Online Course: Institutions are Leading the African Socio-Economic Transformation (5 ECTS, )
Five subjects compose the Professional Course “Institutions are Leading the African Socio-Economic Transformation”
taught by EENI Global Business School:
month It is recommended to dedicate about twelve hours of study per week following a flexible schedule. It is possible to reduce the duration dedicating more hours a week
available in For improving the international communication skills, the student has free access to the learning materials in these languages (free multilingual training).
Sample - Institutions are Leading the African Socio-Economic Transformation
The main objective of the course is to understand the role of...
The African Union (AU): The “Political Vision: a United Africa”
The AUDA-NEPAD: The “executing agency” of the African Union
The Economic Commission for Africa (ECA): organises all the information necessary to
achieve the African Integration
The African Development Bank: the Financing the AU vision
Finally, we will study the “Agenda 2063: The future we want for Africa” a key
document to understanding the vision of the African leaders.
Course intended for all those wishing to understand the African Socio-economic Transformation.
This course contains exercises that are evaluated, which the student must work out and pass to obtain the Diploma of the Professional Course: “Institutions are Leading the African Socio-Economic Transformation” issued by EENI Global Business School.
Students who have taken this course can validate and register for a Master or Doctorate at EENI.
Africa: a continent in a deep transformation.
Subject - Agenda 2063: “The Future we want for Africa.”
Syllabus:
Vision and Priorities of the Agenda 2063
African aspirations for 2063
Wealthy Africa (inclusive growth and sustainable development)
Integrated Continent
Good Governance, Democracy, Human Rights, Justice and the Rule of Law
A Peaceful and Secure Africa: “By 2020 all guns will be silent”
Strong cultural identity, common heritage, shared values and ethics
Development is people-driven, unleashing women and youth potential
Africa as a strong, united and influential global player and partner
Roadmap of the Agenda 2063
Factors for the African transformation
Since the creation of the Organization of the African Unity (OAU), now called the African Union, the African political leaders are moving irreversibly towards the full economic integration,
with the aim of creating an African Continental Free-Trade Area (1 billion people, GDP
combined: 1.2 trillion) consisting of fifty-four African Countries.
While this goal is very complex (e.g., the intra-African trade represents only 10% of the total African trade) and will require substantial investments (especially in infrastructure); they are taking decisive steps to achieve it.
Some people are talking about “Africa as an emerging continent.” Although we believe it is premature to consider the African continent as an emerging market (although many African countries are already emerging economies, in fact, South Africa is a
BRICS Country), rather we can affirm that Africa is the next “frontier market.”
To achieve this vision of a “United Africa”, four African institutions are playing a fundamental role.
The “African Union” establishes the political vision
The NEPAD is the executing agency of the African Union
The Economic Commission for Africa (United Nations)
is the responsible, among other things, to organize all the information necessary to
achieve the African Integration
The African Development Bank is primarily responsible for financing and supporting the development projects in Africa
The African Union has agreed the “Agenda 2063: The future we want for Africa”
an essential document to understand the vision of the African leaders.
Knowing these institutions (*), operations, programs and information they provide is vital to understand the profound transformation taking place in Africa.