United Nations Basic Space Science Initiative: 2011 Status Report on the International Space Weather Initiative
S. Gadimova, H.J. Haubold, D. Danov, K. Georgieva, G. Maeda, K., Yumoto, J.M. Davila, N. Gopalswami

TL;DR
This report details the progress of the UN Basic Space Science Initiative, highlighting international cooperation, development of astronomical facilities in developing countries, and the deployment of space weather observation instruments worldwide.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the UNBSSI's activities from 2011, emphasizing the establishment of space weather and astrophysical data systems globally.
Findings
Over 600 instruments operational in 95 countries.
Workshops have promoted international collaboration in space science.
Development of astronomical facilities in developing nations.
Abstract
The UNBSSI is a long-term effort for the development of astronomy and space science through regional and international cooperation in this field on a worldwide basis. A series of workshops on BSS was held from 1991 to 2004 (India 1991, Costa Rica and Colombia 1992, Nigeria 1993, Egypt 1994, Sri Lanka 1995, Germany 1996, Honduras 1997, Jordan 1999, France 2000, Mauritius 2001, Argentina 2002, and China 2004; http://www.seas.columbia.edu/~ah297/un-esa/) and addressed the status of astronomy in Asia and the Pacific, Latin America and the Caribbean, Africa, and Western Asia. One major recommendation that emanated from these workshops was the establishment of astronomical facilities in developing nations for research and education programmes at the university level. Such workshops on BSS emphasized the particular importance of astrophysical data systems and the virtual observatory concept…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpace exploration and regulation · History and Developments in Astronomy · Economic Growth and Productivity
