<p>ISO 19152:2012:</p>
<ul>
<li> defines a reference Land Administration Domain Model (LADM) covering basic information-related components of land administration (including those over water and land, and elements above and below the surface of the earth);</li>
<li> provides an abstract, conceptual model with four packages related to parties (people and organizations); basic administrative units, rights, responsibilities, and restrictions (ownership rights); spatial units (parcels, and the legal space of buildings and utility networks); spatial sources (surveying), and spatial representations (geometry and topology);</li>
<li> provides terminology for land administration, based on various national and international systems, that is as simple as possible in order to be useful in practice. The terminology allows a shared description of different formal or informal practices and procedures in various jurisdictions;</li>
<li> provides a basis for national and regional profiles; and</li>
<li> enables the combining of land administration information from different sources in a coherent manner.</li>
</ul>
Registration number (WIID)
51206
Scope
<p>ISO 19152:2012:</p>
<ul>
<li> defines a reference Land Administration Domain Model (LADM) covering basic information-related components of land administration (including those over water and land, and elements above and below the surface of the earth);</li>
<li> provides an abstract, conceptual model with four packages related to parties (people and organizations); basic administrative units, rights, responsibilities, and restrictions (ownership rights); spatial units (parcels, and the legal space of buildings and utility networks); spatial sources (surveying), and spatial representations (geometry and topology);</li>
<li> provides terminology for land administration, based on various national and international systems, that is as simple as possible in order to be useful in practice. The terminology allows a shared description of different formal or informal practices and procedures in various jurisdictions;</li>
<li> provides a basis for national and regional profiles; and</li>
<li> enables the combining of land administration information from different sources in a coherent manner.</li>
</ul>