AMIP News Photo
Omni Shoreham Hotel
Washington, DC
July 28, 2014
Today, during a town hall with 500 young African leaders, President 
Obama announced the expansion of his Young African Leaders Initiative 
(YALI) which was launched in 2010.  Through YALI, the United States is 
investing in the next generation of African leaders, and has committed 
significant resources to enhance leadership skills, bolster 
entrepreneurship, and connect young African leaders with one another, 
the United States, and the American people.  
Signature aspects of this expansion include:
•         The creation of four Regional Leadership Centers in Ghana, Kenya, Senegal, and South Africa.
•         The Washington Fellowship for Young African Leaders was 
renamed as the “Mandela Washington Fellowship for Young African   Leaders”
 and will be doubled in size to reach 1,000 participants each year by 2016.
•         New virtual resources and vibrant physical spaces for the YALI Network.
•         Hundreds of new entrepreneurship grants and mobile incubators,
 and the Global Entrepreneurship Summit will be held in sub-Saharan 
Africa in 2015.
Deepening Our Reach on the Continent: Regional Leadership Centers
President Obama also announced the creation of four Regional 
Leadership Centers in Ghana, Kenya, Senegal, and South Africa.  
Beginning in 2015, these Centers will improve the availability and 
quality of leadership training programs and professional development 
opportunities for young African leaders.  Each will be run as a 
public-private partnership, capitalizing on the energy and dynamism of 
the private sector, the knowledge of African and American institutions, 
and the programmatic and educational resources of the U.S. Government.  
The Centers will focus on engaging young leaders from a wide range of 
organizations and backgrounds and with a diversity of experiences.
The Regional Leadership Centers will:
•         Provide Quality Leadership Training:  Centers will provide 
both long and short courses on leadership and issues across multiple 
sectors.    
•         Support Entrepreneurship:  Centers will provide 
entrepreneurship support services, including mentoring, technology, and 
access to capital.
•         Enhance Professional Networking:  Centers will offer young 
leaders the opportunity to connect with each other, American 
professionals, and experts from across the region.
The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) will 
provide $38 million for the creation of and programs in the Regional 
Leadership Centers.  American and African companies and foundations have
 more than matched these funds, providing principal capital for the 
startup costs, equipment, and technology for the Centers.  The 
MasterCard Foundation will provide financial support over five years to 
develop the Centers.  With financial and in-kind contributions from 
Microsoft, Dow Chemical Company, Intel Corporation, and Cisco Systems, 
the U.S. Government will be able to establish and maintain the Centers, 
and provide business software and hardware, mentoring, and information 
technology training through them.  With in-kind support from Proctor 
& Gamble, General Electric, Atlas Mara, and McKinsey & Company, 
the U.S. and its partners will be able to provide leadership training, 
technical support, and access to capital for young entrepreneurs.
The U.S. Government has joined with the following partners to 
establish and deliver high quality training, support, and networking 
through the Centers.  In collaboration with USAID, host institutions in 
Africa will provide instruction and collaboration space, expert 
training, and coursework for the Centers.
•         The Center in Ghana will be supported by a consortium of 
civil and private sector organizations including Africa 2.0, Africa 
Capacity Building Foundation, Ghana Private Enterprise Federation, and 
the Center for Policy Analysis, led by the Ghana Institute of Management
 and Public Administration. 
•         The Center in Kenya will have a robust training curriculum 
with direction from a partnership that brings together Deloitte’s global
 management and strategy skills, the established curriculum and capacity
 of Kenyatta University, the public administration training of the Kenya
 School of Government, and Africa Nazarene University’s youth engagement
 and outreach.
•         The Center in South Africa will benefit from an education 
alliance led by the University of South Africa, with support from the 
University of Pretoria, which brings expertise in governance training, 
and Innovation Hub, which provides entrepreneurship support.
•         The Center in Senegal will assist young entrepreneurs 
through  the African Center for Advanced Studies in Management’s 
experience in professional management studies, the West African Research
 Center’s youth leadership training experience, and the Synapse Center’s
 support to young leaders.
Expanding the Flagship Program: The Mandela Washington Fellowship for Young African Leaders
Today, in front of 500 Fellows, the President announced that the 
Mandela Washington Fellowship for Young African Leaders will reach 1,000
 participants each year by 2016.  The Fellowship currently brings 500 of
 Africa’s most dynamic young leaders to the United States each year for 
six weeks of leadership training, networking, and mentoring at top U.S. 
universities.  Training and mentorship are focused on three areas: 
business and entrepreneurship, civic engagement, and public 
administration.  Upon returning home, the Fellows will have access to 
professional development opportunities, mentoring, networking, training,
 and seed funding to support their ideas, businesses, and organizations.
