Monday, December 27, 2010
Africa a New Developmental Focus
Monday, December 6, 2010
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Does the sun shine in Africa?
Do you want to build a melting facility based on solar energy? Hey, what about solar ovens and stoves, cooking with the sun? Multitude, go for it! It only takes a few mirrors...
Create an enterprise based on open principles and collaboration, using the Discovery Network blueprint, and attract technical expertize from all over the world. Contact Watu Afrika and the Multitude Project for assistance. We even have a specialist in optics and light interaction with matter in our group (contact Tiberius Brastaviceanu).
You need funding? Get involved with the African Diaspora Bank project.
Monday, November 29, 2010
This is how you build Africa!
Open Source Ecology is a movement dedicated to the collaborative development of tools for replicable, open source, modern off-grid "resilient communities." By using permaculture and digital fabrication together to provide for basic needs and open source methodology to allow low cost replication of the entire operation, we hope to empower anyone who desires to move beyond the struggle for survival and "evolve to freedom."
The Open Architecture Network is an online, open source community dedicated to improving living conditions through innovative and sustainable design. Here designers of all persuasions can:
- Share their ideas, designs and plans
- View and review designs posted by others
- Collaborate with each other, people in other professions and community leaders to address specific design challenges
- Manage design projects from concept to implementation
- Communicate easily amongst team members
- Protect their intellectual property rights using the Creative Commons "some rights reserved" licensing system and be shielded from unwarranted liability
- Build a more sustainable future
Tibi
Sunday, November 28, 2010
Our collaboration infrastructure
If you have access to edit our website please comment on the page (go at the bottom of the page in edit mode). You can also comment on our central forum.
If you are not part of our community yet, but you have suggestions or questions please contact our community directly.
Saturday, October 30, 2010
Thursday, October 28, 2010
Why Africa?
Diaspora Bank concept - outline
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Join a new discussion on the Diaspora Bank concept
Concept proposed: DIASPORA BANK
The group is made up largely of professional and business people with close links to Africa, and as the thread has illustrated ... a great deal of love and passion for the continent
The highly perceptive posts in the thread have effectively begun to develop into a SWOT analysis of Africa. It has provided participants with a glimpse of the magnitude of the problems faced by the continent and her people. At the same time it has revealed massive opportunities for those with the foresight to recognise them ... and the vision to realise them.
During the course of the discussion a number of suggestions were made as to how the situation could be turned around. It is critical that this time the ordinary people of Africa get to reap the benefits ... and not only the ruling-class elite who have to date largely continued the colonial tradition of leeching the continent dry.
It was agreed that for the continent to compete successfully on the global stage, it must not only explore new avenues of opportunity and new ways of doing things ... Africa in fact needs to completely reinvent and reposition itself.
Being a ‘business’ group, one issue that predictably surfaced was the difficulty that entrepreneurs (with bold, original ideas) experience when attempting to source funding for innovative new projects.
I proposed a solution to this problem to the group in the form of a DIASPORA BANK ... in essence a bank funded by the 60 million-odd displaced Africans around the globe with the express aim of financing disruptive new business ventures that would ordinarily struggle
Visit SICU INNOVATION
By Ian Bentley
This anouncement was first published on SICU HUB.
Monday, October 18, 2010
Thinkers, Dreamers and Doers
Brooks Atkinson an American theatre critic who worked for the New York Times described the reasons for America’s greatness. He stated, “This nation was built by men who took risks-pioneers who were not afraid of the wilderness, business men who were not afraid of failure, scientists who were not afraid of the truth, thinkers who were not afraid of progress, dreamers who were not afraid of action. Which African nation can boast of such characteristics? We need to cultivate such qualities in our future leaders.
Why are African nations incapable of escaping poverty? When will we start to compete with the rest of the world in science, innovation, and economic might? Why is it that in over fifty years of independence we have not changed from primary producers to manufacturers of finished goods? Where have we gone wrong? How do we change our predicament?
Kwame Nkrumah, a visionary African leader would be turning in his grave if he was alive, to witness the anarchy in some regions on the continent. East Africa, a former powerhouse on the continent has morphed into a region of instability, war and terrorism. Nkrumah’s dream was to create nations that were not only a “pool” to source raw materials but an economic force with its own industrialized bargaining power. Many African countries are living below the breadline without the basic human necessities like: access to clean water, sanitation, accommodation and education. In fifty years we have failed to produce many shining examples of fair, honest leadership. Our continent has been marred with dictators like Idi Amin Dada, a former British army lieutenant who later styled himself as “His Excellency President for Life”. Then there was Mobutu of Congo, Charles Taylor who is currently on trial for crimes against humanity at The Hague. Most of these dictators had a common trait. They were once the darlings of their country, seen as liberation heroes, but somewhere down the line lost their way.
How does a continent begin to heal from decades of bad governance? How do we purge the continent of leaders with archaic ideology, corrupt leanings and self- enriching tendencies? How much blame rests on the shoulders of each African?
We are guilty of not standing up and demanding truth and transparency for fear of retribution. There are not enough dissenting voices driving the need for change. A nation with a weak civic society is a nation setting itsel up to fail. African youth have to fill this gaping hole of civic responsibility, acting as watchdogs and challenging the status quo.
Succession-planning and grooming of young future leaders with the right qualities is imperative. African governments should make this a priority and include it in their policies.
Young Africans have little interest in participating in matters concerning politics. The youth expend their energy on attaining materialistic possessions, forgetting that in order to secure their aspirations, their country needs to have sound governance. African youth must serve as the voice of society. They ought to become the conscience of a nation reminding its leaders that another generation will follow and therefore decisions made should be of benefit to future generations. The youth of Africa need to create an organisation powerful enough to influence policies in government and leadership positions.
We need to bring about change. We need a generation of strong-minded youth similar to the generation who helped to fight for our independence decades ago. We need a revolution!
I want to extend a challenge to African youth to develop our abilities to dream, think and act. We need dreamers who can dream up visions of a future far beyond our imagination. We need innovative thinkers who are not afraid to push the boundaries and challenge societal norms. Finally, we need doers to act on the dreams and innovation to create concrete plans with a vision to build and develop Africa.
This is the time for the Youth of our continent to become part of a shift in mindset and social conscience.
Written by: Kate Nkansa
Saturday, October 16, 2010
Watu Afrika project was born on October 16, 2010
t!b!