This peer-reviewed book provides detailed insights into how space and its applications are, and can be used to support the development of the full range and diversity of African societies, as encapsulated in the African Union’s Agenda 2063. Following on from Part 1, which was highly acclaimed by the space community, it focuses on the role of space in supporting the UN Sustainable Development Goals in Africa, but covers an even more extensive array of relevant and timely topics addressing all facets of African development. It demonstrates that, while there have been significant achievements in recent years in terms of economic and social development, which have lifted many of Africa’s people out of poverty, there is still a great deal that needs to be done to fulfill the basic needs of Africa’s citizens and afford them the dignity they deserve. To this end, space is already being employed in diverse fields of human endeavor to serve Africa’s goals for its future, but there is much room for further incorporation of space systems and data. Providing a comprehensive overview of the role space is playing in helping Africa achieve its developmental aspirations, the book will appeal to both students and professionals in fields such as space studies, international relations, governance, and social and rural development.
Table des matières
Towards a Competitive African Space Industry.- Remote-Sensing Applications for Mineral Mapping.- The Final Frontier: Considering the Right to Privacy in the Context of Remote Sensing.- Application of Low to Medium Resolution Data for Hydrological Modeling in Malawi.- Egypt’s Remote Sensing Land Use Classification Using Deep Learning.- Reflective Practice in the African Space Sector: The Importance of Cadre Formation.- Democratising the Signal: A Conceptual Beneficiation Model of Space Technology for Lesser Privileged Communities in Sub-Saharan Africa.- A Technical Policy and Technological Analysis of a Satellite-Hosted Blockchain System for Sustaining African Development.- On the Feasibility of Landing the Dream Chaser Space Vehicle in South Africa.- Africa’s Emerging Satellite Activities and the Registration of its Satellites.- Africa’s Emerging Satellite Activities and the Registration of its Satellites.- Outer Space Resources and African Perspective.