My Fellowship at the Robert Bosch Academy in 2019/20
Obiageli "Oby" Ezekwesili, former Vice President of the World Bank’s Africa division and co-founder of Transparency International, darts a look at her fellowship at the Robert Bosch Academy.
During my stay in Berlin as a Richard von Weizsäcker Fellow, I set out to design a template for the structural change of the politics, political culture, and outcomes of countries in Africa, especially Nigeria. The design for the structural change of Nigeria’s politics follows from the findings of my study, diagnostics, and evaluations of the nexus between the quality of national politics and the economic progress of countries, using the experience of post-World War II Germany as a case study. The Fellowship inspired an epiphany that shed much light on Nigeria’s political history and the dismal economic performance of the country since its independence in 1960.
My Project
The Robert Bosch Academy provided me the mix of academic and experiential opportunities necessary for the range of work that culminated in my evidence-based road map. For me and my fellowship, the round table that the Academy hosted in Berlin for select members of the Work Study Group that I established to co-lead the design of the #FixPoliticsInitiative as well as the conference co-hosted in Lagos were defining moments. The two events helped build a strong constituency and credible public ownership of the mission of #FixPolitics. The experiential component of my Fellowship stood out for me. The Academy was exceptional in identifying the right range of political and economic sector leaders in Germany for me to interact with and interview. The over 20 meetings significantly enriched my knowledge of the post-World War II experience of Germany, and the development of its political institutions and economy. Complementary to the one-on-one meetings were the many public speaking events that I headlined or participated in across Berlin and other cities in Germany. The debates at the events were usually candid and healthy, the kind that help build strong open societies. They provided crucial opportunities for me to learn about the German citizens and their role in the development of their democracy and economy.
I will remember the Academy, Berlin, and Germany as the incubation hub of the #FixPolitics initiative and as a guiding light for evaluating our citizens-led vision in the coming years as we course-correct our flailing democracy and arrested development.
My Community
The Academy’s strong selection of Fellows promoted a deep learning opportunity among us. The diversity of knowledge and experiences made discussions exceedingly insightful in terms of depth and breadth. Some of my colleagues were researching issues that intersected with my area of focus and so our Tuesday and Thursday lunch discussions enriched my research though global lenses. A testament of how useful the relationships were is that I continue to interact with some of my colleagues who have since become close friends in mutual support of our works.
Generally, I believe in the importance of finding communities like the one around the Robert Bosch Academy, in the sense of finding unusual leaders, to build a momentum to push others to make good change happen.
My Stay
The Academy-on-Tour events for the community of fellows such as the one to Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania also provided very important learning opportunities for me not only from the wider network of Fellows who participated but from the cities, issues, leaders, and citizens we interacted with at each event. The eclectic composition of the Fellows background enriches the global perspective on issues that affect our world and helped nurture tolerance and understanding while respectfully acknowledging differences in opinions.
My Fellowship coincided with the 30th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall and sharpened my knowledge and appreciation of how much a country and its people can change in 30 years. My stay helped expand the scope of my discovery, namely that German reunification remains a journey with multiple destinations. No society has evolved to a place of political and economic Eldorado. Berlin will always be the European city that I can most comfortably reside in outside of home because of the sheer range of intellectually rewarding networks it opened up to me.
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