Africa stands at a decisive moment in its technological evolution. The global race to shape the rules, norms, and power structures of artificial intelligence is accelerating, and the continent must decide whether it will be a rule‑taker or a rule‑maker.
At the LSE Africa Summit 2026, held from 28–29 March, this question framed both my contribution as a Panellist on 28 March and my role as Debate Synthesis Speaker on 29 March.
Across these two engagements, one message emerged with unmistakable clarity: Africa’s future in the age of AI will be determined not by external forces, but by the strength of its institutions, the coherence of its strategies, and the courage of its leadership.
The panel discussion, titled “Rules of the Game: Data Sovereignty, AI Governance, and Continental Strategy,” brought together policymakers, scholars, and practitioners to interrogate the continent’s readiness for a rapidly shifting digital order. While Africa has produced an impressive array of strategies, from national AI frameworks to the African Union’s continental vision, the gap between policy and implementation remains wide. It is within this gap that Africa’s technological destiny will be shaped.
My intervention emphasised a foundational truth: policy without execution is aspiration; execution without institutions is fragility; and institutions without ethics are dangerous. Africa must therefore build not only the frameworks that articulate its ambitions, but the institutional muscle that can enforce them.
This includes regulatory bodies capable of auditing AI systems, data protection authorities with real enforcement powers, and public‑sector institutions equipped to procure, deploy, and monitor AI responsibly.
The conversation on data sovereignty is a prime example of where Africa needs to shift from rhetoric to action.
Too often, sovereignty is reduced to questions of data localisation or legal ownership. Yet sovereignty, in its truest sense, is about control, value, and agency. Who extracts economic value from African data? Who sets the standards that govern its use? Who bears the risks when AI systems fail?
These are not technical questions; they are political ones. And they require Africa to negotiate from a position of strength. This is why I argued for the development of strategic negotiation frameworks—continental mechanisms that enable African states to engage global actors with coherence and leverage. Fifty‑five fragmented national strategies cannot negotiate effectively with the G20, the OECD, or the major AI‑producing nations.
A unified continental voice can. Africa must therefore harmonise its regulatory approaches, pool its bargaining power, and articulate a shared vision of what ethical, equitable, and development‑aligned AI should look like.
The panel also explored the ethical dimensions of AI governance. African values, human dignity, communal responsibility, moral accountability, must not remain abstract ideals.
They must be encoded into procurement rules, technical standards, and institutional practices. Ethics that are not operationalised become decorative. Ethics that are institutionalised become transformative.
On 29 March, I had the privilege of delivering the Post‑Synthesis Remarks for the Inter‑University Debate between the London School of Economics and Imperial College London.
The debate, centred on the societal implications of emerging technologies, offered a powerful demonstration of the intellectual maturity and ethical awareness of the next generation of leaders. Their arguments were not merely academic exercises; they were reflections of the real dilemmas that policymakers, technologists, and citizens must confront.
In synthesising the debate, I reminded the audience of a principle that underpins all discussions on technology:
“Technology is never neutral; it reflects the choices, values, and power structures of those who design and deploy it.”
This truth is especially relevant for Africa, where the stakes of technological adoption are high.
AI systems deployed without contextual understanding can reinforce inequalities, entrench dependency, and undermine sovereignty.
Conversely, AI systems governed with foresight, ethics, and strategic clarity can accelerate development, strengthen institutions, and expand opportunity.
The debate also highlighted the importance of respectful disagreement. In an era where public discourse is increasingly polarised, the ability to argue passionately while remaining grounded in fairness and intellectual honesty is a rare and valuable skill. Both teams demonstrated composure under pressure, agility in response, and a commitment to truth—qualities essential for future leaders navigating the complexities of AI governance.
Following the debate, delegates participated in breakout sessions designed to deepen the day’s insights through collaborative reflection.
These sessions underscored a key theme of the Summit: that Africa’s digital future will not be shaped by isolated conversations, but by sustained, collective engagement across sectors, disciplines, and generations.
Across both engagements, I returned to a conviction that guides my work: our task is not to build what replaces us, but what outlives us. In both human capacity and AI systems, Africa must build institutions, norms, and technologies that carry forward its values, its agency, and its developmental purpose. The goal is not technological mimicry, but technological sovereignty. Not dependency, but strategic autonomy. Not passive adoption, but active authorship.
As global AI norms crystallise, Africa must ensure that its voice is not peripheral but central. This requires investment in research, capacity‑building, and digital public infrastructure.
It requires political will, regulatory courage, and continental coordination. And it requires leaders who understand that AI will not determine Africa’s future Africa’s choices, values, and leadership will.
The LSE Africa Summit 2026 made one thing abundantly clear: Africa is not lacking in vision, talent, or ambition.
What it needs now is alignment, between policy and practice, between ethics and institutions, and between national priorities and continental strategy.
If Africa can achieve this alignment, it will not merely participate in the global AI landscape; it will shape it. The future is not waiting. The rules of the game are being written.
Africa must decide whether it will be written into the margins or into the centre. The choice is ours, and the time is now.




