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THE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS CENTER FOR AFRICA CONFERENCE MOBILIZING AFRICAN INTELLECTUALS TOWARDS QUALITY TERTIARY EDUCATION 5 th 6 th July 2017 Kigali, Rwanda conference entitled: Mobilizing African Intellectuals Towards Quality Tertiary Education will be held at Radisson Blu Hotel & Convention Centre, Kigali from 5 th to 6 th July 2017. The primary objective of the conference is to create a coalition of African intellectuals who will brainstorm and hold principal discussions on practical actions, explore solutions and build consensual approaches on the major themes relevant to SDG implementation in tertiary education and research throughout Africa. I. INTRODUCTION Given the size of the continent, in terms of size and population of 1.2 billion, it is surprising to note that none of the many African institutions of tertiary education are atop the podium of recent international university rankings. Only as few as 10 of the world s top 1000 universities are in Africa, eight of which are located in a single country South Africa 1. The highest ranked African university, the University of Cape Town, ranks only 148 th in the world today. Undoubtedly, for Africa to compete on the global stage, as well as for its countries to meet the SDGs, there is an urgent need to improve the quality of higher education across the African continent. II. BACKGROUND To understand the issue of tertiary education in Africa, one must understand some important statistics. First with a population of approximately, 1.2 billion people, Africa is home to 16% of the earth s people today. Second, Africa has the youngest population in the world with 200 million inhabitants aged between 15 and 24 years. Third, it is estimated that the African population will reach 1.6 billion people by the year 2030 and 2.4 billion people by 2050, numbers likely equal to a quarter of the world s population and with a youth population bulge close to 30%. In sub-saharan Africa, 11 million young people are expected to enter the labor market each year over the next decade alone. In addition, 18 million jobs will need to be created per year until 2035 in order to absorb this growing labor force. 1 Citations for facts and figures in this document are available upon request

The challenge for Africa is to turn its demographic growth and youth bulge into real economic potential with a positive impact on development across the continent. However, despite the population numbers cited above, Africa s Gross Enrollment Ratio in tertiary education is only 9% compared to the world average of 33%. Further, the youth in Africa who have graduated from the many tertiary education institutions, are often not sufficiently equipped for the labor market and are vulnerable for unemployment. In fact, youth account for 60% of all African unemployed, with women representing an even higher percentage. Even in the informal sector, where productivity and wages are desperately low, young people are in a situation of permanent underemployment. Africa is now under considerable strain to accommodate a significant demographic transition and keep pace with future demand for productive employment. As a result, the need for great improvements in the quality of higher education contributing to significant economic development requires immediate response. Both the quality and quantity of quality tertiary education available should be addressed in order to reach a critical mass of human capital that will actively shape the knowledge-based society across Africa. Africa needs university graduates, who can accelerate and sustain the region s economic growth. African public universities must be reformed to accommodate the demographic dynamics and developmental needs of the continent. It is interesting to note that African stakeholders are aware of the numerous challenges that must be overcome in order to reverse the growing trend of jobless graduates. The challenges include reorienting enrollments, postgraduate education, research and innovation; to building additional modern infrastructure and providing innovative delivery using ICT. In addition, there is the need to address the aging population of professors and trainers; working and living conditions of both faculty and students; cost of tertiary education; regional harmonization access, relevance and quality; Technical Vocational Education and Training (TVET), illiteracy, lack of nationallyowned education vision and strategic framework and dependency on inconsistent external development resource for learning, among other challenges. At the forefront of any reform efforts and in order for higher education in Africa to be considered as a public good, there is a need to secure funding mechanisms. The Science, Technology and Innovation Strategy for Africa 2024 (STISA-2024) recommends setting up an African Science and Technology Innovation Fund (ASTIF) as a pan-african financial instrument. The Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN) came up with the strategic proposal of a Global Fund for Education. It is now time to advocate and lobby for the creation of an African Education Fund enabling practice-oriented, interactive, community-based problem-solving that is gender-sensitive. III. MOBILIZING AFRICAN INTELLECTUALS African policy makers are aware of the pressing need to reform the education sector. The growing number of African youth entering higher education has stimulated competition amongst African tertiary institutions. Increased investment that results in reformed quality research is an imperative. Regional and continental cooperation is necessary to foster

