CARTA Newsletter (July-Dec 2017) CARTA NEWSLETTER July Dec 2017

The newsletter of the Consortium for Advanced Research Training in Africa Vol 7. Issue 5 July-December 2017 My vision for CARTA’s future: ruminations from Emeritus Executive Director Alex Ezeh By Eunice Kilonzo, CARTA communications officer. D r. Alex Ezeh has a clear vision for how research can support African development: to grow the size and scope of African researchers from across the continent able to generate quality, relevant and prodigious amounts of evidence that can answer the most pressing questions of our time. Through the CARTA program, and its 12 partner institutions around the continent, this is becoming a reality. The APHRC emeritus director sat down to mull over the “interesting, exciting, real journey” that CARTA has taken, while laying out his hoped-for vision for the future. “Perhaps of all the things that I did at the African Population and Health Research Center (APHRC) the one that I am really proud of, is CARTA,” he said. “The program is innovative, impactful and clearly thought through. It has the right type of impact we want to see happen in Africa and within African institutions.” Prof. Sharon gives Dr. Alex Ezeh a card with farewell messages from the participants of the Board of Management Meeting in Nairobi, Kenya in September 2017. In this issue P1: My vision for CARTA’s future P3: Research Capacity strengthening new Director P3: CARTA program updates P4: Study by CARTA fellow critical in malaria research P5: Kudos to our fellows P8: Photo gallery P10: International conference presentations by CARTA fellows P11: CARTA funders and northern Partners P12: Publications CARTA was born from a seed planted in 2005, when an unsuccessful candidate for an APHRC staff position noted with concern that there were no APHRC staff who had achieved doctoral degrees from African institutions. “We did a review of all the staff at APHRC and indeed, we had never given a job to someone with a PhD from an African university,” he said, which prompted an investigation that revealed three main reasons such candidates were ultimately unsuccessful in joining the APHRC team. “Three things stood out: first, they were not able to speak to the current debate in the areas they are working on – to the point that many times their ideas were 5-10 years behind where the current discourse is. Secondly, [there were concerns about] the methodological sophistication of their research. Were they able to apply the right models, were they able to interpret the results well? “Finally, these candidates were largely unable to defend their intellectual position. These assessments yielded a convening of leaders from universities around the continent a year later, and that 2006 meeting was a turning point: the realization of the critical need for a PhD program that provided clear markers for future success that included sustained commitments to research output on and for the continent, to keep the best and brightest minds in Africa rather than contributing to the brain drain that has impeded national and continental socio-economic development. P14: Calendar of activities Building a vibrant multidisciplinary African Academy able to lead world-class research that makes a positive impact on Public and Population Health.