Ungana-Afrika

Ungana-Afrika
Founded 2004
Founder Toni Eliasz, Rudi von Staden, Ryan Jacobs
Type South Africa not-for-profit
Location
Area served
African Technology Service Providers and Civil Society Organisations
Method ICT program development, capacity-building, tools development and research
Employees
5
Website www.ungana-afrika.org

Ungana-Afrika, Swahili for "connect africa", is a non-governmental organisation based in Pretoria, South Africa that provides a wide range of ICT services for civil society within and outside of Africa. It aims to better empower civil society organisations, networks and related stakeholders, in terms of ICT capacity and resources, so they may more efficiently achieve their unique social missions.

Ungana-Afrika's efforts address critical digital divide issues within African civil society (such as the lack of technology capacity and universal access), through the implementation of new support programmes and tools, capacity-building and general research. Though some services are targeted directly to civil society organisations (across sectors), many of Ungana-Afrika's efforts go towards empowering the technology service providers and general Information and Communication Technology for Development (ICT4D) networks that jointly serve these organisations.

Ungana-Afrika's work has garnered it several awards for community leadership.

Services and Programs

Ungana-Afrika's work centers around 3 main service areas, each targeted toward a focused group of beneficiaries. All efforts, either directly or indirectly, aim to "empower development organisations to better integrate ICTs as a strategic, mission focused, tool".[1] These service areas are titled as follows:

Supporters, Clients and Affiliations

Ungana-Afrika's activities are funded through a combination of grants, project-specific funding and project revenue. Core supporters include the Open Society Institutes, Hivos and the Finnish government.

Notable clients include the Association for Progressive Communications (APC), CompuMentor, Sangonet, Women'sNet and EngenderHealth.

Ungana-Afrika also draws upon a number of partnerships within the ICT4D community. For example, Ungana-Afrika is an official member of the Association for Progressive Communications (APC).

Origins and History

Ungana-Afrika has been active in Southern Africa since 2003. In an interview, co-founder Rudi von Staden (29) said the organisation "was formed as a partnership with the student organisation then called AIESEC (a French acronym, for an association of students interested in economics), and OSISA (the Open Society Initiative for Southern Africa)." He continued to say "There were then some seven AIESEC members around the world, and they all came together in Johannesburg in 2003, with the objective of improving the technology capacity in NGOs in Southern Africa. There's still three of us of the initial seven who are still there — Ryan Jacobs from the United States, Toni Eliasz of Finland and myself."[2]

During its initial year as an AIESEC and OSISA project, Ungana-Afrika continued to evaluate and implement support models for Southern Africa's development community, including a relatively new mobile consulting and support method called eRiding.[3] In 2004, acknowledging the need for a sustainable nonprofit technology support hub in Southern Africa, Ungana-Afrika formally registered as a non-profit organisation and moved to an office in Pretoria, South Africa.

In recent years, Ungana-Afrika has increased its focus on capacity building and toolkit development for ICT support providers and the ICT support community. However, it still continues to deliver support and training directly to nonprofit and community service organisations in Southern Africa.

To date, Ungana-Afrika has received a number of national and international awards including an APC member award for "best initiative promoting the strategic use of ICTs for social change"[4] and a Dirk Award for "extraordinary contributions to the nonprofit and international NGO technology communities".[5]

See also

Notes

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