GSDI 2 Chapel Hill USA

GSDI 2 Chapel Hill, USA

20-21 October, 1997

Theme: Towards Sustainable Development Worldwide

Conference Program

October 20, 1997

8:00 - 8:30            Overview of Conference

r. Michael Brand, Conference Chair and President, EUROGI

8:45 – 9:15           Theme Paper – Defining GSDI

Dr. David Coleman, Chair, Geodesy and Geomatics Engineering, University of New
Brunswick Canada

9:15 - 9:30            Break

9:30– 9:45            Welcome and Introductions

s. Jane Smith Patterson

Governor James B. Hunt Jr.

9:45 – 10:15        Keynote Address

“GSDI: The Policy Imperative”

s. Bonnie Cohen, Under Secretary for Management, United States Department of
State

10:15 – 12:30      Invited Presentations

Session Chair: Mr. Klaus Barwinski

Director, Surveying and Mapping Agency, Northrhine-Westfalia Germany

Perspective – Defense

Rear-Admiral Jack Dantone, Director, National Imagery and Mapping Agency USA

Perspective – Science and Environment

r. Hiroshi Murakami, Director for GIS Technology Coordination, Geographic
Survey Institute Japan

Perspective – Land Records: State and National

s. Mabel Alvarez de Lopez, Directorate of Cadastre and Land Information,
Province of Chubat Argentina

Perspective – Enabling Technology

r. David Schell, President, Open GIS Consortium, Inc. USA

Perspective – Commercial Data Supplier

r. Stephen Smyth, Lead Geographer, Geography Business Unit, Microsoft
Corporation USA

Perspective – Sustainable Economic Development

r. Fritz Petersohn, Chairman, Advisory Board, Atlantic Institute USA

12:30 – 1:45         Luncheon

“A Luncheon Metaphor: Can We Make GSDI Palatable?”

Speaker: Ms. Beatrice Labonne, Director, Division for Economic and Social
Development and Natural Resources Management United Nations

1:45 – 4:00           Breakout Groups

Identifying the Issues

Objective: To help identify shared values, driving factors and issues for
discussion in reaching a common idea of what is meant by GSDI. The output from
these sessions will be a description of points of agreement and issues requiring
further examination.

Sign-up sheets will be available for the following six sessions:

Linking GSDI: The Environment, Economic Development and the Community

Cultivating and Sustaining Political Support

Financing Information Infrastructure Initiatives

Identifying Common Ground Among Stakeholder Communities

Technological Drivers (including standards)

Top-Down vs. Bottom-Up: The Role of Institutions in GSDI

4:00 – 5:00           Full Assembly

Reports from group facilitators to identify and summarize discussion points.

6:00 – 8:30          Governor’s Reception

James B. Hunt Jr., Governor, State of North Carolina

North Carolina Museum of History, Raleigh, North Carolina

October 27, 1997

Session Chair, Dr. John Estes

International Steering Committee for Global Mapping, University of California,
Santa Barbara USA

9:00 – 9:45          Theme Paper – Implementing GSDI

Dr. David Rhind, Director General, Ordnance Survey United Kingdom

10:00 – 12:30      Invited Presentations: Local to Global Transitions

Dr. Gene Thorley, Chair, Federal Geographic Data Committee Coordination Group
USA

r. Peter Holland, Executive Director, Australian Surveying and Land Information
Group Australia

r. Mark Corey, Director General, Mapping Services Branch, Geomatics Canada
Canada

r. Olaf Ostensen, Chairman, ISO/TC 211 Norway

r. Claude Torres, Matra Systems and Information France

s. Karen Siderelis, Director, North Carolina Center for Geographic Information
and Analysis USA

12:30 – 1:45         Luncheon

“Steps Toward GSDI”

Speaker: Dr. Herbert Weber, The Fraunhofer Institute Germany

2:00 – 4:00          Breakout Groups

Resolutions and Recommendations

Objective: To develop lists of prioritized resolutions and recommendations
toward achieving a Global Spatial Data Infrastructure. These resolutions will be
presented in the final discussion session.

Sign-up sheets will be available for the following six sessions:

Towards the Creation and Use of GSDI for Sustainable Economic Development

Towards Improved Geospatial Information Content and Coverage

Towards Sustained Political Support

Towards Better Understanding of GSDI Cultural Differences

Towards Practical, Local-to-National-to-Global “vertical information highway”
Initiatives

Towards New Institutional Alternatives

4:00 – 5:00          Full Assembly

Resolutions from each group will be presented to the assembly. Final resolutions
and recommendations will be passed.

5:00 – 5:30          Closing Remarks

r. Michael Brand, Conference Chair and President, EUROGI