General Meeting of the Society is held, Other
one- and two-day meetings and workshops are also
organised often by the Special Interest Groups and
often jointly with other societies.
The period covered by this report has shown a huge
increase in the number of remote sensing
publications. In 1992, the International Journal
will publish about 220 papers in 18 issues: this
is to be compared with about 115 papers in 12
issues in 1987 and 25 papers in four issues in
1980. Dozens of books enter the market each year
(0f special note is the Remote Sensing Yearbook)
both as textbooks and conference proceedings.
These are far too numerous to list. Many
organisations now produce their own newsletters
and bulletins.
A landmark in this reporting period was the
formation in October 1989 of the Survey & Mapping
Alliance (SMA) to reflect the consensus of opinion
on all aspects of surveying and mapping and to
organise co-operative ventures. The need has
long been recognised to bring together the
traditional disciplines of land and hydrographic
surveying, remote sensing, photogrammetry and
cartography, with new technology for collecting
and managing land information to meet the needs
of our time. SMA has taken over responsibility
for organising the fourth UK national Survey and
Mapping conference in Spring 1993 for the nine
participating societies and institutions:
The British Cartographic Society
The Hydrographic Society
The Institution of Civil Engineering Surveyors
The Photogrammetric Society
The Remote Sensing Society
The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors
The Society of Surveying Technicians
The Association for Geographic Information
The Guild of Incorporated Surveyors
Discussions are actively taking place between the
Remote Sensing Society and the Photogrammetric
Society into ways of drawing the two societies
closer together, initially with
benefits and mutual publicity.
reciprocal
The National Association of Aerial Photographic
Libraries (NAPLIB) was also formed in 1989 to
publicise and stimulate the use of existing
sources of aerial photography and has prepared a
directory of collections of aerial photography.
2. PHOTOGRAMMETRY
Photogrammetry provides scientific interest or
employment or both for about one person in every
60,000 of the working population of the United
Kingdom (28.3 million in 1991). Employment in
photogrammetry in the private sector and in the
Ordnance Survey has declined as a result of the
current economic recession, and increased
productivity resulting from improved technology.
Mergers amongst the larger manufacturers and
distributors of photogrammetric instruments have
also resulted in some staff rationalisation. Other
sectors seem to have remained static or even
expanded slightly. Photogrammetry is reported to
provide employment for the equivalent of 387 full
time person years including the proportion of
people whose time is only partly devoted to
photogrammetry. As our survey was not
comprehensive, this must be an underestimate,
52
perhaps of around 20%. Few would regard photo-
grammetry as their primary discipline, being
trained in land surveying, engineering,
information technology etc. It is particularly
difficult to quantify the efforts of people who
devote only a small proportion of their time to
photogrammetry; those who cross the traditional
barriers between surveying, cartography and data
processing; lecturers who teach some photo-
grammetry amongst other surveying subjects; and
those who apply photogrammetry and other
techniques for measurement and analysis as expert
users in medicine, industry, environmental
sciences and the like.
2.1 Changing patterns of employment
There are now only three organisations employing
more than 25 people in photogrammetry (Ordnance
Survey, Directorate of Military Surveys, and BKS
Surveys). Several of the large air survey
companies, like Hunting Surveys which operated
world-wide for forty years, have ceased operating
and been succeeded by numerous small companies.
As a result the number of private mapping
companies which are corporate members of the
Photogrammetric Society has increased from 9 to
17 between October 1987 and October 1991. More
than half the total number engaged in photo-
grammetry work for 13 organisations which employ f
between 6 and 25 people. 31 organisations employ
between one and five people. 18 organisations
(28$ of respondents) reported activity in photo-
grammetry at less than one person year. There are
probably many more in this category who were not
sent questionnaires.
TABLE 2.1
Organisations providing employment in photo-
grammetry with estimates of number of full time
staff employed:
Employment Number of Numbers employed
(person years) Organisations (person years)
Over 25 3 90
6 - 25 13 195
I~ 5 31 93
Less than 1 18 9
TOTALS 65 387
2.2 Types of Organisation
The private sector accounts for over half the
organisations engaged in photogrammetry as users;
manufacturers and system support; providers of
aerial photography, mapping and close range
measurement; and consultants. Educational
establishments represent 25% and government 18%,
divided between mapping, conservation of heritage
and environment, and applied research.
TABLE 2.2 Photogrammetric organisations by type:
Government Private Non-profit
Institution
Number of 12 36 17
Organisations
Percentage 18% 56% 26%
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