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Toward a Virtual Academic Consortium to Promote Land Information Sciences in Africa (4232)

Moha El-ayachi (Morocco)
Dr. Moha El-ayachi
Head
Department of Geodesy and Surveying
School of Geomatics and Surveying Engineering
Institute of Agronomy and Veterinary Medicine
BP 6202, City ALRIRFANe, Rabat-Institutes, 10101
Rabat
Morocco
 
Corresponding author Dr. Moha El-ayachi (email: moha.elayachi[at]gmail.com, tel.: + 212-662-124-657)
 

[ abstract ] [ paper ] [ handouts ]

Published on the web 2010-01-14
Received 2009-11-19 / Accepted 2010-01-14
This paper is one of selection of papers published for the FIG Congress 2010 in Sydney, Australia and has undergone the FIG Peer Review Process.

FIG Congress 2010
ISBN 978-87-90907-87-7 ISSN 2308-3441
http://www.fig.net/resources/proceedings/fig_proceedings/fig2010/index.htm

Abstract

The land in a continent as Africa is an economic resource, a basis of wealth promoting growth and human development, and a tool of empowering and governing. Most of native africans are peasants and have their main living and fundmuntal insfrastructures based on land and land resources. Then, land adminastrating and management which are largelly tied to the diversity of the local cultural and traditional practicies should be enhanced in a good and scientific manner. For such purpose, african universities will play a major role in promoting a scientific revolution throught innovation and technology development. Certainly, every university has its own scientific community living inside or abroad. To make progress, it is indisponsible to gather efforts, create favorable conditions to promote african brains, and encourage research to face many challengies in a world dominated by the knowledge economy. Knowledge does not arise simply from having access to large amount of information but by exchanging ideas to which values have been added by particular experience of each university context. Indeed, a Virtual Academic Consortium dealling with land information (VACLIS) is extremely needed to establish a virtual mechanism networking universities that furnish education and training in land information systems and land information management. As an academic consortium of researchers, it will provide a series of tools enabling communication, development, and sharing of educational and research experiencies among the community of universities specialised in LIS/LIM across Africa.
 
Keywords: Education; Curricula; Capacity building; Geoinformation/GI; land; economic resource; wealth; Africa; innovation

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