info@waaii.org

West Africa AI Initiative

Coordinating Responsible AI for West Africa

WAAII is West Africa’s neutral coordination infrastructure for responsible AI development — connecting policy, talent, research, capital, and implementation partners to turn regional AI ambition into measurable outcomes.

Across West Africa, governments, institutions, innovators, businesses, and young people are already moving toward an AI-enabled future. WAAII exists to ensure this movement is coordinated, inclusive, evidence-led, and rooted in the region’s development priorities.

Responsible AI for West Africa

About WAAII

The Coordination Layer for West Africa’s AI Future

The West Africa AI Initiative, WAAII, is an independent regional platform designed to coordinate responsible AI development across West Africa.

WAAII does not replace governments, compete with delivery partners, or operate as a technology company. It provides the shared coordination layer that helps institutions work together through standards, evidence, convening, quality assurance, and responsible AI frameworks.

Its role is simple but essential: to help West Africa move from fragmented AI ambition to coordinated AI action.

Why WAAII Exists

West Africa does not lack AI ambition. It needs coordination.

Across the region, AI is becoming central to digital transformation, economic competitiveness, public-sector innovation, education, enterprise growth, and youth opportunity.

But ambition alone is not enough.

Policies can remain disconnected from implementation. Training programmes can produce talent without clear pathways to work. Businesses can struggle to access trusted local expertise. Governments and funders can lack reliable evidence on what is working. Institutions can move in silos, duplicating effort instead of building shared capacity.

Without coordination, West Africa risks becoming a permanent consumer of AI systems built elsewhere. WAAII exists to change that.

Fragmented Efforts

AI initiatives are emerging across the region, but too often without shared standards, coordination, or interoperability.

Policy-Practice Gap

National and regional strategies need stronger implementation pathways, tools, and delivery coordination.

Talent-Opportunity Disconnect

Young people are learning AI skills, but many lack access to employers, projects, mentorship, and regional mobility.

Evidence Gaps

Decision-makers need better data on AI readiness, adoption, training outcomes, risks, and investment priorities.

Trust Deficit

Responsible AI requires a trusted neutral platform that can convene governments, civil society, academia, funders, and the private sector.

WAAII coordinates. Partners deliver. West Africa moves together.

WAAII is built on a federated coordination model. It works between regional policy direction and implementation partners, helping different actors align around shared standards, evidence, quality, and impact.

It is not designed to control national programmes or centralise AI activity. Instead, it supports governments, institutions, and delivery partners with frameworks, convening power, research, and coordination infrastructure.

Step 1

Regional Policy & Institutional Priorities

Set direction and define shared ambition.

Step 2

WAAII Coordination Layer

Standards, evidence, convening, quality assurance, and responsible AI frameworks.

Step 3

Delivery Partners

Universities, training organisations, research institutions, consultants, enterprises, governments, and civic actors.

Step 4

Regional Outcomes

Skills, jobs, responsible adoption, better policy, stronger institutions, and African-led AI innovation.

The Neutrality Principle

A platform for coordination, not control

WAAII’s credibility depends on neutrality. Its role is to enable, not dominate; coordinate, not replace; support, not compete.

WAAII Is

  • A regional coordination platform
  • A responsible AI champion
  • A standards and evidence hub
  • A public-good infrastructure
  • A convening platform for governments, institutions, and partners
  • A bridge between policy and implementation

WAAII Is Not

  • A technology company
  • A surveillance or political tool
  • A data-harvesting organisation
  • A replacement for national sovereignty
  • A training provider competing with partners
  • A centralised operator controlling country programmes

Strategic Pillars

Seven pillars for a coordinated AI ecosystem

WAAII advances its mandate through seven equal strategic pillars. Each pillar strengthens a different part of the regional AI ecosystem — from talent development and research to policy influence, investment, inclusion, and community.

Explore All Pillars
01

Skills & Talent Development

Building Africa-trained AI professionals through curriculum standards, certification pathways, mentorship, and delivery partner programmes.

