Full text: Commission VI (Part B6)

  
Digital Mapping and GIS. Their educational facilities have 
developed up to awarding post-graduate diplomas and M.Sc. 
degrees in modern techniques apart from offering courses in 
these techniques as an integral part of other degree programmes 
(see Table 2). This second group is exemplified by Nigeria and 
Madagascar in Table 2. Singapore should belong to this group 
but there was no response to the country-wide survey. In this 
second group of countries, manpower development in 
sophisticated techniques such as DIP in Photogrammetry and 
Remote Sensing and Inertial Surveying methods is heavily 
dependent on technical assistance. 
Developing countries in the third group have acquired hardware 
and software facilities for Digital Mapping and GIS through 
technical assistance but are yet to develop indigenous training 
programmes within their countries. They are therefore still 
heavily dependent on technical assistance for their manpower 
development in modern techniques. Countries like Ghana, 
Chile, Bolivia, Guinea (Conakry) Ethiopia and Turkey are 
typical examples of this group. 
The fourth category of developing countries is well illustrated 
by Namibia where manpower development and availability of 
both hardware and software facilities are almost nil. Such 
countries are very few but they exist as a large proportion of 
Least Developed Countries of the world even though this survey 
has not covered them. In such countries awareness of GPS, 
Digital Image Processing, Computer Cartography and GIS is 
almost nil and there is hardly any individual who has a 
specialized qualification in modern surveying techniques. 
3.2 Institutional Survey 
At the institutional level (see Table 2), four categories of 
tertiary institutions can also be identified. Those with advanced 
level training up to M.Sc. or Ph.D. level such as South Africa 
(University of Cape Town), Nigeria (University of Lagos), and 
Singapore (Nanyang Technological University) constitute the 
first category. 
Institutions with facilities for training programmes at 
technologist or post-graduate diploma level form the second 
group. Regional Centre for Training in Aero Space Surveys 
(RECTAS), Ile-Ife, and the University of Ibadan, both in 
Nigeria, belong to the second category. The first two categories 
also have modern techniques as part of existing programmes at 
undergraduate and postgraduate levels. 
The third category of institutions consists of those whose 
facilities are only enough to support modern techniques as an 
integral part of the existing degree programme such as B.Sc. 
(Surveying), M.Sc. (Surveying) or Inginieur Geometrie 
Topographie. The following institutions illustrate the third 
category: Institute Geographique et Hydrographique National 
(Madagascar), University of Science and Technology, Kumasi 
(Ghana),Instituto Geografico Militar, La Paz (Bolivia), 
University of Nairobi (Kenya) and Institute of Geodesy, Poland. 
The fourth group of institutions is constituted by those without 
any training programme such as the University of Namibia and 
Al-Azhut University, Cairo (Egypt). They have no hardware or 
software facilities or lack the technical skills or both. From the 
responses to the institutional questionnaire, some of them have 
the manpower resources but no equipment to work with. 
It is good to note that technical cooperation is an important 
feature of this survey and will now be discussed in the next 
section. 
4. TECHNICAL COOPERATION 
There are two types of technical cooperation covered by the 
survey viz. North-South cooperation existing between 
developed and developing countries and South-South 
cooperation which is sometimes desirable amongst developing 
countries. North-South cooperation was also surveyed at the 
country-wide level as well as at the institutional level. 
4.1 North-South Cooperation 
The result of the country-wide survey shows that all the eleven 
countries surveyed in Table 1 have enjoyed North-South type of 
cooperation in modern techniques such as GPS, GIS, Digital 
2 
Photogrammetry, Digital Remote Sensing and Digital Mapping. 
The survey also shows that assistance received from developed 
countries were to facilitate manpower development and to 
acquire hardware and software facilities. In some cases the 
purpose of cooperation is to execute a defined Digital Mapping 
project. Thanks to donors involved in such cooperation 
including the World Bank, the Dutch, Canadian, French, 
Japanese, German, British and US governments, the UNDP and 
the European Union (see Table 1). At the institutional level, 
technical cooperations were also established usually as a tertiary 
institutional linkage programme sponsored by donor agencies 
to link tertiary institutions in developed countries to their 
counterparts in developing countries. All the donors mentioned 
above in addition to Swedish International Development 
Agency (SIDA), are involved at the fifteen tertiary institutions 
surveyed in developing countries. The purpose of cooperation is 
usually similar to that of the country-wide cooperation. 
The cooperation between regional centres in Africa and Asia 
and their respective donors have also linked their participating 
countries in such centres with advanced technology in the 
developed countries. This is a very important aspect of 
institutional technical cooperation 
4.2 South-South Cooperation 
The survey questionnaire specifically requested institutions to 
indicate what type of technical assistance they can offer other 
institutions within or outside their region. It is encouraging to 
note that some institutions in the developing countries are quite 
willing to offer assistance to their counterparts within and 
outside their regions (see Table 2. continued). South-South 
cooperation is very beneficial in that a developing country or 
institution is more likely to adapt a new technology following 
the example of its counterparts in another developing country 
than that of its counterpart in a developed country. 
5. GENERAL OBSERVATIONS AND CONCLUSIONS 
The following general observations and conclusions can be 
made: 
(a) Most developing countries have been slow in catching up 
with modern techniques while only a few are moving fast. 
(b) Without technical cooperation (North-South), new 
techniques would have been near impossible in most developing 
countries. Thanks again to donors, Table 2 shows that 
institutions which have no technical assistance are also devoid 
of modern techniques in their training programmes. 
(c) Areas where there is very little or no advancement in most 
developing countries are in Digital Photogrammetry, Digital 
Remote Sensing, and Digital Cartography. Most countries do 
not have higher degree training programmes in these areas. 
(d) The regional centres in Africa and Asia contribute an 
important linkage between their participating countries and the 
modern technologies in developed countries. Some donors 
regard this as a multinational cooperation and do favour it. The 
regional centres at Ile-Ife, Nigeria and Nairobi, Kenya constitute 
a good example of this type of cooperation. Developing 
countries should therefore consider their participation in these 
centres if they have not already done so. 
(e) A multi-institutional linkage of tertiary institutions in 
developing countries with their counterparts in the developed 
countries is also very crucial for developing institutions. Some 
donors also favour this type of cooperation. 
(f) Curriculum for modern techniques can be established by 
institutions using the Modules established for Curriculum 
Development by the author (see Ayeni, 1992). 
Most developing countries and institutions still require technical 
assistance. However, some countries and institutions which 
have been classified as grossly underdeveloped in this paper 
require special attention from both developed countries through 
a North-South technical cooperation and from advanced 
developing countries through a South-South technical 
cooperation. 
REFERENCE 
Ayeni, O. O., 1992 “Curriculum Development for Developing 
Countries”. International Archives of Photogrammetry and 
Remote Sensing, Washington, DC, USA. Commission VI Vol. 
XXVII, pp. 227 - 234. 
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B6. Vienna 1996
	        
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