| FIG PUBLICATION NO. 75FIG and MeMy Twenty Five Years in the International Surveying Arena - 
	Earl JamesFIG REPORTAuthor:Earl James, FIG Honorary President
 
 
  
 
 FOREWORD  As the President of FIG, I am privileged to announce the release of the 
	publication “FIG and Me – My Twenty Five Years in the International 
	Surveying Arena” written by Earl James, FIG Honorary President. This book 
	provides an insight into Earl’s international surveying accomplishments, and 
	a unique perspective of the FIG workings, achievements, and challenges 
	experienced by our establishment, during the period 1988 – 1996. Back then 
	FIG Council and Office was known as the “Bureau”, and from 1988 Earl served 
	as a Vice President with the Finnish Bureau for four years, and then as FIG 
	President of the Australian Bureau, who hosted the XX International Survey 
	Congress held in Melbourne in 1994. For those who do not know, Earl is an Australian icon of surveying, and 
	is recognised and respected as a survey pioneer of the Northern Territory of 
	Australia. For 44 years Earl worked as a professional surveyor, starting as 
	an “outback” cadet surveyor with the Lands and Survey Department, 
	progressing to a Senior Licensed Surveyor in government, and then 
	establishing a reputable and successful private business in the Northern 
	Territory. Earl in the course of his professional career surveyed numerous 
	property land boundaries in pastoral, rural, and urban environs, he mentored 
	many surveyors or land related professionals, and contributed to the growth 
	of the Northern Territory through his expertise as a Planner and the 
	Chairing of numerous land development Boards. Both the surveying and 
	planning profession have honoured Earl with the accolade of “Honorary 
	Fellowship”, and the Australian Government have recognised his service to 
	industry by appointing Earl as a Member of the Order of Australia. Many of those who know Earl, always recount his eloquent speeches, his 
	strategic thinking, and plans for FIG, which when combined help shape the 
	foundations of the organisation that we know today. It is therefore a great 
	pleasure and honour for me to write this foreword and for FIG to be part of 
	this publication. I sincerely hope that FIG members enjoy reading this 
	personal record from a Northern Territory of Australia outback surveyor who 
	visited over 50 countries whilst leading the way. In the name of the International Federation of Surveyors I thank Earl for 
	his outstanding engagement for our profession, for his activities in the 
	name of FIG, and also for his wonderful memories. Rudolf StaigerPresident (2019–2022)
 
