Partners Consultative Forum
RUFORUM has received the generous support of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation in support of the Secretariat, its governance, networking and research agenda since 2009. During that time, RUFORUM has strengthened its operations and developed new and enhanced partnerships with other partners, and also received support from many other agencies to implement research, programmes, projects, advocacy, training and scholarships including from MasterCard Foundation, Carnegie Corporation of New York, World Bank, EU, IDRC, etc. During this period, it has shown significant progress in building a framework for engaging African universities in reform processes and enabled them to work more closely together and to produce more relevant graduates and research. It has also raised the profile of higher education and of RUFORUM. Today, RUFORUM is beginning to get more support as an African-owned and supported network with commitment from some governments to sign a RUFORUM Charter. However, it is important for RUFORUM to maintain the momentum. RUFORUM thus invites those who have supported it closely in the past decade to assist in framing RUFORUMs growth trajectory into the next decade.
As part of this process, RUFORUM recently developed the RUFORUM Vision 2030 Strategy that seeks to enhance the impact and contribution of universities to development agenda in Africa such as the Sustainable Development Goals 2030 and the African Agenda 2063. RUFORUM also seeks to engage new partners. It is on this basis that RUFORUM is convening a meeting of partners to help it map out a strategy to broaden its partnership base to ensure that RUFORUM continues to strengthen the network and the transformation of higher agricultural education.
Session Aim: To provide a platform for a select group of RUFORUM Development Partners to discuss a way forward for RUFORUM to achieve its Vision of universities at the centre of an ecosystem for rural transformation.
Specifically the Session will
- Share the RUFORUM Vision 2030 for contributing significantly to the the SDGs and AU Agenda 2063 with partners
- Outline achievements, activities, challenges and lessons learnt over the last years
- Discuss with partners how RUFORUM could play a role in reinforcing their own agency initiatives for achieving the African Agenda 2063 and the Sustainable Development Goals
- Propose a meeting and agenda for a more substantive two-day discussion with a broader group of Development Partners to be held in early 2019
Suggested Partners for the 2019 proposed meeting: Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Carnegie Corporation of New York, CIDA, DAAD, DFID, JICA, IDRC, Norad, NUFFIC, National Research Foundation, OCP Morocco, SIDA, USAID, World Bank.
Co-convened by the OCP Group African Development Bank, World Bank and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the consultative forum is organised to provide a platform for dialogue between the African tertiary education sector (TVET, HEST, R&D) and the global and African development partners to chart a way forward for transforming African agricultural higher agricultural education, science, technology and innovation (AHESTI). It is proposed to engage global and African partners with passion for Africa’s transformation through skilled human capital, science, technology and innovation with inclusive agricultural growth. Inclusive agricultural growth relates to mitigating the effects of commercialization if agriculture and related large corporate takeovers of farming and value chains and the food system as a whole, from production to retail, by ensuring smallholder farmers and poor rural residents are included in the benefit streams. As such, inclusion requires that agricultural growth helps existing farmers, traders, and others in the value chain to mitigate risk, to become more profitable and to scale up what they are doing. Thus, inclusion cannot be only at the level of primary production rather it includes family farmers being able to access markets, by aggregating their outputs, and selling into value chains that are able to efficiently get produce to the growing numbers of urban consumers. Inclusive growth provides for reducing inequalities in ownership and income, and offers the opportunity for incomes from agriculture to be reinvested to stimulate further growth in farming, in the rural non-farm economy and, through rural-urban linkages, into the urban food economy, to feed Africa’s growing and urbanizing population.
