Publication Date:
2015
abstract:
In Africa, natural resources are degrading, while being at the same time essential
for maintaining or improving people's livelihood. The well-being of African communities is
highly correlated to changes in local ecosystem services. Their vulnerability to degradation of
natural resources is extremely high and resilience against natural changes (e.g. climate
variability) and socio-economic changes (e.g. fluctuations in food markets) is low.
Nowadays, it is widely accepted that reversing these trends and adapting to climate change
require integrated responses tackling the underlying social, economic, political and
institutional drivers of unsustainable use of natural resources. Integrated approaches
intrinsically ask for cooperation, exchange of information and communication to better
understand complex interactions and assess environmental issues. Understanding these
interactions requires collecting and integrating various data describing physical, chemical,
biological and socio-economic conditions. However, two common obstacles are currently
preventing the implementation of such integrated approaches: (1) difficulties to find data,
and (2) difficulties to integrate data.
In response to these issues, this paper presents the Africa Discovery Broker, a web-based
tool that enables users working in different domains to search through and access 32442
heterogeneous African geospatial resources (e.g. remote sensing, geospatial data, socioeconomic
data) coming from 17 international, regional, national and research projects
repositories.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Africa; Earth observation; geospatial; discovery; interoperability; metadata
List of contributors:
Papeschi, Fabrizio; Santoro, Mattia
Published in: