ACBF
Knowledge Networks

Thus far, the Foundation has launched two types of networks — the highly
specialized Technical Advisory Panels and Networks (TAP-NETs),
six of which have been launched, and the Country Level Knowledge Networks (CLK-NETs),
the first of which is being set up in Ghana. Both types of networks aim at
encouraging the emergence of communities of practice among development stakeholders
in the Foundation’s core competence areas with a view to facilitating
knowledge generation, sharing and dissemination for good governance, sustainable
growth and poverty reduction. Two other Knowledge Networks, the African Policy
Institutes Forum (APIF), and Economic and Financial Policymakers’ Network
(EFNET), are to be launched by the end of 2004.
All six TAP-NETs in
the Foundation’s six core competence
areas are in operation. These are:
Economic Policy Analysis and Management
(EPANET), Public Administration and
Management (PAMNET), Financial Management
and Accountability (FIMANET), Professionalization
of the Voices of the Private Sector
and Civil Society (VOICENET), Strengthening
of Policy Analysis Capacity of National
Parliaments and Parliamentary Institutions
(PARLIANET), and Strengthening and
Monitoring of National Statistics
(STATNET).
TAP-NETs are networks
of highly competent and experienced
professionals, intellectuals, development
practitioners, researchers, policymakers,
civic leaders, captains of industry
and commerce, among others, in the
six core competence areas of the
Foundation's operation.
The TAP-NETs were
set up to achieve three major objectives.
First, to improve the quality of
ACBF project and program operations
so that the Foundation can serve,
more effectively, the African continent
through projects, programs and knowledge
generating and sharing activities
in capacity building and development
management. Second, to work with
ACBF to identify, refine and apply
best practices in the capacity building
process. Members of the TAP-NETs
are therefore expected to contribute
their skills, experiences, strategies,
techniques and tools, among others,
and through the Foundation make these
available to policymakers and other
development managers in African countries
with a view to strengthening the
effectiveness of their capacity building
programs and enhancing their access
to a pool of experts who can contribute
valuable inputs to solutions to development
management problems. Third, to work
with ACBF to synthesize information
and share skills, experiences, and
best practices that could be of value
to African countries and regions
in the management of development
policies and programs for sustained
growth.
As communities of
professionals and practitioners,
the TAP-NETs offer many benefits.
First and foremost, they serve as
a pool of experts that strengthens
the effectiveness of ACBF's operations.
Beyond the Foundation's immediate
operational needs, the TAP-NETs offer
African countries the following,
among others: a platform on which
African policymakers and development
managers can seek information and
knowledge on specific development
policy issues; a tool for expanding
the frontiers of policy research
and analysis on specific development
policy problems; a pool from which
to draw and learn from country cases
in development management; a mechanism
for tapping into the skills of Africans
in the Diaspora to make the best
use of the brain drain; and a platform
for the confluence of global experience
and best practices in policies and
programs for national and regional
development.

The membership
of the TAP-NETs is global, comprising
African and non-African experts who
have distinguished themselves professionally
in each of the six core competence
areas that are guiding the Foundation's
interventions in capacity building.
The TAP-NETs will
provide the Secretariat with a pool
of experts that will supplement the
Secretariat’s skills in each
of the core competencies. As part
of the evolutionary process, they
will form the technical arms of the
communities of practice that the
TAP-NETs will support.
The Foundation’s
TAP-NETs are global knowledge networks
comprising African and non-African
experts and institutions. They are
set up to provide the Secretariat
with a pool of experts that will
supplement its skills in each of
the six core competencies. The TAP-NETs
will also form the technical arms
of the broader thematic networks
that will eventually evolve from
the TAP-NETs.
The Secretariat in 2003 launched the Country Level Knowledge Networks (CLK-NETs)
program that is designed to encourage policy institutes, professionals, development
practitioners, academics, researchers and other stakeholders in national development
to form a country-wide community of practice that will generate, systematically
collate and share knowledge for the management of economic and social policies
and programs. A CLK-NET is hosted by an existing well-established national
policy institute or specialized training institution, a number of which have
been set up or are being supported by the Foundation. So far, the establishment
of two CLK-NETs has been approved by the Executive Board. These are for Burkina
Faso and Ghana. The Burkina Faso CLK-NET will be managed by Centre d’Analyse
des Poliques Economiques et Sociales (CAPES). That for Ghana is being hosted
by the Institute for Statistical, Social and Economic Research (ISSER), Ghana.