transparent governance that nurtures academic freedom, ownership and accountability of an efficient education development process. Through a global network of higher educational institutions and innovative technologies, African educators and students can be prepared to perform at the highest of global standards while also raising the value in the contextual expertise of the African experience. It is by joining forces and assets that the continent can achieve a dynamic development with and for its promising youth. In January 2016, an interesting analysis by the Spanish Webometrics Ranking of World Universities details universities beyond the top 500, emphasizing the geographic disparities on the African continent. On the first 1000, South Africa has 7 universities out of 124 considered, Egypt 2 out of 61, Kenya 1 out of 137. Out of the top 5000, Nigeria counts 22 out of 219, Algeria 30 out of 86, Morocco 10 out of 181, and Ethiopia 6 out of 59. In comparison, countries like Senegal has 1 university out of 16 in the top 5000 and Rwanda has 1 out of 14. Lessons must be drawn in order to improve the score of African universities and rebalance the geographic distribution. Furthermore, today there are about 10 African universities in the top 1000. Can Africa boost that number and aim for at least 20 African universities in the top 200 by 2025? IV. THE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS CENTER FOR AFRICA is an international organization that supports citizens, governments, civil society, businesses and academic institutions to accelerate progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in Africa. Following the signing-off of the historic agreement on sustainable development during the United Nations General Assembly in September 2015, African leaders decided to take quick and firm action by establishing the Center, as a home-grown African institution, championing the implementation of the SDGs in line with the principles of African Union s 2063 Agenda. By agreeing to establish an African own technically trusted Center, African leaders want to ensure that they act together in pursuit of a shared African development vision. They also want to ensure that Africa will have its right position in the global forum with all the other actors responsible for the global conversation and actions related to the SDGs. Opened in July of 2016 at the headquarters in Kigali, Rwanda, the Center aims to build upon Africa s existing success of the Millennium Development Goals by bringing together people, ideas and innovations to collectively reach a more sustainable future. The management of the Center comprises of the following departments: (i) policy, research and analysis, (ii) innovation and outreach, (iii) partnership and financing; (iv) corporate services. The SDGC/A is governed by the Board of Directors. The Director General of the Center is reporting to this body. The Board of Directors comprise of high profile personalities, including heads of state, business leaders and renowned civil society activists. The current Board is co-chaired by His

Excellency President Kagame of the Republic of Rwanda and Mr. Aliko Dangote, prominent Nigerian businessman and Owner of Dangote Group. For more details please visit the website: www.sdgcafrica.org. In its capacity as a platform for engaging academics, citizens and communities with the SDGs, the Center has identified tertiary education as a game changing lever for African societies to meet the SDGs. In an effort to convene major stakeholders for discussion on comprehensively improving the education curriculum, training for trainers, student life, academic freedom, quality research outputs, universities infrastructure, financing and cooperation, among other topics, the SDGC/A desires to hold a conference, titled: Mobilizing African Intellectuals Towards Quality Tertiary Education. As a platform for intellectuals engagement this workshop will be specifically designed for the field of actors who are exposed to Africa s higher education bottlenecks in their daily professional life. The SDGC/A foresees a fruitful interaction between academics in order to accelerate successful practices among tertiary education establishments. V. OBJECTIVE OF THE CONFERENCE The overall objective of the conference is to create a coalition of African intellectuals who will convene in order to brainstorm on the key priority action areas for consideration at the workshop: (i) The Enabling Environment in Education - Excellence in Teaching and Learning (ii) Research - Scope and Reputation (iii) Building Reputable University Systems in Africa (iv) Knowledge for Development Transforming Societies In addition, participants will share experiences, agree on common actions to ignite the big push needed at continental level to transform the academic ecosystem. The conference will to kick-start discussions on practical actions, explore solutions and build consensual approaches that can be undertaken right away against the back-drop of underperforming higher education systems throughout the continent. The Mobilizing African Intellectuals Towards Quality Tertiary Education conference will reinstate the pivotal role of education practitioners as agents of change to galvanize innovative societies, complementing the efforts made by policy makers in that regard. The Center trusts the expertise of African intellectuals in articulating pertinent action-oriented recommendations to the discrepancy between higher education and sustainable development, and in addressing daunting local and global realities. Therefore, the SDGC/A is determined to foster the engagement of the African academic stakeholders as leading champions to implement in the SDGs in Africa and partake in the global transformation process.