  • AI literacy and professional capability
  • Curriculum and certification standards
  • Mentorship and career pathways
  • Delivery partner quality assurance
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02

AI Marketplace & BrainHub

Connecting Africa-trained AI professionals to organisations that need them, bridging the talent supply-demand gap across West Africa and beyond.

  • Talent-employer matching
  • Expert networks
  • Project and work opportunities
  • Cross-border talent visibility
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03

AI for Society

Ensuring AI development serves people, communities, and public-interest priorities through literacy, accessibility, and inclusive participation.

  • University partnerships
  • School and municipal AI literacy
  • Accessibility programmes
  • AI for underserved communities
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04

Investment & Consulting

Helping governments, banks, investors, enterprises, and development partners understand, fund, and deploy responsible AI strategies.

  • AI readiness advisory
  • Investment pathways
  • Venture development from capstone projects
  • Public and private-sector AI strategy
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05

Data Assets, Repository & Research

Supporting African datasets, applied AI research, repositories, hackathons, and evidence systems rooted in regional realities.

  • Open and responsible data assets
  • Research collaboration
  • AI hackathons
  • State of AI reporting
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06

Policy, Influence & Stage

Creating spaces for high-level dialogue, policy contribution, and regional thought leadership on responsible AI governance.

  • AI summits
  • CEO roundtables
  • Working groups
  • AU, ECOWAS, and national policy input
Read More
07

Community & Conversations

Building a Pan-African network of AI practitioners, policy thinkers, researchers, founders, and changemakers.

  • Peer learning
  • Community dialogue
  • Knowledge sharing
  • Practitioner networks
Read More

Operating Model

Four functions. One coordinated regional system.

Across all its strategic pillars, WAAII performs four core institutional functions: convening stakeholders, developing standards, coordinating partners, and generating evidence.

These functions allow WAAII to support responsible AI development without becoming a centralised operator or competing with those implementing programmes on the ground.

F1

Convening & Dialogue

WAAII brings together governments, regional bodies, development partners, private sector actors, academia, civil society, and delivery partners to align priorities and reduce fragmentation.

Examples

  • Regional AI forums
  • Policy roundtables
  • Working groups
  • Multi-stakeholder consultations
F2

Standards & Frameworks

WAAII supports the development of shared frameworks for responsible AI, capability standards, deployment guidelines, and sector-specific governance.

Examples

  • Regional AI ethics principles
  • AI capability standards
  • Responsible deployment guidelines
  • AI readiness frameworks
F3

Partner Coordination & Quality Assurance

WAAII helps delivery partners work within shared standards while maintaining neutrality and quality across programmes.

Examples

  • Delivery partner endorsement
  • Training quality assurance
  • Programme monitoring
  • Regional alignment of initiatives
F4

Knowledge & Evidence Generation

WAAII strengthens evidence-based decision-making by tracking aggregated ecosystem metrics, publishing insights, and documenting what works across the region.

Examples

  • State of AI in West Africa report
  • Policy briefs
  • Data spine
  • Benchmarking and ecosystem mapping

Responsible AI for West Africa

Technology must serve people, institutions, and society.

For WAAII, responsible AI is not only about compliance. It is about trust, dignity, transparency, inclusion, accountability, and African agency.

West Africa’s AI future must be built in a way that protects rights, strengthens institutions, expands opportunity, and reflects the region’s languages, histories, cultures, and development priorities.

WAAII works to ensure that AI adoption is not extractive, exclusionary, or disconnected from local realities. It supports a future where West Africa does not merely consume AI, but builds, governs, and leads it.

01

Human-Centred

AI should strengthen human capability, not replace human dignity.

02

Inclusive

AI development must include youth, women, persons with disabilities, underserved communities, and diverse language groups.

03

Accountable

AI systems and policies must be transparent, explainable, and subject to oversight.

04

Locally Relevant

AI must respond to African realities, data contexts, institutions, and development needs.

05

Evidence-Led

Responsible AI must be guided by data, research, monitoring, and learning.

Our Identity

African wisdom. Modern intelligence. Regional coordination.

The WAAII identity brings together Adinkra symbols and a coined modern continuity mark to express the values behind responsible AI coordination.

Together, these symbols reflect what WAAII stands for: a future where Africa’s wisdom systems and modern AI infrastructure work together to shape responsible progress.

