or cadastral surveys: (a) public surveyors (graduates of the 
National University, pre-1955 syllabus); (b) topographers (graduates of the 
National University and the Catholic University); (c) civil engineers; (d) 
graduates in geographical sciences; (e) engineers in geographical sciences; and 
(f) graduates of foreign universities with equivalent qualifications and prior 
validation. The responsibilities of holders of some of these qualifications are 
not clearly defined and it is not possible to monitor whether they perform work 
which falls within their area of ability. Since the professional associations 
have no supervisory role and since some survey work is not subject to 
administrative approval, and also because there is a free contractual 
relationship between the client and the professional, there will always be those 
who seek more favourable prices and who will be unprotected against unscrupulous 
or bogus professionals. 
2.2 This does not mean there is no control over professional practice. The 
state has always retained this legal authority; although its administration in 
this area is not efficient. Professionals have as yet not managed to have such 
authority delegated to professional associations or councils because of 
Parliament’s reluctance to create them by law. 
2.3 Among the legal provisions governing the activity of surveyors the 1910 
Decree is still in force. Essentially it applies the code of civil procedure to 
the judgement of measurement, division and boundary marking. Its provisions also 
apply to administrative surveys of state land for purchase by private 
individuals. Only these cadastral and administrative surveys are supervised, 
approved and recorded by a national authority - the department of surveying and 
geodesy of the Ministry of Public Works. 
2.4 Special or private surveys are carried out through agreement between the 
land owner and the professional. If such work is performed on plots of land 
located in urban areas, it is supervised and approved by the corresponding 
municipal authority and must comply with the provisions of municipal framework 
Law Nº 1294/87 relating to land divisions or development. If the property is not 
located in an urban area the professional survey of the part to be marked off is 
referred to a public notary who will organise the purchase and sale by 
transcribing the surveyor’s report. All surveying work, whether cadastral, 
administrative or private, is referred to the national land registry department 
to be registered and given a current land registration account number, through 
either the legal or municipal authorities or public notaries. The department is 
responsible only for keeping records and not for the registration and technical 
supervision of professional practice. 
2.5 Paraguay is a unitary republic and the whole national administration is 
concentrated in the capital, Asunción. Therefore the State, via the Ministry of 
Public Works, controls registration. Law Nº 976/64 regulates the practice of the 
professions of engineer, architect and surveyor or topographer and clearly 
establishes that they may only be practised by people with authorised titles 
awarded by domestic universities or with titles awarded by foreign universities 
and validated by the National University. The same Law establishes a 
professional register under the supervision of the Ministry. Professionals must 
be registered annually and a certificate issued, failing which municipal 
authorities cannot grant the municipal registration certificate. The Law also 
stipulates that people who practise any of these professions without having a 
valid registered title or who lay false claim to the title may be subject to 
penalties laid down in the penal code. This is the area in which the Ministry 
does not exercise its supervisory capacity to the full. The registration of the 
surveyor depends only on verification of the cadastral or administrative surveys 
for which the Ministry is compulsorily responsible. Many municipalities, public 
notaries and land registration offices are ignorant of the law or are simply 
unwilling to enforce it. 
2.6 Among its objectives the Association of Surveyors of Paraguay has given 
priority to the creation of a professional college of surveying whose authority 
would include supervision of registration. The Association is working within a 
multi-sectoral area of associations of university professionals for the approval 
of a framework law of association, which was unfortunately turned down by 
Parliament in November 1995. While not abandoning the concept of a law of 
association, the idea of the Ministry of Public Works delegating its authority 
to register surveyors, engineers and architects to their respective professions 
is being explored with the Ministry and with the engineers and architects 
associations. The negotiations are proving fruitful and the Ministry in 
particular is interested because it lacks the resources to carry out what for it 
is an unrewarding task. At the same time provincial municipalities, public 
notaries and land registration offices are being urged to demand that 
professionals with whose work they deal should be registered. 
2.7 As the MERCOSUR Treaty prescribes the free movement of services, it is 
essential for surveyors in Paraguay to obtain the authority to administer 
registration so as to achieve correct supervision of national professionals and 
those from the other MERCOSUR countries. The Association of Surveyors of 
Paraguay is working towards establishing the conditions and rules of integration 
through its membership of the Commission of Integration of Surveying, Agronomy, 
Architecture and Engineering for MERCOSR (CIAM). 
3. Social Security, Fees and Tax Laws
3.1 Surveying is an independent liberal profession which the surveyor 
generally practises in person or as a consultant, sometimes with the assistance 
of temporary or permanent collaborators in fieldwork, office administration and 
procedural tasks. In common with other professionals, surveyors who employ staff 
are obliged to pay social security contributions for them; and in this case some 
surveyors also decide to pay contributions for themselves to the Institute for 
Social Security which provides health and pension cover. Registration and 
payment of these contributions is a condition for the submission of tenders. 
