URISA Conference Proceedings

The following articles appear in the 1993 URISA conference proceedings.

Click the title to read the abstract in the ESRI GIS bibliography* or view the paper if available. If needed, you can install the free Adobe Reader®.


A GIS code of ethics: what can we learn from other organizations?

A GIS-based method for integrating expert knowledge into land suitability analysis

A knowledge based GIS approach to priority area identification for forest fire management

Address base creation using raster/vector integration

Applications of GIS technology within New Jersey's hazardous waste site remediation programs

ARCSIM: An integrated system for traffic simulation

Assessing needs and establishing data standards for multiple platform environments

British Columbia's land information infrastructure status update and future directions

Building a framework to characterize land records modernization

CD maps and their in-vehicle application

Charging system for GIS products and services

County-wide multipurpose cadastre GIS implementation: a case study

Data conversion issues: Inexperience, politics, process, content and accuracy

Data requirements for route guidance

Densification of primary geodetic nets by means of photogeodesy

Developing a spatial features register

Developing the Atlanta project's information system

Development of a database supporting integrated access to spatial data

Development of a pricing policy for geographic information

Document imaging expands the GIS data model

ELUDAS: Mapping existing land use in Wake County, NC, using an unlikely source of data

Geographic information in Europe: An overview

Geographic information systems (GIS) development in new Europe a case study: The Republic of Slovenia

GIS and computer aided dispatch: A transactional geofile maintenance system

GIS for a two-million-people city in three years

GIS in wireless communications

GIS on the fire truck: a practical example of the new GIS data publishing paradigm

How good is GIS? An evaluation of GIS operational effectiveness in local government

Implementing and assessing the value of direct public access to the Loudon County, Virginia geographic information system

Implementing multimedia collaborative planning technologies

Implementing the spatial data transfer standard

Improving organizational efficiency through decision support systems for transportation planning

Integration of GIS in town operations

Location analysis using GIS: Georgia department of labor field service offices

Loosely coupled PC programs as a framework for spatial analysis

Maintaining the base map for a multi-participant GIS

Managing data conversion costs

Managing land resources planning in a utility with information engineering

Managing uncertainty in spatial databases: Putting theory into practice

Modeling housing and demographic diversity at census tract versus block group levels of aggregation

Modeling the effects of forest fragmentation on songbird populations

Modernizing Egypt's land information system

Modified reverse geocoding - A methodology for developing accurate address ranges

Pavement management implementation with video-based GIS

Precision planning with small area demographics

Pricing GIS participation and products

Public participation and geographical information systems in siting decisions for locally unacceptable land uses (LULUs)

Reality of object oriented GIS

Reinventing the consortium

The impact of ISTEA on the evolution of growth modeling in the southwestern Pennsylvania MPO

The importance of addresses - the locus of GIS

The Western Australian land information system (WALIS)

Transportation modeling using a linked geographic information system and relational database management system

Utilization of multispectral images for municipal GIS applications



*The ESRI GIS Bibliography and URISA papers are served from ESRI Training and Education (http://www.esri.com/training). The ESRI Training and Education website is copyright © ESRI. All rights reserved. URISA papers are copyright to URISA or the authors.