Africa’s development conversation has for a long time been trapped between two extremes; On one hand is the legitimate memory of colonial exploitation and the damage it inflicted on the continent’s political, economic and social foundations. On the other is the uncomfortable reality that, more than 60 years after many African countries gained independence, the burden of responsibility can no longer be outsourced entirely to history.
This is why institutions such as the African School of Governance matter.
Africa is not short of talent, nor the natural resources or even young people with energy, creativity and ambition. What has often been missing is the deliberate investment in leaders who are both technically competent and morally grounded; leaders who understand public service not as a pathway to privilege, but as a responsibility to transform lives.
This is the gap the African School of Governance (ASG) and similar institutions are designed to fill. By focusing on public policy, governance, research and leadership, they provide the intellectual and practical tools needed to confront Africa’s unique challenges with solutions rooted in African realities.
The continent cannot continue importing policy templates that do not speak to its context, then blame others when they fail. It must build its own capacity to diagnose problems, design tailored solutions, implement them, and hold leaders accountable for results.
The significance of ASG being anchored in Africa is therefore more than symbolic. It speaks to a wider shift in mindset. Africa must look inward, not in isolation from the rest of the world, but with the confidence that its people understand its challenges best. Partnerships remain important, but they must complement African agency, not replace it.
The next cadre of African leaders must be different from those who inherited independence but too often failed to consolidate it into prosperity. They must be comfortable with evidence, impatient with mediocrity, intolerant of corruption, and committed to building institutions that outlive individuals.
This is especially urgent at a time when Africa has the youngest population in the world, vast markets waiting to be integrated, and global relevance that continues to grow. But demographics alone will not deliver transformation. Neither will speeches about potential. What will matter is the quality of leadership that manages this potential.
As Africans we must be honest enough to acknowledge its unfinished work. Colonialism explains part of the continent’s past; it cannot remain the permanent excuse for present failures. The future will be shaped by Africans willing to take ownership of their destiny.
ASG is one of the important platforms through which that future can be built. Africa should support it, replicate its ambition, and demand from it the kind of leaders the continent has waited too long to see.