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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20261102
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20261113
DTSTAMP:20260423T215702
CREATED:20260302T110719Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260420T090529Z
UID:5290-1793577600-1794527999@africalics.org
SUMMARY:Call for Applications - 12th AfricaLics PhD Academy
DESCRIPTION:** Submission deadline extended to 1st May 2026** \nThe 12th AfricaLics Ph.D. Academy on Innovation and Competence Building Systems will be held in Johannesburg\, hosted by the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits) and the AfricaLics Research Capacity Strengthening Project. \n\nCall for applications \nThe AfricaLics network is an academic research and capacity-strengthening network that focuses on how innovation (the process through which new or improved products\, processes\, organisational forms\, ways of working\, and acting are introduced into new environments) occurs and the relationship this has with economic and social development in African countries.  Such research is becoming known in the network as ‘innovation and development studies’ because it is at the intersection of innovation studies and development studies. \nThe 12th AfricaLics PhD Academy offers PhD students enrolled at African universities who work in the field of innovation and development studies the opportunity to gain a deeper understanding of this burgeoning field\, meet leading academics in the field\, and receive feedback on their PhD studies. \nThe 12th AfricaLics PhD Academy will be held as an in-person event at the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits) campus in Johannesburg\, South Africa. It will be held alongside the 7th AfricaLics Research Conference (https://africalicssouthafrica.witsevents.co.za/) scheduled for 10 – 12 November 2026. \nThis is a call for students enrolled in a PhD at an African university who work in the field of innovation and development studies to apply to participate in this residential PhD Academy event. \nInnovation and development studies \nThe AfricaLics network was founded in 2012 due to a growing recognition of the need for more support for academic ‘research on innovation’ that had relevance to the contextual environments of African countries.  This burgeoning body of work by African scholars is essential to ensure ‘research in innovation’ (i.e.\, research and development of specific inventions that can help solve practical problems)\, where most innovation policy and funding attention is focused\, can be effectively supported.  The concept of ‘research on innovation’ focuses on innovation processes\, what fosters innovation and on what may help new solutions get accepted and adopted.  It is particularly interested in understanding the impact of innovation on the social and economic development of African countries.  It considers these issues at the level of firms\, networks\, and collaborations as well as at the national\, continental\, and global levels. As such the work of scholars in the AfricaLics network is multidisciplinary being at the intersection of the established academic fields of innovation studies and development studies. \nThis multidisciplinary field includes researchers from a range of disciplines often studying innovation studies\, the economics of innovation\, innovation management\, technology management\, science and technology studies.  However\, the network also includes those from other more disciplinary fields such as engineering\, economics and political science. \nWho is eligible to apply? \nPhD students working in innovation and development studies and who are principally interested in how innovation relates to economic and social development in Africa are the main target group for the PhD Academy. \nThe Academy will host approximately 20-25 students from Africa and a handful of students from other parts of the world. \nSpecifically\, PhD students who wish to participate will need to fulfil the following requirements: \n\nwork explicitly on issues related to policy-oriented analysis of science\, technology and innovation\nbe able to present an original paper reflecting his/her research and/or thesis work that fits within the thematic areas of the AfricaLics network\npreferably be at least at the beginning of his/her second year at the time of the academy (a small number of first-year PhD students may be accepted)\n\nIf you are in doubt as to whether you can apply\, please contact us using the email address at the bottom of the call. \nWe will have a limited number of places available to master’s students studying in South Africa.  These selected students will be granted observer status i.e. can attend but will not present their work. \nMaster degree students who wish to participate will need to fulfil the following requirements: \n\nbe a registered Masters student in a South African university on a degree programme in the area of economics\, business or management studies\, sociology or development studies or similar\nhave a Masters project that will focus on an aspect of innovation studies (i.e. innovation management or innovation systems)\n\nTo improve diversity in the emerging academic community on innovation and development studies research in Africa\, we encourage female scholars and those from low-income countries to apply. \nDesign of the Academy \nThe Academy will invite frontier researchers in innovation and development from around the world to deliver lectures and mentor students.  The Academy also provides opportunities for PhD students to share their work and learn new skills. As such\, the Academy is made up of the following activities: \n\nLectures by senior researchers on areas ranging from research methodologies to the latest theories and empirical research in the fields of innovation\, innovation management and science policy.\nPresentations by doctoral students of their work with feedback from the senior scholars facilitating at the event.\nSessions focused on enabling interaction between students\, practitioners and policy makers on innovation and development issues\nStudy visits to innovation hubs\, innovative businesses and/or similar organisations\nSessions that focus on key skills that students need to complete their PhD and become successful academic researchers such as publishing or project management skills\nA practical project that helps students think through how to ensure their PhD project is addressing developmental issues and how to ensure results will be articulated to relevant policy and practitioner stakeholders.