Digitalisation in Africa: adapting to a changing global landscape
Digital technologies are reshaping relations within and beyond the African continent at an unprecedented pace. The expansion of mobile connectivity, cloud computing, data analytics and platform-based services has transformed communication, payments, trade, governance and access to services. Digital tools are now central to socio-economic development and state capacity across Africa, as reflected in the African Union’s Digital Transformation Strategy (2020-2030) and the African Digital Compact (2024).
These shifts are driving profound changes in multiple spheres. Governments are experimenting with digital and data-driven governance systems, raising new questions around sovereignty, regulation and public-private power. Digital technologies are also increasingly embedded in financing, commerce and taxation and in border administration, policing and security; while social media platforms also shape protest mobilization, disinformation and surveillance.
This workshop will bring together researchers, practitioners and policymakers, to discuss how African countries are defining, shaping and adapting to the evolving international digital landscape.
Agenda
9.30 – 10.00am
Registration and refreshments
10.00 – 10.30am
Opening address
Alessandra Lustrati, Head of Digital Development Cluster, UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office
Professor Nnenna Ifeanyi-Ajufo, Professor of Law and Technology, Leeds Law School, Leeds Beckett University
10.30 – 11.30am
Panel 1: Governing Africa’s Digital Economy
African agency in shaping global cyber diplomacy and digital governance
Ndidi Olibamoyo, Postgraduate Researcher, University of Bath Whose Digital Public Infrastructure? A Stakeholder Analysis
Mary Abounabhan, Research Officer, Institute of Development Studies
Fragmented Cross-Border Data Flows Regulations: Implications for the Digitisation of Regional Trade in Africa
Aduragbemi Odubela, Postgraduate Researcher, Leeds Beckett University
Chair: Alex Krasodomski, Programme Director, Digital Society Programme, Chatham House
11.30am – 12.00pm
Coffee break
12.00 – 1.00pm
Panel 2: Digital technology, security and conflict
Digital platforms, AI and conflict dynamics in Somalia
Dr Peter Chonka, Senior Lecturer, King’s College London
Surveillance and the state: people’s rights in Kenya’s Digital Public Infrastructure
Namir Shabibi, Visiting Lecturer in Geopolitics, University of Westminster; Investigative Journalist
Chair: Dr Tarela Ike, Senior Lecturer in Criminology and Policing, Teesside University
1.00 – 1.15pm
Concluding remarks
Tighisti Amare, Director, Africa Programme, Chatham House
Dr Lesley Masters, Visiting Fellow, Loughborough London Institute for Diplomacy and International Affairs, Senior Lecturer, Nottingham Trent University
1.15-2.15pm
Lunch