The Mo Ibrahim Foundation is an African non-grant foundation founded in 2006 by businessman Mo Ibrahim. Headquartered in London, United Kingdom, and Dakar, Senegal, it works to recognise achievement within leadership in Africa through initiatives including:
The Foundation is chaired by Mo Ibrahim. Other board members include Valerie Amos, Jin-Yong Cai, Nathalie Delapalme, Jendayi Frazer, Hadeel Ibrahim, Hosh Ibrahim, Abdoulie Janneh, Donald Kaberuka, Pascal Lamy, Graça Machel, Jay Naidoo, Mary Robinson, Ngaire Woods, and Zeinab Badawi.
In 2007, the Foundation inaugurated the Ibrahim Prize for Achievement in African Leadership, to recognise outstanding political leadership on the continent and encourages good governance. The prize is awarded to a former African Executive Head of State or Government by an independent Prize Committee.
The Ibrahim Prize celebrates African leaders who, under challenging circumstances, have developed their countries and strengthened democracy and human rights, for sustainable and equitable prosperity. The prize is not necessarily awarded every year.
Prize criteria includes:
Award:
The Prize Committee is chaired by Festus Mogae. Other current members of the Committee include Mohamed ElBaradei, Mary Robinson, Aïcha Bah Diallo, Horst Köhler and Graça Machel.
Previous Prize Committee Chairs:
Previous Prize Committee Members:
The prize has previously been awarded:
Nelson Mandela was also awarded an honorary Ibrahim Prize in 2007 and Desmond Tutu was awarded a Special Prize for speaking truth to power in 2012.
Launched in 2007, the Ibrahim Index of African Governance (IIAG) assesses governance performance in all 54 African countries over the latest available 10-year period. It provides a dashboard to assess the delivery of public goods and services and public policy outcomes in African countries.
The IIAG provides scores and trends at the continental, regional, and national levels, for different governance dimensions including security, justice, rights, economic opportunity and health. It aims to provide biennial data from multiple independent African and global institutions to assess the quality of governance in African countries.
The Foundation hosts the Ibrahim Governance Weekend (IGW), an annual three-day event that convenes African political and business leaders, representatives from civil society, multilateral and regional institutions, and some of Africa's international partners to debate challenges Africa face, such as climate change, migration, and urbanisation. Within this event, there is the Ibrahim Forum, a discussion forum that focuses on a specific issue of importance to Africa. The weekend finishes with a public concert with notable African political and entertainment figures.
The event also includes the Now Generation Forum, where the Foundation convenes emerging African leaders and young professionals, to gather perspectives from the continentâÂÂs youth to be discussed across the weekend. The key ideas and takeaways from this event are shared at the Ibrahim Forum by representatives from the group, and some of these are included in an Ibrahim Forum Report published by the Foundation.
The event is held in a different African city each year, with previous IGWâÂÂs having taken place in Alexandria, Dar es Salaam, Port Louis, Tunis, Dakar, Addis Ababa, Accra, Marrakech, Kigali, Nairobi and Abidjan. In 2020 and 2021, due to COVID-19, the IGW was virtual.
The Ibrahim Leadership Fellowships were established in 2011 to identify and mentor the future generation of African leaders over a 12-month period. Each year three fellows have an opportunity to work in the executive offices of the African Development Bank (Abidjan), United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (Addis Ababa) or the International Trade Committee (Geneva), with a stipend of US$100,000. Over this period, Fellows contribute to research and policy and are mentored by heads of the Foundation.
The Ibrahim Scholarships were established in 2007, to support and develop the talent of young Africans in selected disciplines. The Ibrahim Scholarships support aspiring African leaders different academic institutions, including the London Business School, SOAS University of London, the University of Birmingham and Chatham House. All those who graduate from a Fellowship or Scholarship programme are automatically enrolled in the Foundation's Now Generation Network, a network of young and mid-career Africans, with members from all 54 African countries.
The Now Generation Network (NGN) currently consists of the Ibrahim alumni of Fellows and scholars and the participants of the annual Now Generation Forum (NGF). It is a pan-African network, comprising members from all African countries and from various sectors and disciplines.
The NGN includes different initiatives, including the NGF and an In conversation with⦠series, which consists of an hour long âÂÂintergenerational dialogueâ between the FoundationâÂÂs leadership, partners of the Foundation, and a selection of NGN members.
In 2020, the Foundation also produced the first NGN survey, titled COVID-19 in Africa: what does it mean for young people? The report analyses youth perspectives on the challenges Africa faces as a direct result of COVID-19.