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Reimagining Decentralized University Education in Africa: Toward a Scalable Framework for Industry-Linked Learning Hubs Inspired by ALU and CSA Rwanda

Author

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  • Sixbert Sangwa

    (Department of International Business and Trade, African Leadership University, Kigali, Rwanda)

  • Emmanuel Ekosse

    (Department of International Business and Trade, African Leadership University, Kigali, Rwanda)

  • Isaac Museveni

    (Department of International Business and Trade, African Leadership University, Kigali, Rwanda)

  • Simeon Nsabiyumva

    (Department of International Business and Trade, African Leadership University, Kigali, Rwanda)

Abstract

This study investigates how decentralized, industry-linked learning hubs can address Africa’s enduring higher education challenges of access, affordability, and employability. It proposes a scalable framework combining the African Leadership University (ALU)’s multi-city model with the Community Services Association (CSA) Rwanda’s district-based learning ecosystem. The study is guided by three research questions: RQ1: What systemic enablers support the diffusion of industry-linked university hubs in Africa? RQ2: What key barriers limit diffusion, and how do they vary across countries? RQ3: How can proven models (e.g., ALU, CSA) be adapted and costed for scale? (2)Methodology. A qualitative comparative analysis was conducted using 35 high-credibility secondary sources filtered via a PRISMA-adapted protocol from an initial 245 records (2010–2025). Four cases—ALU, CSA, Ashesi University, and UNICAF—were analyzed through the lenses of Diffusion of Innovation, Triple Helix, and Experiential Learning theory. Although the study relies exclusively on secondary sources, we applied light-touch text-mining in MAXQDA: policy documents were tokenised, stop-words removed, and coded with an unsupervised LDA algorithm (k = 6) to surface latent themes that triaged sources for qualitative comparative analysis; no clustering or association-rule modelling was undertaken. Visual tools—including causal-loop diagrams, scorecards, and a Gantt-style scale-up roadmap—supported synthesis. (3) Findings. Five core enablers emerged: policy alignment, institutional autonomy, Triple Helix linkages, diversified finance, and contextualized curricula. Barriers included regulatory rigidity, funding fragility, governance gaps, and digital divides. The proposed Pan-African Learning Hub Framework blends ALU’s experiential pedagogy with CSA’s grassroots model, enabling vertical progression from district-level cooperatives to regional research hubs. A three-year scale-up plan (USD 400–4,000 per student/year) suggests viability under flexible policy conditions. (4) Research Limitations / Implications. Secondary-data reliance constrains causal attribution and excludes francophone/North African contexts. Field validation and financial modeling are recommended for future work. (5) Practical Implications. Policymakers and institutions can use this framework to pilot scalable, employment-linked hubs without constructing new campuses. (6) Originality / Value. This is the first study to align Africa-wide policy ambitions with operational design and costing of university-linked hub models.

Suggested Citation

  • Sixbert Sangwa & Emmanuel Ekosse & Isaac Museveni & Simeon Nsabiyumva, 2025. "Reimagining Decentralized University Education in Africa: Toward a Scalable Framework for Industry-Linked Learning Hubs Inspired by ALU and CSA Rwanda," International Journal of Research and Innovation in Social Science, International Journal of Research and Innovation in Social Science (IJRISS), vol. 9(3s), pages 5204-5222, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:bcp:journl:v:9:y:2025:i:3s:p:5204-5222
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