“WAAII is not just building an AI ecosystem. It is helping West Africa coordinate the intelligence, institutions, and values needed to lead.”

The Six Symbols

  • Adinkrahene

    Leadership

  • Nkonsonkonson

    Unity and connection

  • Ananse Ntontan

    Wisdom, creativity, complex intelligence

  • Mate Masie

    Listening and knowledge retained

  • Wawa Aba

    Resilience and endurance

  • Infinity Thread

    Continuity, interdependence, long-term coordination

Looking Ahead

From regional coordination to continental influence

WAAII’s long-term ambition is to help West Africa become a recognised leader in responsible AI development and to provide a coordination model that can support wider African AI governance.

By strengthening talent, evidence, standards, policy, enterprise adoption, and regional partnerships, WAAII supports a future where young West Africans can build AI careers, launch AI-enabled ventures, contribute to global governance, and shape the technologies that affect their lives.

  • 01Stronger regional AI coordination
  • 02Shared responsible AI frameworks
  • 03Better evidence for policymaking
  • 04More AI-ready institutions and enterprises
  • 05More pathways from skills to opportunity
  • 06Stronger African representation in AI systems
  • 07Long-term ECOWAS institutionalisation and continental relevance

Knowledge Hub

Evidence for better AI decisions

WAAII’s Knowledge Hub will serve as a home for research, policy briefs, frameworks, insights, and data-driven recommendations that help decision-makers understand and act on the region’s AI priorities.

State of AI in West Africa

An annual evidence report tracking regional AI readiness, adoption, talent, policy, and investment trends.

Responsible AI Frameworks

Guidelines and principles to support ethical, inclusive, and accountable AI deployment.

Policy Briefs

Concise recommendations for governments, institutions, funders, and ecosystem actors.

Research Repository

A curated space for applied research, datasets, case studies, and regional learning.

Convenings

Creating the rooms where West Africa’s AI future is shaped

WAAII convenes the actors needed to move responsible AI from ambition to action. Through forums, roundtables, working groups, summits, and stakeholder dialogues, WAAII creates neutral spaces for alignment, trust-building, and shared decision-making.

Explore Upcoming Convenings

West Africa AI Summit

A flagship regional platform for policy, enterprise, research, innovation, and responsible AI leadership.

CEO & Institutional Roundtables

High-level conversations with public and private-sector leaders shaping AI adoption.

Working Groups

Focused technical and policy communities addressing standards, talent, data, ethics, and implementation.

Community Dialogues

Open conversations with practitioners, researchers, civil society, youth, and ecosystem builders.

Who We Work With

A platform for many actors, serving one regional future

WAAII is designed for multi-stakeholder collaboration. Its value comes from connecting institutions that often operate separately but need to move together.

Governments & Regional Bodies

Policy alignment, implementation support, peer learning, and responsible AI frameworks.

Development Partners & Donors

Coordinated investment pathways, reduced duplication, measurable outcomes, and ecosystem intelligence.

Universities & Research Institutions

Research coordination, responsible data systems, talent development, and applied AI collaboration.

Private Sector & Enterprises

AI readiness, talent access, responsible adoption, and trusted local expertise.

Civil Society & Communities

Accountability, inclusion, rights protection, public awareness, and social impact.

Delivery Partners

Programme implementation under shared standards, quality assurance, and regional coordination.

Partner With Us

Partner with WAAII to shape responsible AI for West Africa

WAAII invites governments, development partners, universities, private sector institutions, civil society organisations, funders, researchers, and delivery partners to collaborate in building a coordinated AI future for the region.

Whether your work is in policy, skills, research, investment, enterprise adoption, digital rights, or community development, WAAII provides a neutral platform for alignment and shared impact.

Stay Connected

Stay connected to West Africa’s AI coordination agenda

Receive updates on WAAII’s research, convenings, policy work, partnerships, and responsible AI initiatives across the region.

We will only send relevant WAAII updates and institutional communications.

West Africa’s AI future must be coordinated, responsible, and built to last.

WAAII exists to help the region move together — with trust, evidence, standards, and shared purpose.