AFD, The GovLab, and Expertise France Announce Awardees for #Data4COVID19 Africa Challenge

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready…

On April 6, 2021, l’Agence française de développement (AFD), Expertise France, and The GovLab announced the awardees of the #Data4COVID19 Africa Challenge, following a call for innovative proposals that ran from December 15, 2020, through February 5, 2021. The challenge seeks to address the social, economic, and health challenges resulting from COVID-19 in Africa through new collaborations around non-traditional, non-statistical datasets.

 

With the input of a panel of outside data experts, AFD and its partners reviewed the over 80 proposals submitted, and selected the following:

 

  • Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (Mali): Researchers will seek to quantify missed opportunities for COVID-19 screening in vulnerable populations (such as people with HIV).

 

  • Université Alioune Diop de Bambey (Senegal): A university team will investigate how the crisis impacted the social, economic, and technical circumstances of students pursuing higher education and which action can be taken to mitigate negative effects.

 

  • Nigeria Centre for Disease and Control (Nigeria):  This project will seek to understand which social, economic, and political factors influence individual knowledge and perception of COVID-19 among Nigerians and how they shape population behavior with regard to safety protocols.

 

  • Code for Africa (Nigeria, Senegal): Participants will develop an “African COVID-19 Vulnerability Index” in coordination with the African CDC to give leaders up-to-date and granular resources about the public to support their decision-making.

 

  • The Population Council of Kenya (Kenya, Zimbabwe): The research team will examine how perceptions of COVID-19 and vulnerability to it influence the adoption of protective behaviors and to what extent the perceived vulnerability and adoption of protective behaviors differ by population sub-groups.

 

  • Institut National d’Hygiène Publique (Ivory Coast): This project will seek to understand how organizations can best obtain information on the spread of acute respiratory tract infections and how organizations can use different datasets to enhance existing disease surveillance and early-warning systems in a way that is proactive and sustainable long-term.

 

  • Data Science Institute – INPHB CI (Ivory Coast): The Data Science Institute will use anonymized social media data to seek to understand public needs and concerns about measures taken amid the COVID-19 pandemic, including curfew and lockdown restrictions, with an aim of reducing mistrust of authorities.

 

“Though there’s been much progress around the world to develop collaborative data ecosystems that can improve people’s lives, there are still significant gaps. By funding this new and innovative work, we hope to build the data infrastructure needed to tackle the pandemic and other dynamic societal threats,” said Stefaan Verhulst, co-founder and chief research and development officer of The GovLab.

 

“Creating an environment to enable multi-disciplinary and multi-stakeholder collaboration for innovation to provide actionable strategic insights and contextual intelligence that leverage on data to address issues related to the COVID19 crisis is at the core of this initiative.”, said Thomas Melonio, Executive Director of Innovation, Research & Knowledge (AFD).  Peter Addo, AFD data specialist and Head of Datalab, echoed this point, noting, “This initiative is part of AFD’s effort to prioritize investments in data and the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) to contribute to an innovation-led, knowledge-based economy in Africa.” 

 

“The important number of proposals received is a genuine proof that there is a real need for data related support in Africa” said Béata Suszterova, project coordinator within Expertise France. “The selected proposals are all very relevant and we are looking forward to working with our African counterparts on this data challenge”.

 

In addition to total funding of €567,000 for all winning projects, laureates will have access to a Situation Room, an online meeting place where funded researchers and select data experts can meet to discuss their current work, brainstorm solutions to major challenges, and share findings. This resource will enable peer-to-peer learning and broaden the impact and reach of each individual project. Data-driven professionals interested in providing support can send an email inquiring at datastewards@thegovlab.org

 

AFD and its partners will remain engaged and help manage the Situation Room. It will also communicate outcomes as they emerge. Organizations are encouraged to visit https://datachallenge.africa for more information on forthcoming work.

 

 

About the Agence française de développement :

The Agence française de développement Group (AFD) is a public institution that implements France’s policy in the areas of development and international solidarity: climate, biodiversity, peace, education, town planning, health, governance, etc. Our teams are actively involved in more than 4,000 projects with a high social and environmental impact in the French Overseas Departments and Territories and in 115 countries. We thus contribute to the commitment of France and the French people to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

www.afd.fr     @AFD_France

 

About Expertise France :

Expertise France is a public agency and a key actor in international technical cooperation. It designs and implements projects that sustainably strengthen public policies in developing and emerging countries. Governance, security, climate, health, education… It operates in key areas of sustainable development and contributes alongside its partners to the implementation of the 2030 Agenda.

https://www.expertisefrance.fr/       @expertisefrance

 

 

About The Governance Lab at the NYU Tandon School of Engineering :

The Governance Lab’s mission is to improve people’s lives by changing the way we govern. Our goal at The GovLab is to strengthen the ability of institutions — including but not limited to governments — and people to work more openly, collaboratively, effectively, and legitimately to make better decisions and solve public problems. We believe that increased availability and use of data, new ways to leverage the capacity, intelligence, and expertise of people in the problem-solving process, combined with new advances in technology and science, can transform governance. We approach each challenge and opportunity in an interdisciplinary, collaborative way, irrespective of the problem, sector, geography, and level of government.