KENYA'S SPACE IDENTITY
by Judith Murage
1. 4. international collaborations
1.1. key partnerships
1.1.1. NASA,ESA,ISRO
1.1.2. PRIVATE COMPANIES
1.1.3. AFRICAN UNION and AFSA
1.2. Malindi spaceport collaborative efforts
2. 5. sustainability and innovation.
2.1. EOS
2.2. Small satellite technology and nanosatellites
2.3. reusable lauch vehicles
2.4. public awareness
2.5. research and development
2.6. environmental standards and policy frameworks
3. 1. Current space capabilities and potential.
3.1. Luigi broglio space centre
3.2. 1KUNS-PF nanosatellite
3.3. Kenya Space Agency (KSA) established in 2017
3.4. Taifa 1 satellite - enhancing earth observation
3.5. Strategic equatorial location suitable for lauch sites
3.6. Challenges: funding limitations, technological gaps
4. 2. space identity vision
4.1. Vision statement: Leverage space technology for sustainable development
4.2. integration with national development goals
4.3. core values
5. 3. framework components
5.1. Sovereign identity
5.1.1. cultural heritage
5.1.2. community driven projects
5.1.3. national pride
5.2. economic strategy
5.2.1. space economy
5.2.2. STEM education
5.2.3. commercial spaceport
5.2.4. public-private partnerships
5.3. wealth economy application
5.3.1. natural capital
5.3.2. human capital
5.3.3. knowledge capital
5.3.4. physical capital
5.3.5. social capital
5.3.6. institutional capital