Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    $800K awarded by jury to 2 public defenders who sued for discrimination

    February 3, 2026

    Local young scientists scoop medals in India

    February 3, 2026

    BRED Abu Dhabi returns this April

    February 3, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • Contact Us
    • About Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms Of Service
    • Advertisement
    Tuesday, February 3
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    ABSA Africa TV
    • Breaking News
    • Africa News
    • World News
    • Editorial
    • Environ/Climate
    • More
      • Cameroon
      • Ambazonia
      • Politics
      • Culture
      • Travel
      • Sports
      • Technology
      • AfroSingles
    • Donate
    ABSLive
    ABSA Africa TV
    Home»Culture»How jazz improvisation can help shape transformative governance in Africa
    Culture

    How jazz improvisation can help shape transformative governance in Africa

    Ewang JohnsonBy Ewang JohnsonJanuary 19, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
    How jazz improvisation can help shape transformative governance in Africa
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link


    I recently watched Herbie Hancock describe a moment of pure stress with Miles Davis. In the middle of a solo, Hancock hit a wrong chord. But Miles didn’t treat it as a mistake; he took it as the new reality – data – and played into it creatively. What if that mindset could inspire a different way of governing in Africa? One that is inclusive, accelerates economic transformation and asserts the continent as a key player on the global stage. My conviction is that jazz improvisation, combined with our cultural foundations and the lessons of the informal sector, offers powerful clues for a transformative governance.

    Why transformative governance matters

    In July 2025, I sat on a panel organised by a development partner who was presenting its economic report about my country, Guinea. Sharing my views, I said that many of the issues raised—lack of economic diversification and inclusion, limited domestic resource mobilisation, poor public service and lack of modern infrastructure, limited financing for SMEs—only showed that much rests on the government’s shoulders. It is about public sector governance and its capacity to undergo a sweeping transformation.

    What we have in many places across Africa has helped strengthen our internal caste systems: ethno-regional and gender hierarchies, the duality between formal and informal economies, between large firms and micro-enterprises, urban and rural. If we don’t challenge this system, reforms will keep rewarding insiders and trapping outsiders at the margins. That is where culture and language become strategic.

    Culture and language at the heart of inclusive governance

    A serious conversation about development starts with culture as the foundation of our governance, markets and institutions. When we speak of debt, public investment or development strategies: no need to speak or write in foreign languages. Truly people-centred governance implies that laws, public policies, citizen budgets and participation are written in the languages citizens speak. Ngugi wa Thiong’o has long argued that culture – our languages, stories, music, humour, fashion, movies – is how we contest these hierarchies.

    Reforming governance must therefore mean reforming its linguistic infrastructure. In my time in government, I started these conversations with my team to see how we could borrow from our cultural metaphors and parables to translate key economic and financial reforms. My goal was not only to get citizens involved and hear their views but also use their buy-in as a shield against vested interests.

    Rwanda’s « