Across the volume, praxiographic studies show how data gaps shape technoscientific work and spatial practices in African settings. In health care and administrative systems, gaps appear as infrastructural deficiencies, prompting experts to improvise with fragmented data and adopt external standards—deepening dependencies and postponing structural solutions. In ecology and radioastronomy, African sites generate scarce data needed by all scientists. Here, gaps reflect limitations of global infrastructures that rely on data, prompting experts to protect access and negotiate credit when rendering their datasets globally available. Data gaps thus operate both as constraints and as strategic resources within unequal technoscientific worlds.
Contributors are Véra Ehrenstein, Georges Macaire Eyenga, Richard Sufo Kankeu, Siri Lamoureaux, Johannes Machinya, James Merron, Ronan Mugelé, Iruka N Okeke, Symphorien Ongolo, Meredith Root-Bernstein, Richard Rottenburg.
Véra Ehrenstein is a CNRS researcher at CEMS–EHESS in Paris. She holds a PhD in Science and Technology Studies from Mines Paris. Her most recent publication is Can Markets Solve Problems?, which she co-authored.
Richard Rottenburg is Professor of Science and Technology Studies at WiSER, University of the Witwatersrand. He completed his habilitation at Viadrina University. His best-known publication is Far-fetched Facts.
The book is intended for readers interested in Science and Technology Studies from across Africa and beyond. Students and scholars in the humanities, social sciences, and law, from the natural sciences, engineering and medicine, as well as practitioners of science and technology will find it useful.