A paper based on this research, co-authored with my Kingston University supervisors, is about to be published by Richmond Law & Tax in the third volume of their international series Critical Issues in Environmental Taxation. It takes a snapshot of my findings as at April this year and is titled A Revealing Landvaluescape: Making Property Tax More Acceptable Using Value Maps. An earlier draft of the article is http://www.landvaluescape.org/archives/GETC5prism.doc
Among the conclusions of this 'work in progress' are:
"The political and institutional aspects of value mapping are far more difficult and important than the technical aspects"
and
"Transitional economies in Europe that are creating their property markets and geo-spatial data infrastructures from scratch are very likely to lead the way with value mapping...."