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cadastros

Cadastros are registries or inventories used by governments and organizations to collect, maintain, and share information about people, properties, assets, or legal rights. The term is common in Portuguese-speaking countries and is applied at national, regional, and local levels. Cadastre systems typically combine administrative records with geographic information to support administration and decision making.

Common types include the cadastral registry for land and real property, which documents ownership, boundaries, assessed

Cadastros serve several purposes: they provide a basis for taxation and property transactions; they support urban

Most modern cadastros rely on geographic information systems (GIS) to map properties and integrate data from

Examples of widely used cadastros include Brazil's CPF and CNPJ, which identify individuals and legal entities

values,
and
encumbrances;
taxpayer
registries
for
individuals
and
businesses,
such
as
CPF
and
CNPJ
in
Brazil;
social-program
registries
like
Cadastro
Único
in
Brazil;
and
population
registers
used
for
census
and
public
services.
In
some
contexts,
cadastros
also
cover
assets
such
as
vehicles
or
intellectual
property.
and
regional
planning,
infrastructure
investment,
and
service
provision;
and
they
enable
targeted
social
programs
and
statistical
analyses.
Access
to
the
data
is
often
regulated
to
balance
transparency
with
privacy
and
security
concerns.
multiple
agencies.
Data
quality,
timely
updates,
and
interoperability
between
systems
are
critical
challenges.
Legal
frameworks
govern
data
collection,
storage,
sharing,
and
rights
of
property
owners
and
registrants.
for
tax
purposes;
and
the
Brazilian
Cadastro
Único
for
social
programs.
In
Portugal
and
other
lusophone
countries,
cadastral
registries
are
used
for
property
rights
and
taxation.
The
concept
is
closely
related
to
land
registries,
census
operations,
and
property
registries
in
many
jurisdictions.