 PrefaceSurveying is a pastime enjoyed (or endured) by many, many people who 
	carry out a host of different occupations; occupations that could range from 
	the simple task of polling people with a question of political significance 
	to the complicated and highly skilled task of measuring the shape and size 
	of the earth. In some countries the term ‘surveyor’ is used to refer to those who carry 
	out surveys such as those required to define property boundaries or the 
	surveys needed to control the construction of bridges, roads, multi-storied 
	buildings and other structures but in other countries the term is also used 
	to cover those who simply collect information and use it to come to a 
	specific conclusion such as the determination of the value of a property, or 
	how best to design a new suburb, or the production of a particular map. Surveyors have been around for a long time. Evidence of this can be seen in 
	such ancient works as the three thousand year old map recently found 
	stencilled into the rocks of Italy’s mountains. Ancient art depicts 
	surveyors using crude tapes and other measuring implements while the 
	rectilinear layout of most excavated lost cities is enough to convince even 
	the casual observer that surveying is a very ancient art. Indeed, surveying 
	is often referred to as the world’s first, or oldest profession though this 
	is hotly contested by the military. Even so, military ranks always have 
	contained surveyors though they were referred to as engineers. Roman 
	military surveyors two thousand years ago were famous for their long 
	straight roads and the symmetry of their military encampments. The International Federation of Surveyors defines a surveyor as, among 
	other things, ‘a professional person with the academic qualifications and 
	technical expertise to practise the science of measurement’. I am a 
	surveyor. I have worked both as a government employed surveyor and as a 
	private practicing surveyor for the best part of forty six years in the 
	Northern Territory of Australia. During that time I took a great interest in 
	the politics of the profession to the extent that over the years I 
	progressed from being an
	associate member of the Institution of Surveyors Australia (ISA), to 
	national President of that Institution thence to Vice President of the 
	International Federation of Surveyors (FIG), then to President of that 
	federation and finally to President of the International Union for Surveys 
	and Mapping (IUSM). This is the story of my involvement with the Féderation 
	Internationale des Géomètres (FIG). NOTE: For list of acronyms see Glossary. 
 Introduction18 July 1878 – 1st Congress and Founding of Féderation Internationale 
	des Géomètres (FIG) in Paris (France)On 18 July 1878 a select band of representatives from the professional 
	surveying associations of seven European countries met in Paris, France at 
	the instigation of the associations from France and Belgium. The objective 
	of the meeting was to find a mechanism by which those associations could 
	exchange information about the profession and changes in work practice as 
	well as news about developments in research and exploits of individual 
	surveyors. The end result of the meeting was the formation of the Fédération 
	Internationale des Géomètres otherwise known as Internationale Vereinigung 
	Der Vermessungsingenieure or the International Federation of Surveyors. The 
	Federation was founded as a non-governmental organisation and its purpose 
	was described as being ‘to support international collaboration for the 
	purpose of surveying in all fields and applications’. The member countries of this fledgling organisation were France, Germany, 
	Great Britain, Belgium, Italy, Spain and Switzerland. As the people in the 
	majority of those countries spoke either French, German or English the 
	meeting agreed that all three of those languages should be official 
	languages of the Federation and that the shortened version of the name 
	should be FIG, the initials of the French version of the name. The 
	organisation has been known by all and sundry as FIG until the present day 
	and no doubt will continue to be so known. The decision to have three 
	official languages required all documents to be recorded in three versions 
	and for conferences to have simultaneous translation facilities. This was 
	not overturned until 1995. The newly created federation was formed with four principal units: a 
	General Assembly of member associations; a Permanent Committee; a number of 
	Technical & Scientific Commissions and an executive committee known as the 
	Bureau. This structure remained in place until 1998. The definition of a 
	surveyor was fairly simple but was stated to include appraisers and valuers. 
	This definition was too simple for most people and was to remain a bone of 
	contention until a new all-inclusive definition was agreed to in 1991. This meeting in 1878 was taken to be the 1st Congress of FIG. The next 
	congress was held in Brussels in 1910 and the 3rd Congress was held once 
	again in Paris in 1926 having been disrupted by World War One and the 
	tumultuous events in Europe after that event. Thereafter some regularity 
	appeared with congresses taking place every three or four years except 
	during the years of World War II. Membership grew apace but all member 
	associations came from European countries until the United States became a 
	member country in 1935. The first congress to be held outside Europe was 
	held in Washington, USA in 1974 and the first to be held in any country 
	other than one in Europe or the USA was held in 1994 in Melbourne, 
	Australia. The Institution of Surveyors, Australia (ISA) first sent a delegation of 
	observers to an FIG Congress in 1962 when the 10th Congress was being held 
	in Vienna, Austria after which the Council of the Institution considered the 
	possibility of becoming a member of the Federation. The matter was put to 
	the general membership who agreed to the idea and in 1965 the Council of ISA 
	lodged a formal application for membership which was considered by the 
	General Assembly of FIG at the 11th Congress held in Rome that year. The 
	application was successful. The Institution of Surveyors, Australia thus 
	became the first Australian association to become a member of FIG. The 
	Australian Institute of Valuers became a member in 1970 but resigned from 
	the Federation in 1983. ISA continued to be a member of FIG and had a significant impact on that 
	organisation. Administration of the Federation was in the hands of the 
	Australian Institution during the four year period 1992 to 1995 during which 
	time Bureau members were successful in achieving great changes to the 
	structure of the organisation and to policy matters. I became involved in 
	1971 and went on to become the President of the Federation for the period of 
	the Australian administration. 
  Read the full FIG Publication 75 in pdf Book 1: 1972 to 1992Book 2: 1992 to 1995
 Book 3: Epilogue - 1996 to 2010
 
 Copyright © The International Federation of Surveyors (FIG),  
May 2020.  All rights reserved.  International Federation of Surveyors (FIG)Kalvebod Brygge 31–33
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 Tel. + 45 38 86 10 81
 E-mail: FIG@FIG.net
 www.fig.net
 Published in EnglishCopenhagen, Denmark
 ISSN 1018-6530 (printed)
 ISSN 2311-8423 (pdf)
 ISBN 978-87-92853-94-3 (print)
 ISBN 978-87-92853-95-0 (pdf)
 Published byInternational Federation of Surveyors (FIG)
 Layout: Lagarto
 
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