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How Gender-Inclusion in Higher Education can transform Africa’s Future

Meekness Lunga-Ayidu, Director Higher Education SSA, British Council, ‘on how African women can thrive within systems designed to advance opportunity and inclusion

CAPE TOWN, South Africa, 5 November 2025 -/African Media Agency(AMA)/- Although access to higher education has improved, Sub Saharan Africa still has the lowest enrolment rate globally with only 9-10% compared to the global average of over 40%. While we have made some progress, we are still lagging. 60% of the young people who are not in education, employment or training are women. In as much as women’s participation in early stage and informal entrepreneurship across SSA now equals or even exceeds that of men, men are significantly more likely to own an established and growth-oriented business. Young women face significant additional barriers when attempting to access education or enter the labour market. Between 8 million to 11 million African youth will enter the labour market every year in the coming decades. Yet, only about 3 million new formal wage jobs are created yearly. Informal and self employment are becoming the norm. Action from governments and the private sector is required to close the gap between the increase in the working-age population and lagging job growth.

At the 16th Quadrennial General Conference of the Association of African Universities (AAU) in Rabat this year, the British Council presented groundbreaking research in collaboration with the African Network for Internationalisation of Education (ANIE) titled ‘Higher Education Gender Analysis: Access to Employability and Entrepreneurship Opportunities’. The research exposes systemic barriers across Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, and South Africa. The findings are sobering. Women in higher education still face discrimination, harassment, and exclusion from leadership positions. Gender policies, where they exist, remain poorly understood and rarely enforced. Female graduates face higher unemployment rates than their male counterparts, while socio-cultural norms continue to prioritise boys’ education, contributing to early marriages and dropouts.

The insights highlight the systemic challenges to advancing higher-education gender-responsive reforms in the four main countries, and chart a roadmap for higher education institutions, policymakers, funders, and partners to bridge persistent inequalities and develop enabling systems that could unlock sustainable gender inclusion in higher education. For example, entrepreneurship holds enormous promise for empowerment, yet a lack of start-up capital and support structures remains. By introducing post-graduation accelerator programmes that incorporate entrepreneurship training and seed funding for women, a challenge like this can be transformed into an opportunity for inclusive growth. This demonstrates the urgent need for systemic reforms that will drive innovation, employability, and inclusive growth, and achieve true gender equity in higher education.

The two proven models include programmes such as Innovation for African Universities (IAU) and Gender Equality Partnership grants that form part of the British Council Going Global Partnerships programme. These programmes offer scalable, evidence-based models that other institutions and development partners can replicate or adapt. Through multi-country initiatives, the IAU co-designs and implements projects that equip graduates, especially women, with market-relevant entrepreneurial skills and mindsets. Its approach blends industry-academia collaboration, start-up mentorship, and enterprise-focused curricula. By embedding gender-responsive teaching, strengthening institutional support for female entrepreneurs, and improving access to funding and networks, the IAU shows how higher education can drive economic transformation and support female students.

Gender Equality Partnerships grants foster cross-border collaboration by funding joint research, institutional partnerships, and policy dialogue that centre gender equity as a core value. Together, these initiatives form a practical, evidence-based blueprint for gender parity, turning research into action and offering adaptable frameworks that universities across Africa can implement.

The ‘Higher education gender analysis’ was commissioned under the latter programme, reflecting a clear commitment to embedding gender equity across all higher education initiatives. The study applied the Accountability for Gender Equality in Education (AGEE) framework to ensure its outcomes were evidence-based and intersectional analysis, addressing not only gender but also how it interacts with class, ethnicity, and geography. AGEE is a UNESCO-developed model that helps governments and institutions identify, monitor, and address gender inequalities in education through data-driven analysis, policy reform, and institutional accountability mechanisms.

And the evidence is clear. Systemic change is required and must be driven by three priorities: gender reforms that include robust anti-harassment procedures, gender-responsive policies and gender-sensitive student support services, such as childcare and flexible learning, amongst others; policy reforms that prioritise gender equity in higher education with affirmative action in admissions and faculty recruitment, targeted scholarships, and funding for female students and entrepreneurs; and higher education transformation that invests in digital skills and infrastructure and integrates entrepreneurship education across disciplines.