\nA two-day supervision workshop focusing on topics such as what good supervision looks like\, the student-supervisor relationship and key tools for the PhD journey (planning\, good work habits and how to deal with feedback).\n\nThe Academy’s language of instruction will be English. We will not be able to provide translation services. A good level of spoken and written English will be required by students accepted into this Academy. \nAn overview of the likely programme for the Academy is provided in Appendix 1. \nHow to apply \nPhD students who apply must submit an extended abstract of their PhD thesis\, not exceeding five (5) pages. \nMaster’s students who apply must submit an extended abstract of their Master’s project\, not exceeding two (2) pages. \nThe abstract must be submitted together with a covering letter\, the applicant’s CV\, and a recommendation letter from the applicant’s principal PhD/ Master’s supervisor or a senior scholar who is familiar with the applicant’s work. \nThese documents should be sent to the AfricaLics Secretariat (phd-academy@africalics.org) on or before 23:00 hours East Africa time on Friday\, 1st May 2026. \nFormat of abstracts \nAbstracts should be typed double-spaced in English with font size 12. The abstract must include the following sections: \n\nBackground and literature review\nThe research objectives or research questions\nMethodology including the data collection and analysis techniques to be used\,\nExpected contribution to academia and policy discussions.\nReferences\n\nPlease also make it clear in your application if you are preparing a thesis by publication or manuscript/ monograph thesis. \nSelection \nAll extended abstracts will be reviewed by at least two senior scholars from a review panel comprising members of the AfricaLics Scientific Board\, the AfricaLics Secretariat\, the AfricaLics RCS team\, and the host University. \nSelection will be made based on the academic quality of extended abstracts as well as on the basis of criteria aimed at promoting diversity (by location\, gender\, etc.).  Selection criteria for AfricaLics events are published on the AfricaLics website: http://www.africalics.org/selection-criteria/ \nSuccessful applicants will be notified by 15th May 2026 of their acceptance to the Academy. \nSponsorship and travel support \nSuccessfully selected participants will be expected to arrive on Sunday 01 November 2026 and leave on the night of Thursday 12 November 2026. The airport to arrive and depart from is OR Tambo International Airport. Airport shuttle arrangements will be made by the organisers. \nThe AfricaLics Research Capacity Strengthening (RCS) project will cover the cost of 11 nights of accommodation\, on a dinner\, bed and breakfast basis\, during the Academy for accepted PhD students. No daily subsistence allowance or stipend is provided but lunch and 2 refreshment breaks will be provided during the academy. Students should be expected to bring sufficient funds with them to cover the cost of any sightseeing and lunch on Sunday\, 08 November. \nThe AfricaLics RCS project also has funding to cover the costs of economy-class return airfares for those attending who are registered at an African university based in a country classified by the OECD as ‘least developed’\, ‘low income’ or ‘low middle income’\, and who will be attending from outside South Africa. \nIf you are interested in applying for this travel support\, please indicate as such in your cover letter and ensure that your cover letter and the support letter from your supervisor indicate how you have tried to find alternative sources of funding for your trip In addition\, such applicants must indicate that they have (a) tried to source funding from elsewhere and (b) have been unable to source alternative funding. Only those from African countries classified by OECD as least developed\, low or low-middle-income can apply for this travel support.  These applicants will be asked to complete a travel support request form. Details of this process will be made available once an applicant has received confirmation of their acceptance at the academy. Acceptance at the academy does not automatically guarantee financial support to cover the cost of your air ticket. If financial support is given to cover the cost of an air ticket\, the amount of support awarded may not cover the whole cost of the air ticket. No support is provided for ancillary costs associated with your travel e.g. visa costs\, other transport costs. Please note that travel support is provided on a reimbursement basis only\, except in exceptional circumstances. Please see AfricaLics travel support policy here: https://africalics.org/travel-support/ \nAll accepted applicants will be responsible for their own visa and travel insurance arrangements\, including the cost of these. \nConfirmation of attendance and final paper upload  \nAll successful applicants are expected to confirm their participation by 23:00 hours East African Time on Tuesday\, 1st September 2026; otherwise\, their place will be offered to another applicant. \nAll selected participants who confirm attendance will also be expected to upload a final FULL paper (details of this will be given in your acceptance letter) by 23:00 hours East African time on Monday\, 5th October 2026.  The full paper should be a full project proposal (for Master’s students) or a chapter of\, or paper from\, your thesis that you would like to present and get feedback on during the Academy (for PhD students). \nOrganisation and support \nThe 12th AfricaLics Ph.D. Academy is organised by Wits University in Johannesburg\, South Africa with support from the AfricaLics RCS project hosted at the African Centre for Technology Studies (ACTS)\, Kenya. The event is financially supported by Wits University\, the AfricaLics network\, and Sida (Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency). \nThe local organising committee at Wits University is led by: Prof. Geci Karuri-Sabina. Day-to-day organisation of the Academy at Wits University is the responsibility of Dr Amy Matua. Organisation of the Academy at the AfricaLics RCS project is being managed by Prof. Rebecca Hanlin. \n\nContacts \nFor any queries or questions about the academy contact: rebeccah@uj.ac.za \nFor general queries about Wits University: amy.mutua@wits.ac.za \nFor general queries about the AfricaLics RCS project: RCS@africalics.org \nFor general queries about AfricaLics: secretariat@africalics.org
URL:https://africalics.org/event/12th-phd-academy/
CATEGORIES:PhD Academies,Virtual Events
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