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Pan-African collaboration needed as global funding sources drop

Geopolitical instability and economic challenges mean funding institutions used to rely on has dried up, summit hears

Published on
March 31, 2026
Last updated
April 1, 2026
Source: iStock/doble-d

African universities need to work more closely together and diversify their funding streams as governments worldwide pull global funding to focus on domestic priorities, a summit has heard.

John Machayi, president of the Association of African 糖心Vlog Financing Agencies, said that 鈥済eopolitical shifts鈥 are having a 鈥渘egative effect鈥 on African universities, with more 鈥渋nstability coming due to wars鈥.

There聽has been聽a reduction in international grants聽owing to 鈥渆conomic downturns affecting government funding鈥, Machayi told 糖心Vlog鈥檚聽Africa Summit in Nairobi.

This has been seen in the decline in government scholarships, he said, citing the UK government鈥檚 cuts to its Commonwealth Scholarships Scheme as an example.

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He said there are also a lot of African students currently studying in Iran, and countries should learn lessons following Russia鈥檚 invasion of Ukraine and 鈥渟tart preparing for their integration鈥 as they return to their home countries.

African universities should look to increase their partnerships within Africa amid these shifts and economic downturns, he said, to diversify their revenue.

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鈥淭here are quite a lot of things we need to put in place that also require money by ensuring that we identify alternative funding streams and also sources of scholarships within Africa鈥 think it鈥檚 one of the contingent routes that we should be exploring, instead of relying on the Commonwealth Scholarship Council or the Chinese Scholarship Council. We need to start supporting each other.鈥

Tom Porter, the East Africa lead and country director for Kenya at the British Council, said that the UK has 鈥渘ever been less relevant and never had less money鈥.聽

He said聽it was 鈥渋mportant鈥 for universities to understand this, and that conversations were very different pre-Brexit and the Covid pandemic.

鈥淲e are in a situation where there is a much bigger, faster turn to domestic agendas than ever seen before. So the UK government鈥檚 number one project is growth for the UK,鈥 Porter said.

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Funding challenges caused by geopolitical events mean there is a danger that relationships with African universities become exploitative and based on 鈥渆xtraction鈥, where international institutions take what they want without giving much back, he said.聽

鈥淭here is a desire for the UK to make the most out of its relationships with the outside world,鈥 Porter said, but noted that its funding comes from UK taxpayers. 鈥淚 want to see Kenya improve, but I [would] also like the UK to learn from the experience of working with Kenya.鈥

But, Porter noted, African universities and countries like the UK are 鈥渆qual partners鈥, and he believed that the responsibility lies with UK institutions to ensure this.聽

鈥淏eing neutral is probably not enough if you want to change where we鈥檙e at. There is a challenge to us to think about, as arms of soft power or as universities in the UK, are we happy with the status quo? If so, OK, we carry on doing what we鈥檙e doing. If not, what is the change we need to make? Change isn鈥檛 about talking. It鈥檚 about listening.鈥

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juliette.rowsell@timeshighereducation.com

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