Providing the Tools, Training, and Technology to Promote Leadership: The YALI Network
The YALI Network provides virtual resources and vibrant physical 
spaces to equip young African leaders with the skills and connections 
they need to improve their communities and their countries.  Established
 by President Obama in April 2014, the Network already includes more 
than 68,000 members.  Using yali.state.gov and social media, the United 
States provides online courses and materials, and connects members with 
global leaders in their field.  Over the next year, President Obama will
 continue to engage the YALI Network.  
Virtual training, tools, and technology for the YALI Network.  YALI 
Network members will have access to an array of online courses and 
training materials, along with virtual mentoring and networking 
opportunities.
•         Over 20 Curated MOOCs and 60 facilitated MOOC Camps:  YALI 
Network members are able to access more than 20 Massive Open Online 
Courses (MOOCs) and will be offered 60 facilitated courses in MOOC Camps
 in YALI Spaces across the continent over the coming year.  Additional 
courses, including on vocational education, will come online in the 
months ahead.
•         Tailored web training videos:  The YALI Network platform 
will also provide access to tailor-made training videos on leadership, 
business and entrepreneurship, civic leadership, and public management 
featuring U.S. university professors and experts in their field. 
•         Meetups – the ability to connect at home and in person:  
The YALI Network website will provide members with a “Meetup” option, 
which enables members to connect, network and even collaborate on new 
initiatives. 
Creation of state-of-the-art YALI Spaces.  Over the next year, 
American Corners in Cote d’Ivoire, Zimbabwe, and South Africa will be 
outfitted to provide YALI Network members opportunities to meet, learn, 
and incubate their ideas; spaces in seven additional countries will be 
renovated over the next two years.  YALI staff will facilitate online 
courses and provide advice on everything from business start-ups to 
opportunities for study abroad.  Meeting rooms, collaboration spaces, 
and business tools will allow YALI Network members to work together to 
create social ventures, community service projects, and new business 
start-ups.  
Building on a tradition of engagement.  All of our embassies in 
Africa have significant, sustained engagements with young leaders.  
Currently, 43 embassies have youth councils that provide input into U.S.
 policies and contribute to the design and execution of U.S. Government 
programs.  Since 2010, the State Department has held 15 exchanges 
specifically for young African leaders and brought more than 1,600 
sub-Saharan young leaders to the United States, through its educational 
and cultural affairs programs, including Fulbright.  In just the past 
year, embassies have organized over 800 events across the continent to 
support Africa’s young civic, government, and business leaders. 
Supporting Young Entrepreneurs
In addition to the announcements made by President Obama today, the 
U.S. Government is expanding support to entrepreneurs by connecting them
 to investors, advisors, and distribution networks.
In 2015, the Global Entrepreneurship Summit (GES) will be hosted in 
sub-Saharan Africa for the first time.  Morocco is hosting this year.  
YALI Network members will have the opportunity to present at and 
participate in both summits. 
Over the next year, the State Department will lead three partnership 
opportunity delegations of entrepreneurs and investors to Tanzania, 
Ethiopia, and Ghana.  
In addition, the State Department and the U.S. Africa Development 
Foundation (USADF) will support selected YALI entrepreneurs to attend 
and participate in the DEMO Africa 2014 conference, to be held in Lagos,
 Nigeria, on September 25 – 26.  DEMO Africa is a platform for top 
African companies to launch their products and announce to Africa and 
the world what they have developed. 
The United States will continue to provide young Africans access to 
resources they can use to put their skills to work in service of their 
communities. 
•         Hundreds of new entrepreneurship grants.  USADF is 
partnering with the State Department to offer $2.5 million in seed 
funding to members of the YALI Network over the next three years in the 
form of 250 small entrepreneurship grants.  These grants will support 
start-ups and expansion of businesses and social ventures in six 
countries in 2015 – Ghana, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, South 
Africa, Zimbabwe, Tanzania, and Rwanda. 
•         Mobile incubators will reach at least 5,000 aspiring 
entrepreneurs in 2015.  U.S. embassies in Africa will build 
entrepreneurial capacity beyond the capital cities by training and 
helping to incubate the businesses of at least 5,000 aspiring 
entrepreneurs from the Network in provincial cities and rural areas 
during 2015.  StartUp Weekend and other experts will accompany a mobile 
incubator, equipped with the tools and technology to get a business off 
the ground.  Conducted in collaboration with local governments, 
institutions, and NGOs, the workshops and equipment are designed to walk
 aspiring entrepreneurs through the basic precepts of starting a 
business, including writing a business plan, leveraging online 
resources, raising capital, and expanding market share. 
###
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment