The Times of Tanzania
Eastern Africa News Network

ASE the Leading Pan-African University expands to Zanzibar. Plans state-of-the-art campus in the Isles

The African School of Economics has officially announced its expansion to Zanzibar.

The Pan-African university mission aims at developing the frontier of Africa’s next generation of scholars, researchers, policymakers and entrepreneurs to establish homegrown solutions to African challenges.

The African School of Economics (ASE) venturing into Zanzibar marks the university’s first location in East Africa.

An official announcement from ASE reveals plans for a state-of-the-art campus for African students and world-class faculty in the Isles.

“ASE will also become the latest high-profile addition to the Silicon Zanzibar initiative as it kick-starts the next phase of its expansion plan to become the go-to Pan-African Centre of higher learning,” reads part of the statement.

For its expansion in the Tanzanian Islands, ASE will work in partnership with renowned educational institutions including Princeton University and Indian Institute of Technology Madras.

The University will deliver graduate and undergraduate degree programs focused on Science Technology Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) as well as social science training.

Training will be provided through three departments namely the School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Business, and the Engineering School.

Strategically, it is the first campus to have a focus on technology, aiming to become part of the tech ecosystem in Silicon Zanzibar.

“ASE is committed to actively engaging in the launch of tech startups, training up the human capital and skills necessary to enable the development and commercialization of new technology and incubate innovative companies,” says the statement.

To support the upcoming launch, the university will also accelerate its current recruitment drive to attract 50 elite faculty members and 900 students from across the world, providing the highest standard of learning to ensure African students can compete on a global stage.

The Founder and President of the African School of Economics, Professor Leonard Wantchekon, explained during the launch that the vision for ASE has always been to establish a Pan-African system of universities.

“Since launching in 2014, and with our first launch in East Africa, it was vital we selected an environment which strongly reflected our ethos. At ASE, we firmly believe it is simply not enough to train up STEM talent, but we must also create an enabling policy environment which empowers their ideas to truly scale,” he added.

“Through its Silicon Zanzibar initiative, Zanzibar has made impressive headway in this regard by establishing policies which heavily encourage frontier innovation. Coupled with its strong entrepreneurial spirit and close proximity to a number of well-regarded East African universities, we’re fully convinced these qualities make Zanzibar the ideal destination to spearhead the next chapter of our Pan-African expansion.”

Prof. Wantchekon

For the past twelve years, Princeton’s Department of Politics has served as an incubator for the African School of Economics.

“Last year, ASE alumnus earned his Princeton Ph.D. and was appointed assistant professor at New York University (NYU), a world-class university…

… We congratulate ASE on the expansion of its mission of excellence in research and training to a second regional hub on the continent,” said Professor Rodney Priestley, the Dean of the Graduate School, and the Pomeroy and Betty Perry Smith Professor of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Princeton University.

Launched in Benin in 2014, ASE was founded to address the twin challenges of a lack of African representation at the forefront of cutting-edge research as well as limited training of top-tier talent on the continent.

With over 2,000 students and alumni, 12 plus degree programs and four campuses across its locations of Benin, Côte D’Ivoire, Nigeria and Zanzibar, it ranks as one of Africa’s leading universities in terms of research quality, the caliber of faculty and students as well as its superb record of graduate placements.

For the past 7 years, over 15 percent of ASE graduates have been placed in top global PhD programs at institutions including Princeton, Harvard University, Penn State University and the University of Wisconsin.

Some 75 percent of graduates have research, government, and private sector positions both in global and regional offices at the UNDP, the Central Bank of West African States, the governments of Togo, Benin, and Cameroon, as well as a Junior faculty position at New York University.

Zanzibar’s Minister of Education, Lela Mussa, explained that the Isles were pursuing education transformation to achieve its national development vision.

“We are promoting international universities and higher learning institutions to establish campuses here in the isles to support human capital development,” the Minister stated.

In addition to its purely academic pursuits, ASE’s planned campus in Silicon Zanzibar will also begin to set up a robust network of campuses that serve as high-quality anchor tenants to nascent free economic zones and charter cities across the continent.

This is geared towards not only attracting high-quality talent for these new zones and cities to thrive but also incubating breakthrough innovation and high-quality research.

Daniel Yu, Founder and CEO of Wasoko, Africa’s largest B2B e-commerce network and the official private sector ambassador for Silicon Zanzibar, said the ASE’s presence in the Isles will undoubtedly have a transformative impact in the development of a crucial pipeline of tech talent for the island and beyond.

“We look forward to exploring areas of collaboration alongside them in the near future.”

The announcement of ASE’s launch in Zanzibar follows the recent award of the Global Economy Prize to Prof. Leonard Wantchekon in June 2023 for his visionary work in both establishing ASE as well as his world-leading research in development economics.

Prof Wantchekon received the award alongside Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Director General of the World Trade Organization, and Dr. Eleni Gabre-Madhin, Chief Innovation Officer of the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) in Kiel, Germany.

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