Introducing the African Futures Dialogues Series (AFDS)

By Passy Amayo and Duncan Koome

The African Futures Dialogue Series (AfDS) was conceptualized after an event in Nairobi with Society for International Development’s Regional Office for Africa (SID Africa), in partnership with School of International Futures (SOIF) and the Next Generation Foresight Practitioners Network in Africa (NGFP Afric) in February 2024 at the Fairview Hotel, kickstarting an impactful programme aimed at interrogating and ideating what Fairer Futures for Africa might looks like and how it might be intergenerationally achieved.

The objective of the programme is to engage both senior and emerging futurists, foresight practitioners, experts and thought leaders from across the continent, and connecting them in conversations through the African Futures Dialogues Series (AfDS) and in foresight workshopping through the African Futures Academy designed primarily for  Next Generation Foresight Practitioners in Africa (NGFP) network, into participatory dialogues that would allow for collection of insights and perspectives on challenges and opportunities shaping Africa’s future, including signals, trends and drivers that could be used to connect, collaborate and collectively enact a more desirable future trajectory for Africans, and by Africans.

In 2023, the Secretary General of the United Nations, Antonio Guterres, spoke to the need for global cooperation to overcome current and future challenges through effective multilateralism to help accelerate global development goals. It is this concern that led to, and elaborated in, the publication of ‘Our Common Agenda’ Report published by the UN which provides recommendations to member states, whilst highlighting 12 commitments proposed by the Secretary General, to aid in attaining the Sustainable Development Goals, which as of 2024 are 5 years away from the target timeline.

Amongst the proposed commitments was the urge to embrace a ‘Quintet of Change’ which features innovation, digital data, strategic foresight and behavioural science and culture. 

Through the SID, NGFP and SOIF partnership, we envision conversations that would intrinsically attempt to include African citizens in the direction of participatory engagements in dialogue, to produce a more organic and inclusive perspective on  the future, and how  commitments made at the global level can provide impact (both negative and positive) in the African context; and whether there are gaps we can leverage our insights and experience to purposefully  steer the negotiations and deliberations towards fair idealistic futures for Africa, by Africans.

It is from this thinking that the AfDS was birthed, pegged initially to the ongoing deliberations at the Summit of the Future and negotiations towards a Pact for the Future. The effort to weave and engage an intergenerational African Futures Network together with the Africa Working Group members, Nsah (NGFP Cameroon), Yame (Botswana) and Alimi (Nigeria) once every month offers the platform to discuss, in context and foresight, what the chapters of the Pact entail and if therein it captures the current gaps and opportunities necessary to bring parity to the treatise from a global south perspective (with a focus on Africa). 

Purpose & Objectives for the Dialogue Series

The initial purpose of the AfDS was to allow our network of emerging foresight practitioners from across the continent and in the diaspora to appraise the Pact for the Future and the various commitments expected to be agreed upon during the Summit of the Future. This also included the Global Digital Compact (a framework that on digital cooperation to help realise a secure, open, and free digital future for all member states), the Declaration on Future Generations and the Reforms to the International Financial Architecture, which calls for reforms focused on global economic governance, debt relief and the cost of sovereign borrowing, international public finance.

These treatises were appraised by the network members through the lens of continental aspirations framed in such treatises as the Malabo Declaration, Agenda 2063, and the recent Addis Ababa Declaration from the African Union.

So why are we engaging virtually? 

The network of Next Generation of Foresight Practitioners in Africa chose to leverage on technology and virtual conferencing as an enabler to participating in conversations  critique, appraise and make recommendations as the only available and affordable means of connecting, dialoguing and hopefully collaborating on initiative and activities coming out of each dialogue moving forward.

The Dialogues however, are not limited to the NGFP Africa Network members, but seeks to engage, governments, agencies and institutions concerned with the theme of each Dialogue for the purpose of bringing regional and member states contexts to the fore based on the national representation of our network of sense-makers to frame an idealistic future-proof improved perspective through participatory futures Dialogues with the network of Next Generation Foresight Practitioners in Africa, friends and partners of NGFP Africa. In 2025, we will be introducing a new set of themes and dates for planned African Futures Dialogues planned to take place throughout the year.

Happy Holidays!