Documents on consultation forums of RUFORUM with Partners
Concept Note on Building Africa’s agricultural science, technology and innovation capacity for accelerated, sustainable and inclusive development [Download ]
The presentatons
1. RUFORUM OCP/UM6P Partnership to contribute to Africa's Agricultural Transformation [Download]
2. Accelerating youth innovativeness, entrepreneurship and financial inclusion for Africa’s development [Download]
3. Twenty years of investment in African higher education [Download]
4. Building Africa’s Science and Technology Capacity for Economic Growth [Download]
5. Vision 2030: African Universities’ Agenda for Agricultural Higher Education, Science, Technology and Innovation (AHESTI) [Download]
6. YOUNG AFRICA WORKS Creating Opportunities for All to Learn and Prosper [Download]
7. Food Planet Health : The EAT-Lancet Commission on Healthy Diets From Sustainable Food Systems [Download]
8.Strengthening Use of Digital Technologies for Agricultural Transformation in Africa: African Digital Agriculture Program (AfriDAP) [Download]
9. African Digital Agriculture Programme (AfriDAP) Data Science for Agriculture [ Download ]
10. Digital Agriculture and Disruptive Technology a Fundamental Shift Agriculture Global Practice-World Bank [ Download ]
11. Digital Learning and Sharing Technologies for Agriculture [Download]
Summaries from Morocco Consultative Forum 2019
Day 1 Summary : Building Africa’s agricultural science, technology and innovation capacity for accelerated, sustainable and inclusive development [Download]
Day 2 Summary : Higher Education in Africa Partners Consultative Forum [ Download ]
Day 3 Summary : Higher Education in Africa Partners Consultative Forum [ Download ]
The Agenda’s action plan provides a more integrated and inclusive Africa that uses its natural resources, human capital and institutions to drive technological, social and business innovation for development. It proposes to leapfrog the conventional approaches in ways that ensure rapid, sustainable growth, reduce out-migration and improve quality of life. Highly-skilled human resources are essential to develop and deploy new technologies to meet the Agenda’s goals and aspirations[1]. This is also envisioned in the United Nations 2030 Agenda on sustainable development, notably Goals 4 on “Ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all” and Goal 10 to “Reduce inequality within and among countries”. The success of any initiatives to contribute to Africa’s response to regional and global agendas will depend on synergy between and among partners and stakeholders operating in the African region.
Afro-Arab partnership in development processes has had a historical interaction and mutual support and benefit for the two regions. During the 28th League of Arab States Summit H.E. Mr. Moussa Faki Mahamat, the African Union Commission Chairperson, acknowledged the Africa-Arab collaboration as Africa’s oldest strategic partnership with the outside world and highlighted the need to cultivate the common experience between these two regions towards a promising future. Similarly, the Arab/Africa Economic Forum in 2013 “Beyond Promises: Moving forward towards an effective Arab/Africa Partnership” resolved for common horizons of investment cooperation between Arab and African countries with education being one of the priorities.
Recognising the untapped potential of returns to investment in higher education and challenges that Africa’s tertiary education sector faces, the Regional Universities Forum for Capacity Development in Agriculture (RUFORUM), a network of 114 members from 38 African countries in North, South, West, Central and Eastern Africa developed a higher education development agenda “the African Universities Agenda for Higher Agricultural Education, Science, Technology and Innovation (AHESTI)”. This agenda seeks to realise vibrant transformative universities that catalyse sustainable inclusive agricultural development to feed and create prosperity for Africa.
AHESTI is developed with awareness of Africa’s lagging behind in high-level skills, technologies and innovations, and the need to do more differently, to ensure that Africa’s young population and institutions are empowered to develop new knowledge and innovations for societal and economic transformation. This is most important in agriculture and other primary sectors which are providing food, employing larger proportion of the population and providing the largest export and foreign exchange earnings for the continent. RUFORUM also notes and recognises that Technical Vocational Education Training (TVET), Higher Education Science and Technology (HEST), and Research and Development (R&D) institutions play a critical role in developing the right quality of human resources, new knowledge, as well as technologies and innovations required to transform the continent’s economy and improve service delivery.
However, the tertiary education sector in Africa still faces critical challenges. The expanded higher education sector has generated many graduates, yet the notion of graduate unemployment and the lack of appropriate skills persists in most African countries. Moreover, with an ever increasing population expected to reach 2 billion by 2050, there is urgent need to explore alternatives to exploit the potential that this energetic labour presents for the development of the continent. At the same time, there is need to harness available opportunities for the benefit of the youth to improve productivity and livelihoods. For agriculture, the need to move beyond farm production to added value and exploration of service provision across the commodity value chain is paramount. Higher education is a catchment area for the youth who are at the start of their adult life and open to ideas and practices that will be instrumental throughout their lifespan. The expansion of curriculum to incorporate entrepreneurship, financial inclusion and other soft skills is a fundamental attribute to harness this potential. The need to build human resource capacity to reorient academic staff to appreciate the changing paradigm for higher agricultural education is a key component for the RUFORUM Vision 2030 and AHESTI.
Convened by Arab Organisation for Agricultural Development (AOAD) in collaboration with the Arab Bank for Economic Development and RUFORUM, the Consultative Forum is designed to provide a platform for dialogue between the African tertiary education sector (TVET, HEST, R&D) and the global and African development partners to chart a way forward for supporting the implementation of Africa’ Universities Agenda for Higher Agricultural Education, Science, Technology and Innovation (AHESTI). The AHESTI aims at catalyzing engagement of Africa’s universities to support rural transformation in the continent and universities contribution towards attainment of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and Africa’s Agenda 2063. The Consultative Forum will build on the ongoing initiatives for strengthening higher agricultural education in Africa (SHAEA), business incubation and enterprise creation in RUFORUM member universities. It is proposed to engage global and African partners to explore alternative pathways for inclusive agricultural growth and how to promote agri-entrepreneurship and value addition within the higher agricultural education sector. The Forum will deliberate within the context of youth as active participants in both higher education and the agricultural value chain since, several of Africa’s youth originate from small holder farms where technologies would boost production and productivity to create upstream employment for graduates and out of school youth.
The high level Consultative Forum is building on the meeting held in Morocco in March 2019 where several partners including the Mastercard Foundation, OCP, AODB and Arab Bank for Economic Development (BADEA) participated. The Kampala meeting is intended to explore how the different partners could advance the discussion and partnership to promote the interface between higher agricultural education and the business prospects in agriculture. The meeting is expected to bring together partners that focus on human capital development, agricultural research and entrepreneurship. These among others will include the African Development Bank (AfDB), AOAD, BADEA, Mastercard Foundation, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, OCP Group and others still to be brought on board.
The Consultative Forum will benefit from areas of synergy to support the implementation of African Universities’ Agenda for Agricultural Higher Education, Science, Technology and Innovation (AHESTI) and the solutions to the youth employment challenge and poverty reduction. A special focus will be given to laying a framework for the Strengthening Africa's Science, Technology, Innovation and Entrepreneurship Capacity for Economic Development (SASTIE); Strengthening use of digital technology for learning and sharing in African universities and ideas in the agro-digital space (Afri-DAP), Accelerating Youth Innovativeness, Entrepreneurship and Financial Inclusion for Africa’s Development (AYIF-Africa) and a possible initiative to Strengthen Staff capacities in African Universities and increasing the pool of women scientists in Africa. The Forum will deliberate on the initial target countries for implementation of SASTIE. The Partners will consider areas of synergy for successful implementation of aspirations and goals set out under the initiative. The Forum will receive statement in line with the Partners agenda for Africa’s development and the proposed initiatives. Specifically, the African Development Bank’s capacity building and scholarship program at all levels of education; the Strategy of OCP Group for Africa’s higher agricultural education, science and technology for development; the regional human capacity building and entrepreneurship in Africa by BADEA, the Young Africa Works from the Mastercard Foundation and the global agricultural development programme of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
Objectives
The overall objective of the Consultative forum is to facilitate dialogue amongst Development Partners who are closely involved or have interest in supporting human capital development, agricultural research and innovation, and entrepreneurship under the Africa’s Universities Agenda for Higher Agricultural Education, Science, Technology and Innovations for Africa’s rural and economic transformation. The specific objectives of the Forum are;
- To provide a platform for open sharing of experiences, lessons and ideas on the emerging landscape related to human capital development in agriculture, science and technology and entrepreneurship in Africa;
- Propose areas of synergy, implementation and coordination mechanism for delivery of the AHESTI;
- Develop an investment plan for strengthening staff capacities in African Universities for agri-preneurship and Increasing the pool of Women Scientists in Africa through the RUFORUM platform;
- Hold specific discussion on strengthening the use of Digital Technology for learning and lesson sharing across African Universities, as well as share innovations in the Agro-Digital space; and
- Address the "what next" to underscore the need for practical actions for implementing AHESTI.
Approach
The Consultative forum will be held in Kampala, Uganda. It will be hosted by BADEA, AOAD and RUFORUM with participation from selected Uganda Government Ministries and Partners with interest in high level skills development, science, technology and innovation in Africa and Arab countries. The meeting will be informed by key presentations on the status of Afro-Arab agriculture, science, technology and innovation capacity and its implications for future actions. Opportunity will be provided for partners including the Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa (FARA) to share their current and previous activities relevant to the meeting and also to highlight key perspectives for moving the discussion forward. A facilitated discussion will be held by partners to identify areas of synergy and how future actions could be better coordinated to achieve aspirations set out in strategies under discussion.
Expected outcomes
- Partners successfully utilise the Consultative Forum, as a strategic and collaborative platform for sharing of experiences, lessons and ideas on human capital development in agriculture, entrepreneurship, science and technology in Africa;
- A joint understanding and prioritisation of synergies relevant for the successful implementation and delivery of AHESTI;
- Develop strategies for the use of Digital Technology for learning and lesson sharing across Africa and share ideas on what’s working in the Agro-Digital space;
- An investment plan for strengthening staff capacities in African Universities for agri-entrepreneurship through the RUFORUM platform, and
- Jointly advance strategies for undertaking practical actions in support of Africa’s AHESTI for the promotion of youth employment and engagement amongst and with the partners engaged.