Employers are responsible for paying the contributions of any surveyors that 
they employ. 
3.2 There is no legislation which establishes levels of professional fees. 
The only information available comes from the profession’s own surveys of fees 
and costs for various work. The surveyor negotiates the price, form of payment 
and scope of work to be carried out with the client. In some cases a private 
contract is signed or a commitment is established by exchanging notes for the 
commissioning, offer and acceptance of work. These documents are valid in legal 
actions. 
3.3 Paraguay does not have personal income tax. Liberal professionals pay 
value added tax (currently 10% of the invoice value). It is also a condition for 
submitting tenders that bidders are registered with the tax authorities and that 
their tax payments are up-to-date. 
3.4 If surveyors employ staff they are obliged to register them with the 
Department of Labour. 
4. Conclusion
4.1 Paraguay emerged at the end of the 1980s from a long period of 
authoritarian government. The country’s institutions and people are still 
adapting to the new times and the profession of surveying requires the efforts 
of all of its members if it is to achieve the reforms necessary in territorial 
organisation. 
       
by Nelma Bénia Llano 
1. The Development of Professional Regulation
1.1 People began to populate the countryside in Uruguay in the mid-XVIII 
century, during the rule of the Spanish crown which issued regulations fostering 
the settlement of people in the countryside. It was therefore essential to mark 
out the land: geographical features were no longer sufficient reference points. 
Pilots, qualified to plot courses and to correct drifting brought about by winds 
and currents (based on measuring their position from the stars), were 
responsible for the measuring and demarcations. They were active from the 
mid-XVIII to the mid-XIX century and called themselves surveyors or pilot 
surveyors - though some merely called themselves pilots. 
1.2 In 1820 Uruguay was invaded by the Portuguese. The regulations of the 
time made the surveyor subordinate to the 
Juez de Mensura (the judge of measurement), who had to check the 
instruments used by the surveyor and the data obtained in fieldwork. 
1.3 Between 1825 and 1828 Uruguay formed part of the United Provinces of Rio 
de la Plata, when professional practice was regulated by the Argentinean Law of 
Emphyteusis. This stipulated that, to practise surveying, it was necessary to 
pass an examination and to be registered. The surveyor was furthermore 
considered to be akin to a physician and a Juez de Mensura, whose work 
could only be verified by his peers. Despite the fact that the Eastern Province 
(now Uruguay) became independent in 1828, the same regulations continued to 
govern professional activity as normal. 
1.4 Surveying is the oldest profession in Uruguay and the first technical 
profession to have been subjected to controlled training. Its importance led to 
its regulation in 1831 when Uruguay began to organise itself politically as a 
free nation. The duties of the national topographic commission, founded in 
December 1831, included "examining, registering and supervising authorised 
surveyors". They were allowed 40 days to register, when they were allotted a 
number, thus giving rise to the title "numbered surveyor". Those applying for 
the qualification subsequently had to take an examination in topography, 
geodetics and descriptive drawing. 
1.5 The law of Emphyteusis was ratified in Uruguay in May 1833 and granted 
the surveyor the powers of a professional and 
Juez de Mensura. It regulated the activity of surveyors until it was 
repealed in 1856. 
1.6 The department of public works was created in 1864 and included the 
topographic commission which was granted legal powers to register surveyors. In 
1878 the department drafted instructions for public surveyors. With the 
establishment of the faculty of mathematics within the University of the 
Republic in 1885, the University became responsible for authorisation, as 
examinations to obtain the qualification of public surveyor had to be awarded or 
verified by the University. However, the work of the surveyor continued to be 
regulated by government. The creation of the national department of engineers in 
1892 accordingly made it mandatory to submit a copy of all surveys carried out, 
the ultimate objective of this rule being to produce the map of the country. 
1.7 In 1908 legislation stipulated that only acting surveyors (with a title 
issued or verified by the University of the Republic) could submit plans for 
measurement. Following the abolition of the department of engineers in 1912 and 
the creation of the department of topography of the Ministry of Public Works, 
plans were registered in this department in Montevideo while outside the capital 
they were registered in the regional technical offices. 
1.8 In 1940 the government unified the regulations in force and enacted a 
Decree for the comparison of plans. This made the general department of 
valuations (now the general department of national cadastral surveys and 
administration of public buildings) responsible for registering the signature of 
all surveyors who practised or wished to practise in the country and for 
comparing and registering the measurement plans of buildings anywhere in the 
Republic. The Decree also regulates the content and form of presentation of 
plans and the number of copies required. 
1.9 In 1941 a Decree was issued whereby municipal approval was required for 
the division of land situated in urban and suburban areas, failing which the 
general department of valuations would not register the plan. This brought with 
it the still valid requirement to register the signature in all municipalities 
in which it is intended to submit plans for approval. 
1.10 Subsequent laws regulating different areas of national activity make the 
surveyor and the surveying engineer responsible for carrying out particular 
tasks: for example, the 1982 mining code exclusively authorises surveying 
engineers to draw up sketches and plans necessary for carrying out mining work. 
However, although much professional practice is regulated, huge areas are still 
not covered by the law. There is no institution in Uruguay which defines 
professional responsibilities, supervises registration or lays down a code of 
ethics and subsequently monitors compliance. To date, owing to the limited 
number of professionals in Uruguay (reflecting its size), no great problems have 
arisen. However, freedom to provide professional services in the MERCOSUR region 
could give rise to difficulties that will have to be overcome by measures 
different from those adopted so far. 
2. Professional Training
2.1 The University of the Republic was established by Decree in 1838 and 
inaugurated in 1849. Within the faculty of mathematics two-year courses for 
surveyors and three-year courses for geographic engineers started in 1888. 
Subsequently the faculty of mathematics expanded into separate faculties of 
engineering and architecture and all titles awarded by the former include the 
word "engineer". 
2.2 Professional training in the area of surveying has also varied. The 
initial two-year course led to the title of surveyor. Later, as the profession 
developed both nationally and internationally, the length and breadth of the 
course expanded and the title of the final award also changed. The journey from 
the first geographic engineers and surveyors to to-day’s surveying engineers has 
been both long and enriching. 
2.3 In 1947 the format of the surveying course was changed and its duration 
extended to three years to accommodate the field studies organised on an annual 
basis by the faculty. A four-year course was introduced in 1969 and revised in 
1974. Finally, in 1992 the current course was introduced, increasing the period 
of studies to five years. 
2.4 The present course is organised differently from that traditionally 
followed by surveyors. It is structured in four parts: basic studies, specific 
studies, optional studies, and activities. An innovative feature of this format 
is that the basic studies are common to all courses within the faculty of 
engineering. Another distinguishing characteristic is the concept of measuring 
progress by means of credits. Each time a student completes a part of the course 
he receives the appropriate number of credits. A minimum of 470 credits, which 
correspond to an average of 47 hours per week per semester over the five-year 
period, is required for the award of a professional title. 
2.5 The components of the course, and the minimum number of credits which 
each carries, is as follows. 
Basic studies (150): mathematics (85), physics (30), technology and society 
(20), computer studies (15). 
Specific studies (230): theory of observations (10), topography (60), geodesy 
(50), cadastral surveying (30), valuation (22), photogrammetry (18), rural and 
urban parcelisation (20), GIS and cadastres (10), complementary techniques (18). 
Optional studies (60): topography IV (30), cadastral surveying III (15), 
valuation II (15), physical and satellite geodesy (30). 
Activities (22): workshop (10), project (12). 
The minimum total of 470 credits must include a minimum of 60 credits in 
optional studies. 
2.6 This academic programme leads to the award of a first degree. The 
institute of surveying within the faculty of engineering is studying the 
structure of a post-graduate course, but this project is still at an early 
stage. For several years the institute has organised professional refresher 
courses, providing theoretical and practical training in new techniques and 
technologies. It is thus providing the on-going education that is a prerequisite 
of professional practice in to-day’s global world. 
2.7 A second, private, university was established in the early 1980s but to 
date it offers no courses relevant to the education of surveyors: these are 
provided exclusively within the faculty of engineering of the University of the 
Republic. 
3. Recognition of Academic and Professional Qualifications
3.1 The autonomy of the University of the Republic is recognised by Uruguay’s 
constitution. Under the terms of Law Nº 12.549 of 15 October 1958 the University 
is authorised to recognise academic and professional qualifications which 
entitle their holders to practise their profession. When the University is asked 
to validate or recognise titles awarded by foreign universities, a ratification 
commission undertakes a detailed examination of the content and duration of the 
relevant course and submits a report to the faculty council. This council in 
turn makes its views known to the central directing council of the University to 
enable it to reach a decision. 
3.2 The whole of this process is regulated by a ratification decree whose 
main provisions are as follows. 
The University regulations expressly allow for the ratification of foreign 
titles related to the exercise of the liberal professions in Uruguay. 
Ratification may only be concerned with (a) titles, (b) of foreign origin, 
(c) giving legal or other appropriate entitlement to perform an activity, (d) 
for the exercise of the liberal professions and (e) distinct professions, though 
related to those whose qualifications are the titles awarded by the University 
of the Republic. 
Ratification is concerned with similarities between  liberal professions, 
not between the content of two or more courses (from the same or different 
faculties). 
To this end related professions are defined as those forming part of the same 
family or group, by virtue of their basic common training, even if there are 
differences in aspects of practice. 
Furthermore, there must be reasonable equivalence in the organisation and 
level of their respective (tertiary) studies. 
Furthermore, it is recommended that the names of ratified titles be adapted, 
to obviate confusion and to prevent their being used in competition with related 
titles awarded by the appropriate faculty of the University. 
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