Higher education is more than access, it is a powerful lever for innovation, job creation, and economic transformation opportunities across sub-Saharan Africa. When business community including universities, governments, funders, and industry partners collectively take action to address gender disparities in higher education, we create a multiplier effect where women gain entrepreneurial skills, secure funding, access mentorship, and break cycles of inequality that have persisted for generations. The economic and social returns extend far beyond individual success stories to shape resilient, innovative societies.

A call for partnership depends on Africa’s future to unleashing the full potential of its people and now this is the moment for universities, governments, and industry partners to act decisively and scale proven models like the Innovation for African Universities and Going Global Partnerships to embed gender equity in policy and practice, and to champion women as the architects of Africa’s next chapter of growth. We cannot afford to leave half our talent behind. The British Council invites education leaders, policymakers, and funders to collaborate on systemic change that transforms access into empowerment and ambition into opportunity. This is the moment to champion women as the architects of Africa’s next chapter of growth based on proven models and frameworks with compelling evidence. Join the British Council in making gender-responsive higher education a reality across the continent.

Distributed by African Media Agency (AMA) on behalf of ENAMEN Consulting

About the British Council

The British Council builds connections, understanding, and trust between people in the UK and other countries through arts and culture, education, and the English language.

We work in two ways – directly with individuals to transform their lives and with governments and partners to make a bigger difference for the longer term, creating benefits for millions of people all over the world.

We help young people gain the skills, confidence, and connections they are looking for to realise their potential. We support youth to learn English, get a high-quality education, and gain internationally recognized qualifications. Our work in arts and culture stimulates creative expression and nurtures creative enterprise.

We are on the ground in over 20 African countries and deliver impact working with local institutions and partners.

Follow Meekness Lunga-Ayidu:

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Sources: 

Media Contact:

Nteseng Ngwenya

nmn@enamenconsulting.com

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Bullets beat Silver on penalties to win Plan Malawi’s end child marriage match

LILONGWE-(MaraviPost)-The country’s Peoples team, Nyasa Big Bullets thrashed Silver Strikers on post penalties in a friendly match organised by Plan Malawi at Bingu National Stadium (BNS) in the capital Lilongwe.

The game was organised in order to raise awareness on the dangers of early marriages.

The Central Bankers played without their talisman Mathew Sibale who is Mozambique bound despite wonderful display football.

Strikers were really the better side, creating lots of goal scoring opportunities but Ernest Kakhobwe was very outstanding in goals for the people’s team.

The closest chance fell through to the Bankers when Levison Maganizo exchanged passes with Timothy Chitedze to release Binwel Katinji who blasted his effort wide off the goal mouth.

Both first and second half of the match produced no goals despite Silver Strikers pressurizing their opponents in search for the opener but were denied by Kakhobwe who kept on producing stunning saves.

Consequently, the match had to be decided on penalties where the Bankers missed their opening two spot kicks, allowing Bullets to emerge 4-1 winners and walk away with a trophy and MK1 million.

This was the final game in the 2017 football calendar which Bullets will be in the new year smiling after failing to defend the TNM Super League that witnessed Be Forward Wanderers clinching the championship.

CRECCOM launches 2017-2022 strategic plan; communities urged to be proactive

By Brian Longwe

LILONGWE-(MaraviPost)-Malawians have been asked to pay vibrant participation and self-involvement in empowering child protection and youth development in the country.

The motive has come at a time when violation of children’s human rights has reached at a climax in the country.

Recent report from International Women’s Health Coalition has revealed that 15 million girls around the world are married every year, while a population of 37,000 girls under 18 years engage into eary marriages each day.

And corresponding to the report, UNICEF has disclosed that Malawi has the 11th highest child marriage rates in the world, with nearly 1 in 2 girls married before 18.

It is for that motive that Creative Centre for Community Mobilisation (CRECCOM), one of the organisations thriving to promote girl-child education in the country has embarked on a five-year strategic plan which will run from 2017 to 2022, as said by the Board Chairperson for the organisation Dr. Foster Kholowa.

Speaking during the official launching of the strategic plan in Lilongwe, Kholowa explained that one part of the program is to build capacity and scale up its already existing activities.

This helps to yield robust positive results in the scheduled period.

“For a prolonged time, we have witnessed how Malawi is struggling with the issue of child insecurity. That’s why we came up with an idea to review and revise our operations so that we should bring new ideas to end this problem,” said Kholowa.

He further added that since its establishment in 1999, CRECCOM has been working hand in hand with Other stakeholders including chiefs, mother groups and teachers to encourage students to be proactive in their education.

Paramount Chief Kawinga(representing Yao tribe) confirmed to this reporter that the coming of CRECCOM has made a tremendous change to his people as it has mobilised change in harmful cultural practices hindering girls’ right to education.

“At first we were putting much concentration on our cultural initiations like chinamwali than education, but through civic education campaigns which CRECCOM brought, almost everyone now realise and understand the signifince of educating a girl-child.” Kawinga explained.

As one of the partner to the organisation, the ministry of civic education, culture and community development has promised to commit itself in helping CRECCOM and other organisation working on the same, fulfil their goals.

The Principle Secritary for the ministry, Ivy Luhanga who was also the guest of honour at the event made assurance that the ministry will take part in monitoring the operations to make sure that the organisations stay focused on this workload.

In its plan, CRECCOM with financial support from USAID and other global partners will see 60,000 young mothers returning back to school and 200,000 youths being trained in technical professions.

GBV survivor Hawa Makwinja establishes organization: hosts 103 vulnerable children

growing cases of sexually exploited children and human trafficking.
Complements governmentment’s efforts to over come the challenges faced in Gender based violence

LILONGWE-(MaraviPost)-Gender- based violence (GBV) survivor, Hawa Makwinja, has established a non-governmental organization (NGOs) with the aim of championing vulnerable people’s rights, especially women and children.

Launched in the past week, the organization, “Ndife Amodzi Children’s Care (NACC)”, it is currently providing shelter to 103 vulnerable children at Area 36 in Lilongwe.
NACC’s birth comes after its founder Makwinja, suffered episodes of domestic violence after entered an early marriage at the age of 14 in 1997.
The 35-year old Makwinja said she got divorced in 2011 and left with the burden of caring for five children at Nanjiri in the district.
The divorce provided further torture for Hawa as her ex-husband sold the house; he claimed it belonged to his brothers. She thus left her with children homeless.
She approach the Human Rights Resources Centre (HRCC) for a multi-thousand Kwacha financial assistance to venture into a small cosmetic and zitenje business.
She reports that she suffered again when her shopkeeper stole shop items from her shop.
Nevertheless, after securing a police report she got another loan to help less privileged children from the area.
Makwinja has secured land and constructed offices and hotels for homeless children.
In an interview with The Maravi Post on the launch of the organization, Hawa expressed sadness at growing cases of sexually exploited children and human trafficking.
“It hurts me to see fellow women go through what I experienced. So, I have taken it upon myself to help out those in need. Recovery and reintegration of children who are victims of sexual exploitation, is very long process.
“We need all to take responsibility for the campaign to be effective. The organization has been established to provide a platform where communities can contribute towards curtailing GBV and other forms of abuses in families and communities,” said Makwinja.
Minister of Gender, Children, Disability and Social Welfare Jean Kalirani, commended Hawa for establishing the organization; she said it will complement Government’s effort to overcome the challenges women and men faced with GBV.
HRRC Executive Director Emma Kaliya, said the birth of the organization was a story for all people in the country to be proud of with Makwinja’s inspirational success story.
Echoing on the same, Chairperson for the Parliamentary Committee on Women Caucus Jessie Kabwira, who was once approached for help during Makwinja’s ordeal, observed that resilience pays and that every woman can be encouraged.