. . . . "ITC Bok"@en . . "201800286" . "GIMLA_002" . "7"^^ . "196"^^ . "10"^^ . "2023-02-02T23:00:00Z"^^ . "f2f" . "hybrid" . "This course is taught through lectures and hands-on activities presented as exercises. An individual assignment and a group assignment evaluate learning of practical skills and an exam assesses the students’ understanding of concepts introduced in the course. Exercises and assignments are performed using software introduced during lectures or supervised practical sessions and, where possible, real-world data-sets are used.\n\nThe group assignment is completed as part of the LIS Workshop during which student groups develop a software prototype that implements one or more land administration processes using the Scrum method. The Scrum approach, used in most modern software development projects, is introduced at the beginning of the course. Students have the opportunity to practice using the Scrum method in exercises."@en . . . . . . "GIMLA_001 (Responsible Land Information); MGEO-Core (core_001, core_002, core_003) ,Experience in Land Administration or motivated to work in this domain. It is an advantage to have:\n\nfollowed the course Responsible Land Administration, or\na basic understanding of Geographic information models, or\nexperience/background/knowledge in an ICT or IS field"@en . . . . "5"^^ . "2" . "1B" . . . . . . "2022-11-13T23:00:00Z"^^ . "Land information systems are systems for acquiring, processing, storing, and distributing information about land. They may contribute to secure land tenure or support land valuation, land use planning and land development. Despite contextual differences between countries, there are fundamental concepts that apply to all land information systems. The main objective of this course is to discover, apply, and assess these concepts and technologies – and inspire students to deploy them in the creation and maintenance of scalable real-world land information systems.\n\nThe course focuses on the modeling of data and processes for the implementation of Information Systems for Land Administration. It therefore has two integrated series of lectures: one focusing on data modeling and implementation in a spatially enabled database management systems; the other focusing on the identification and modeling/design of software functionalities that support land administration processes. These two parts are linked together by a practical LIS prototyping workshop."@en . "Land information systems and models "@en . . "Land information systems and models "@en . "Land information systems and models "@en . . "5.0" . "140.0" . "10.0" . . . . . "f2f / blended / online " . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Foundation Courses, introduction to Urban Land Futures, Data sharing, Data engineering"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "4.0" . "3.0" . "Land administration has long been executed through state-based agencies such as cadastral departments,\nland registry offices, ministries of land, or local governments with their own analogue or digital data\nrepositories. These organizations do not act in a vacuum but within larger institutional fields and forces.\nThe broader environment of land governance, in which public organizations operate, is characterized by\nthe interactions of multiple state and non-state actors, formal and informal practices, a multitude of\nregulatory frameworks and increasing global interconnectivity. This environment has been witnessing\npublic sector reforms and increased adoption of (geo)Information and Communication Technologies (ICT),\nincluding automatization techniques, mobile device-generated data, crowdsourcing and advanced remote\nsensing technologies. In many places, more established forms of organizing meet the latest technological\ndevelopments. While some organizations are beginning to digitize paper-based workflows, others may\nfunction through highly automated and digitized processes. At the same time, information technologies and\ndigital data are not merely neutral tools, but they reflect, transport and transform the practices and values\nof organizations and institutional fields.\nIt is important therefore to understand and learn how to describe, explain, and assess organizational\nchange in response to changing environments, (geo-)ICT implementation using workflows and related\nforms of data sharing, uses and dissemination."@en . "Land Information in Practice"@en . . "Land Information in Practice"@en . "Land Information in Practice"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . "Land Admin Principles & Land info in Practice"@en . "Land Information in Practice: LU1"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . "Land information in practice"@en . "Land Information in Practice: LU2"@en . "https://ltb.itc.utwente.nl/page/792/concept/152840" . . "Land information"@e