
Geospatial Data Infrastructure
Concepts, Cases, and Good Practice
Oxford University Press
Published on 17. August 2000
Book
Hardback
318 pages
978-0-19-823381-7 (ISBN)
Description
Geographic Information Systems (GIS) technology, under development since the late 1960s, is being applied in a growing variety of public and private sector endeavours: real estate planning, land administration, resource management, environmental monitoring, etc. Each of these endeavours entails the creation and management of a variety of datasets.
In addition to the cost of the technology, the most significant cost element in GIS exploitation is the establishment and maintenance of the relevant standardized databases, keeping these databases current and ensuring their inter-operability.
Achieving cost-effective data sharing from different sources, however, requires policies and standards that provide a legislative, regulatory, financial operating environment of predictable integrity: a Geospatial Data Infrastructure (GDI). Its creation demands negotiating agreements defining the institutional environment and arrangements between database-producing and using organizations.
This book aims to provide a clear conceptual framework, consistent terminology, reference cases, and recommended practices for design, implementation, and management of GDI. It is meant both for academics and for practitioners faced with the design, implementation, and maintenance of GDI at all levels of government and private sector enterprises, as well as in the international financial institutions involved with underwriting GDI projects.
In addition to the cost of the technology, the most significant cost element in GIS exploitation is the establishment and maintenance of the relevant standardized databases, keeping these databases current and ensuring their inter-operability.
Achieving cost-effective data sharing from different sources, however, requires policies and standards that provide a legislative, regulatory, financial operating environment of predictable integrity: a Geospatial Data Infrastructure (GDI). Its creation demands negotiating agreements defining the institutional environment and arrangements between database-producing and using organizations.
This book aims to provide a clear conceptual framework, consistent terminology, reference cases, and recommended practices for design, implementation, and management of GDI. It is meant both for academics and for practitioners faced with the design, implementation, and maintenance of GDI at all levels of government and private sector enterprises, as well as in the international financial institutions involved with underwriting GDI projects.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
numerous hafltones and figures
Dimensions
Height: 242 mm
Width: 161 mm
Thickness: 22 mm
Weight
635 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-823381-7 (9780198233817)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Richard Groot is a Professor of Geoinformatics Management and Infrastructure at the International Institute for Aerospace Surveys and Earth Sciences (ITC), Enschede, Netherlands.
John Douglas McLaughlin is a Professor in the Department of Land Studies at the Faculty of Geodesy and Geomatics and Engineering at the University of New Brunswick, Canada
John Douglas McLaughlin is a Professor in the Department of Land Studies at the Faculty of Geodesy and Geomatics and Engineering at the University of New Brunswick, Canada
Author
, Professor of Geoinformatics Management and Infrastructure at the International Institute for Aerospace Surveys and Earth Sciences (ITC) Enschede, Netherlands
Professor of Land StudiesProfessor of Land Studies, University of New Brunswick, Canada
Content
7 ANTICIPATING CULTURAL FACTORS OF GDI; 8 THE FOUNDATION TECHNOLOGIES; 9 GDI ARCHITECTURES; 10 CONCEPTUAL TOOLS FOR SPECIFYING GEOSPATIAL DESCRIPTIONS; 11 SPATIAL REFERENCING; 12 PHOTOGRAMMETRY AND REMOTE SENSING IN SUPPORT OF GDI; 13 ACCESS TO GDI AND THE FUNCTION OF VISUALIZATION TOOLS; 14 HUMAN RESOURCES ISSUES IN THE EMERGING GDI ENVIRONMENT; 15 FOUR CASES; 16 ADVANCING THE GDI CONCEPT