The grant agreements
for both CLK-NETs will be negotiated
and signed in the second quarter
of the year for the formal launch
of their operations. Meanwhile, the
CLK-NET for Ghana that was approved
by the Executive Board much earlier
(May 2003) has started to put in
place institutional structures for
its activities. Known as the Network
on the Economy of Ghana (NEG), the
Ghana CLK-NET already has in place
most of the fundamentals, including
subject-matter specialists, for the
commencement of its operation.
As part of its program,
which seeks to support the emergence
of knowledge-based economies in Africa,
the Foundation will be establishing
a fully functional economic and financial
policymakers’ network (EFNET)
by the end of 2004. EFNET is an information
and a knowledge sharing community
of African ministers of finance and
economic development/planning as
well as other senior development
practitioners. The network is aimed
at fostering dialogue, information
and knowledge sharing (including
best and replicable practices) in
policymaking and implementation,
and supporting continuous mutual
learning among finance and economic
development/planning ministers and
other senior development managers.
The Foundation’s
Technical Advisory Panel and Network
on Economic Policy Analysis and Management
is currently reflecting on the details
relating to the operational modalities
of EFNET, the knowledge products,
services and solutions that it will
offer, and the value that it will
add to the development process. Meanwhile,
EFNET will assist finance and economic
development/planning ministers to
acquire knowledge that can help them
in the discharge of their responsibilities.
It will capture and process information
into useable knowledge, provide opportunities
for continuous learning, distil and
codify unique experiences into accessible
replicable practices, and support
advisory services that will provide
quick responses to questions and
queries raised by members of the
network or users of its knowledge
warehouse.
The main objective
of EFNET is to contribute to the
growth of intellectual capital on
the African continent and create
a mutual learning community for economic
and financial policymakers. To this
end, it will offer a platform for
closing information and knowledge
gaps through:
- Access to peer experience
among finance and economic development/planning
ministers.
- Access to replicable best
practices in economic and financial
policymaking, implementation,
monitoring and evaluation.
- The development of a community
of practice for information and
knowledge sharing.
- Provision of advisory services
for the members to have quick
responses to questions and queries.
- The development of a web site
that will offer EFNET members
access to regional and global
data and information required
for the efficient performance
of their duties.
- Provision of support to mutual
learning, professional exchanges
and for the deepening of understanding
of concepts, tools and techniques
in policy analysis and development
management.
- Access to independent professional
opinion from subject-matter specialists
on economic and financial policy
issues through links to the Foundation’s
Technical Advisory Panel and
Networks and Country Level Knowledge
Networks.
EFNET will constitute
the third of the Foundation’s
knowledge networks that are geared
towards operationalising aspects
of its knowledge management strategy.
These networks are vital instruments
for generating and sharing knowledge
among stakeholders in Africa’s
development in the area of capacity
building and development management.
APIF will constitute the fourth of the Foundation’s knowledge networks.
To date two workshops for Directors of Policy Research and Specialized Training
Institutions (Policy Institutes) have been held. The first one, organized by
ACBF in collaboration with the International Center for Economic Growth (ICEG),
was held in 1997, March 23-26. Participants brainstormed on an African Research
Agenda for Accelerating Development in sub-Saharan Africa (ARAADA). The recommendations
of the workshop helped lay stepping-stones for the institutionalization of
a forum that would enable policy institutes directors to meet regularly and
exchange views and share information on development issues and the performance
of their institutes.
A second workshop
of Policy Institutes Directors entitled
The Role of Policy Institutes in
Knowledge Generation, Utilization
and Dissemination for Development
Management and Poverty Reduction
in sub-Saharan Africa was held on
21 – 22 June 2001 in Harare,
Zimbabwe to address the area of knowledge
generation, utilization and dissemination.
The 2001 workshop institutionalized
the African Policy Institutes Forum
(APIF) and provided a vehicle for
the review of leading issues in development,
including institutional capacity
building for development policy analysis,
management and poverty reduction.
As a follow up to
the 2001 workshop a move is necessary
from knowledge generation, utilization
and dissemination for development
management and poverty reduction
in SSA to knowledge sharing among
policy institutes and establishment
of APIF Knowledge Network hence the
workshop on Knowledge Sharing Among
Policy Institutes and Establishment
of APIF Knowledge Network that is
to be held by the end of 2004.
The main aim of
APIF 2004 is to utilize the Forum
to review the experiences of policy
institutes in knowledge sharing,
challenges faced, successes and failures
in influencing policymaking, and
establishing APIF Knowledge Network. |