Reports
The report of the Partners Meeting on Promoting Equal Opportunity for Youth Employability and Entrepreneurship in Africa held at Serena Hotel, Kampala, Uganda on October 2019. [ Download ]
In 2019, the first Afro-Arab Partnership forum focusing on African higher education and agriculture was convened by the Regional Universities Forum for Capacity Building in Agriculture (RUFORUM) in collaboration with Arab Organisation for Agricultural Development (AOAD), the Arab Bank for Economic Development (BADEA) and Uganda Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation (MoST&I). This consultative forum was designed to provide a platform for dialogue between the African higher education sector and the global as well as African development partners to chat a way forward for promoting equal opportunity in youth employability and entrepreneurship in Africa.
The forum is part of the RUFORUM iterative processes for the design and implementation of initiatives that strengthen higher education and agricultural sectors in Africa, with emphasis on business incubation and enterprise creation. As such, and following the success of the first meeting in Kampala, it has been considered important to hold a second one in 2021 to be co-hosted by RUFORUM and Uganda Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation (MoST&I). This will be organised under the theme “Mobilising Partnership for supporting implementation of Africa’s Universities Agenda for Higher Agricultural Education, Science, Technology and Innovation (AHESTI)”.
A preparatory meeting was held today 18th February 2021 to consult with key stakeholders on the planned second Afro-Arab Partnership forum. This virtual meeting, hosted by the RUFORUM Secretariat, was attended by African Union Commission (AUC), Arab Organization for Agricultural Development (AOAD), Arab Bank for Economic Development in Africa (BADEA), Islamic Development Bank (IsDB), Sudan Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research (MoHESR) and Uganda Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation (MoST&I).
The preparatory meeting, which highlighted the Youth Employability and Entrepreneurship as a key issue in Africa, was addressed by Prof. Adipala Ekwamu, RUFORUM Executive Secretary; Prof. Ibrahim El Dukheri, Director General of the Arab Organization for Agricultural Development (AOAD); Dr. Mohammed Elfeel, Technical Advisor to the Director General, the Arab Bank for Economic Development in Africa (BADEA); Ms. En'amulrahman Malkawi, the Global Youth Empowerment Specialist, Islamic Development Bank; Ms. Diana Akullo Ogwal Oyena, Policy Officer - Department of Agriculture, Rural Development, Rural Economy and Sustainable Development of the African Union Commission; and Ms. Monica Nyakaisiki, Assistant Commissioner, MoST&I (Uganda).
The meeting key highlights were:
- AOAD aims to support agriculture and food security in the Arab region and Africa and has a new strategy aligned to the global SDGs, which among others, focuses on supporting and facilitating transformation of food and agricultural systems in the two regions, eradicating hunger and reducing poverty through enhanced productivity, and fostering better knowledge sharing among key actors, among others. AOAD places strong emphasis on engaging youth in the development process and supports activities that promote youth skill development and employability.
- BADEA is committed to the development of higher education; agriculture; science and technology; youth employability; and strengthening SMEs in Africa, which are all in line with the BADEA strategy. BADEA has committed to and is funding a Feasibility Study in Uganda on Strengthening Youth Employability and Entrepreneurship in Africa (YEED) project. Based on the outcome of the Feasibility study, it is planned that the Project be launched in Uganda and other countries.
- IsDB has a youth development strategy, which was approved one year ago focusing on three pillars: education, economic empowerment of youth, and youth engagement with the aim of having engaged and productive youth demonstrating leadership in their communities, agriculture being one of the main sectors of focus.
- AUC values its partnership with RUFORUM and AOAD in advancing Africa’s agricultural agenda and acknowledges the role of agriculture in advancing youth employability and entrepreneurship. The issue of youth employability affects the entire Africa continent and the global community. AUC invites RUFORUM and African Universities to actively participate in implementation of the AUC continental frameworks including CAADP review planned for this year and also in the EU-AUC Partnership activities geared to Food and Nutrition Security and Sustainable Agriculture.
- MoST&I (Uganda) recognises the roles of the various key stakeholders in addressing youth employability challenge and is committed to working with Afro-Arab partners in the cause of transforming higher education, science, technology and innovation especially in line with youth employability and development of Higher Education Regional Training Centres across Africa. Agriculture being the backbone of the economy of Africa is key in the transformation of the continent and therefore the planned forum will be very important. Uganda Government has accepted to host the Forum event and looks forward to welcoming the delegates to Kampala.
The Planning meeting agreed that the Second Afro-Arab Partnership Forum be held sometimes in October or November 2021.