Earlier this year, I learned about the accomplishments of Adebayo Alonge, a graduate of the Yale School of Management and Lagos Business School, members of the Global Network for Advanced Management. Adebayo won the grand prize in the Hello Tomorrow Global Challenge, a renowned international startup competition, for RxScanner, a company he founded to detect fake drugs. His company is currently operating in Canada, China, Myanmar, Kenya, Uganda, Ghana, and Nigeria, and he has plans to expand further. Adebayo’s story is just one example of how studying in the United States and Nigeria can help power innovation and entrepreneurship.
Like many global universities, Yale has already forged partnerships with educational and research institutions in Africa. Makerere University, Uganda’s largest institution of higher education, and Yale University collaborate on research, including investigations of treatments for noncommunicable diseases, patient empowerment, and women’s health. In the short term, scholars from Makerere and Yale mutually benefit from exposure to different clinical settings that widen their perspectives, knowledge, and skills. In the long term, these joint efforts will increase clinical capacity, improve medical access, and enhance public health.
As more nations retreat from the world and look inward, universities must step up and fill this void, providing transformative educational opportunities for students and fostering innovative discoveries that improve lives. There is more to do: we need to continue to create partnerships and transnational ties, building on the tremendous promise of young people around the globe. As we approach 2050, the future looks like Africa-full of energy, determination, innovation, and resilience.