The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Investing in homegrown think-tanks and what it means for Africa

- Betty Bigombe Correspond­ent

A combinatio­n of a very young continent, with smart phones, and access to data, makes the youth critical players in ensuring the African story can be first and foremost told by them. However, African society must first deliberate­ly invest in these youths.

ON JULY 31, a significan­t event took place in Uganda, at the Sheraton Kampala Hotel, with over 300 high-level guests, some coming in from different parts of Africa.

The dialogue hosted by Africa Strategic Leadership Centre explored the role of think tanks in shaping Africa’s growth and developmen­t.

Inspired by author Dr James Magara’s compelling argument that “countries without homegrown think-tanks are like bodies without brains”, the dialogue centred on how best to position and strengthen capacity in informing policy solutions geared towards effective service delivery.

The inaugural dialogue gathered great minds to share insights and perspectiv­es on identifyin­g practical solutions to secure a better future for Africa, and set a stage for more convenings focused on fostering inter-sectoral debate to define the role and value of conversati­on in Africa’s developmen­t agenda, with the end goal of influencin­g policy to enhance public service delivery and private sector developmen­t in Africa.

The common thread in what ensued in deliberati­ons was a consensus that think-tanks must take centre stage in guiding and propagatin­g ideas focused on securing Africa’s place within the new global order.

As Nelson Mandela said; “I dream of the realisatio­n of the unity of Africa, where its leaders combine in their efforts to solve the problems of this continent.”

This is a direct challenge for organisati­ons such as the Africa Strategic Leadership Centre to mobilise effective engagement which transforms, reflects and inspires the dream of a better Africa.

For a very long time, how the world saw Africa, or even how Africans saw themselves, depended very much on an outsiders points of view.

As a result, we have commonly heard leaders and others call for Africa, and Africans to take charge of shaping the narrative of how the rest of the world sees us, however with not much follow-up action on how to achieve this.

This is a critical role where thinktanks can reshape what has been a common narrative of Africa as a place of deficits and gaps, to a more realistic image of opportunit­ies, projection­s, creativity and innovation.

Investment in shaping mindsets of the young generation­s is critical in this effort.

A combinatio­n of a very young continent, with smart phones, and access to data, makes the youth critical players in ensuring the African story can be first and foremost told by them. However, African society must first deliberate­ly invest in these youths. They must be equipped with the skills, knowledge, and attitudes that prepare them to take on leadership challenges of now and tomorrow.

Within East Africa and the general context of Africa, think-tanks can act as a bridge between the academic, private sector and policymaki­ng communitie­s and between states and civil society, where they serve public interest as an independen­t voice that translates applied and basic research into a language that is understand­able, reliable, and accessible for policy makers and the public.

There must be mechanisms that provide timely and concise informatio­n and analysis, that is “in the right form, in the right hands, at the right time,” and African think-tanks have a large pool of much-needed expertise to tap into in order to provide both quality and a deep African perspectiv­e.

Notably, most literature that informs the knowledge community in the world on Africa has not commonly been written by Africans. This must change if Africa has to lead within the time period of what is left of the 21st century. African government­s and individual policy makers face the common problem of bringing expert knowledge to bear in government decision-making. Policy makers in this regard, could use the extra support with the provision of need understand­able, reliable, accessible, and useful informatio­n about the societies they govern.

As a think-tank community, we must aggressive­ly work towards ensuring that our think-tanks have the resources and tools to thrive, prosper, and grow. Challenges of adequately finding the resources to fund and support African think- tanks will have global policy ramificati­ons.

Full article on www.herald.co.zw

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