In order to appear in the global picture, Africa must address the above mentioned issues, while also tackling more traditional ones such as girls inclusion, indigenous knowledge contribution, tuition fees, digitalization leapfrogging, vocational training, innovation in universities, the relationship with the diaspora, and regional Centers of Excellence to name a few. The comprehensive reform of tertiary education must be put in place urgently with the teachers at the core. The reform should be bold enough to disrupt the mindset and confront the paradox of the poor global results despite much spending engaged in percentage. The matter of quality educations should be seriously attended. The SDGC/A will be the hosting platform and facilitator of this exercise in line with the 2030 SDG Agenda and the African Union Agenda 2063. The SDG #4 stipulates that by 2030 all women and men have access to quality tertiary education and there should be a significant increase in the number of young people and adults with skills necessary for employment, access to decent jobs and entrepreneurship. It also recommends that by 2020, the number of scholarships for studies should be increased in developing countries so as to finance the continuation of higher studies. Echoing that, Aspiration #6 of AU Agenda 2063 advises that Africa s youth should be guaranteed full access to education, training, skills and technology, as well as financial means and all necessary resources to allow them to realize their full potential; for them to be the path breakers of the African knowledge society and to contribute significantly to innovation and entrepreneurship. It also specifies The creativity, energy and innovation of Africa s youth shall be the driving force behind the continent s political, social, cultural and economic transformation. Together with African intellectuals, the SDGC/A hopes to turn proclamations into action and aspirations into reality. VI. OUTCOME The outcomes and resolutions of the discussions of the various academic and research institutions, as well as professional associations participating in the event will inform the appraisal of a long-term project proposal on the transformation of African Universities. The SDGC/A envisions that the resolutions will be a helpful narrative to equip academic stakeholders in their collaborative efforts to conduct transformative actions. The Center also intends to closely monitor the gathering follow up and continue to provide relevant tools of support. VII. FORMAT The conference will be a two-day event structured as a workshop. As a platform for intellectuals engagement, the workshop will feature keynote addresses from His Excellency Paul Kagame, President of the Republic of Rwanda and Founding Chair of the SDGC/A Board; Mr. Aliko Dangote, Owner, Dangote Group and Co-Chair of SDGC/A Board; Professor Jeffrey

D. Sachs, Director, Sustainable Development Solutions Network and the Earth Institute; Her Excellency Amina J. Mohammed, Deputy Secretary-General, United Nations, as well as other prominent speakers. In addition, a panel discussion with a diverse range of dynamic speakers and five thematic group discussions will be held on comprehensively improving the education curriculum, quality of research outputs, universities infrastructure, international outlook, and financing and cooperation. Please see the attached agenda for more information, update documents will be provided by 15 th June 2017. VIII. PARTICIPANTS Over 300 participants are expected to attend the Conference. These include government officials and education-related organizations, Heads of State, Vice Chancellors, and Rectors of public and private universities, heads of academic affairs, and representatives of African academic networks, councils and research centers. IX. WORKING LANGUAGES OF THE MEETING The meeting will be conducted in English. Simultaneous translators will be available in French. X. DOCUMENTATION List of background reports: AU: Continental Education Strategy for Africa 2016-2025 AU: Science, Technology, and Innovation Strategy for Africa 2024 UNESCO: Science Report, Towards 2030 World Bank / Elsevier: A Decade of Development in Sub-Saharan African Science, Technology, Engineering & Mathematics Research ACBF: Building Capacity in Science, Technology and Innovation for Africa s Transformation, 2017 AOSTI: Assessment of Scientific Production in the African Union, 2005-2010, African Science, Technology and Innovation Outlook Bibliometric Series N. 1, 2013 ASTII: African Innovation Outlook II, April 2014 AU / NEPAD / COHRED: Strengthening Pharmaceutical Innovation in Africa, Designing strategies for national pharmaceutical innovation: choices for decision makers and countries, 2010 And a number of papers: Education, Research, and Innovation in Africa, Forging strategic linkages for economic transformation; Calestous Juma, 2016

Funding Higher Education in Africa: State, Trends and Perspectives; Damtew Teferra, 2013 The significance of citation impact indicators of research performance in the developing countries of sub-saharan Africa; Japhet Bakuwa, 2014 Is the Brain Drain Good for Africa?; William Easterly and Yaw Nyarko, 2008 Research Output and International Research Cooperation in African Flagship Universities; Robert Tijssen, 2015 Research emphasis and collaboration in Africa; Anastassios Pouris and Yuh-Shan Ho, 2014