African Science Frontiers Initiatives
@AfricanScience2
Raising the next generation of African scientists with the right competence to drive Africa's developmental and transformational agenda.
You might like
Now available: Paper 5 in The Art of Career Time and Timing. Exploring the hidden costs of missed or delayed kairos—and why timely courage matters. Read & share: shorturl.at/4SvCJ
Now Available: Paper 4 in The Art of Career Time and Timing Series The Rewards of Kairos: Living the Benefits of Recognizing and Seizing Career-Defining Moments Read the paper here: asfirj.org/content/?sid=1…
Now Available: Paper 3 - Seizing Kairos: The Courage to Act on Career-Defining Moments In this third paper, Prof. Nwaru turns decisively to action—exploring how to act on kairos once it has been discerned. Read the paperhere: asfirj.org/content/?sid=9…
Now Available: Paper 2 in The Art of Career Time and Timing Series "Recognizing kairos: how to discern the right career moment" It is a paper to engage with, reflect on, discuss, and share. Read it here: asfirj.org/content/?sid=3…
Colleagues, Today we publish the *9th paper* in the ASFIRJ Special Issue on African Women in Science. Author: *Miss Pani N. Fominyen* *ASFIRJ link:* asfirj.org/content/?sid=b… *DOI link:* doi.org/10.70040/asfir…
JUST PUBLISHED The 8th paper in the ASFIRJ Special Issue on African Women in Science. Article Author: Dr. Kezia H. Mkwizu ASFIRJ link: asfirj.org/content/?sid=b… DOI link: doi.org/10.70040/asfir…
Prof. Nwaru’s Career Navigator 2026 The journey begins… The first paper in Series 1 is now published: "The Art of Timing: A Greek Gift for Modern Careers." It’ll inspire you. It’ll empower you. It’ll elevate your career thinking. Read it here: shorturl.at/OTmzm
JUST PUBLISHED Women in science in contemporary Africa from historical and cultural perspectives BY NEBA ET AL. ASFIRJ link: asfirj.org/content/?sid=0… DOI link: doi.org/10.70040/asfir…
Our first article in 2026 is the 2nd editorial from the ASFIRJ Special Issue on African Women in Science. Drawing on 3 articles published in the issue, the editorial shows that African women’s scientific engagement is deeply rooted in indigenous knowledge predating colonialism.
JUST PUBLISHED The impact of age, gender, and quality of life on hippocampal volume and cognitive function in apparently healthy Sudanese elderly individuals BY JUBARTALLAH ET AL. ASFIRJ link: asfirj.org/content/?sid=b… DOI link: doi.org/10.70040/asfir…
JUST PUBLISHED Women networks leading change in science in Cameroon: perspectives on the HIGHER Women Consortium and CaPROWN BY FONDZE-FOMBELE ET AL. ASFIRJ link: asfirj.org/content/?sid=3… DOI link: doi.org/10.70040/asfir…
The 5th paper in ASFIRJ Special Issue on African Women in Science is out today, showing how women’s science networks in Cameroon drive leadership and gender equity through mentorship, capacity building, and advocacy to strengthen STEM across Africa.
JUST PUBLISHED African women in science from diverse perspectives BY OLADEJO ET AL. ASFIRJ link: asfirj.org/content/?sid=2… DOI link: https://doi:10.70040/asfirj-c88d-5gxb
Introducing the 4th ASFIRJ Special Issue paper on African Women in Science, highlighting underrecognized contributions, resilience, STEM gender gaps, and inclusive policies.
Colleagues, Here comes the 4thpaper in the ASFIRJ Special Issue on African Women in Science. The article analyzes African women scientists in literature, showing how cultural narratives challenge stereotypes and promote inclusive, decolonized visions of science.
𝗣𝗿𝗼𝗳. 𝗡𝘄𝗮𝗿𝘂’𝘀 𝗖𝗮𝗿𝗲𝗲𝗿 𝗡𝗮𝘃𝗶𝗴𝗮𝘁𝗼𝗿 LOADING..... 𝐹𝘳𝑜𝘮 𝗝𝗮𝗻𝘂𝗮𝗿𝘆 𝟮𝟬𝟮𝟲, 𝘐’𝘭𝑙 𝑠𝘩𝑎𝘳𝑒 𝑐𝘢𝑟𝘦𝑒𝘳 𝑟𝘦𝑓𝘭𝑒𝘤𝑡𝘪𝑜𝘯𝑠 𝘵𝑜 𝑜𝘧𝑓𝘦𝑟 𝑖𝘯𝑠𝘪𝑔𝘩𝑡 𝘢𝑛𝘥 𝘪𝑛𝘴𝑝𝘪𝑟𝘢𝑡𝘪𝑜𝘯 𝘧𝑜𝘳 𝘵ℎ𝘰𝑠𝘦 𝘯𝑎𝘷𝑖𝘨𝑎𝘵𝑖𝘯𝑔 their 𝑝𝘢𝑡𝘩𝑠.
JUST PUBLISHED Artificial intelligence in education: developing AI-driven solutions to improve learning outcomes for girls in Africa BY OGUNWALE ET AL. ASFIRJ link: asfirj.org/content/?sid=7… DOI link: doi.org/10.70040/asfir…
Colleagues, We bring to you the 2nd paper in the ASFIRJ Special Issue on African Women in Science. This perspective highlights AI’s potential to improve girls’ education in Africa, stressing inclusive design, ethics, supportive policies, and addressing persistent barriers.
JUST PUBLISHED Kenyan environmental reform: Maathai’s thoughts based on African culture in Indonesian perspective BY RIZALAL. ASFIRJ link: asfirj.org/content/?sid=f… DOI link: doi.org/10.70040/asfir…
Colleagues, Today, we bring you the 1st paper in the ASFIRJ Special Issue on African Women in Science. It explores how Wangari Maathai’s ideas shaped the Green Belt Movement, drawing parallels with Indonesia in a broader Africa–Asia context. Please read, reflect, and share.
United States Trends
- 1. Porzingis N/A
- 2. Kuminga N/A
- 3. Warriors N/A
- 4. Skubal N/A
- 5. Gonzaga N/A
- 6. Podz N/A
- 7. Hield N/A
- 8. #AEWDynamite N/A
- 9. Dalen Terry N/A
- 10. Ty Jerome N/A
- 11. Yabu N/A
- 12. Jokic N/A
- 13. Knicks N/A
- 14. Tigers N/A
- 15. Trey Murphy N/A
- 16. Doug Christie N/A
- 17. Brandon Garrison N/A
- 18. POTS N/A
- 19. Tingus Pingus N/A
- 20. Zags N/A
You might like
-
Social Protection and Senior Citizen affairs
@SP_Kenya -
Olubori Paul
@olubori33 -
Mater Misericordiae Hospital
@materkenya -
Ahmed Ddungu
@AhmedDdungu1 -
IVUGA BAND
@ivugaBand -
Uwa Suleiman
@UwaSuleiman -
Jattani Guyo
@Jattaniguyoo -
Dennis Waithaka
@Wambiridennis -
Gabriel Mwangi
@gabukaratu -
UnyimeAbasi.
@tiia_nelson -
Juan Manuel Pardo Garcia
@JMPardo86 -
Eleanor
@ea_eleanor
Something went wrong.
Something went wrong.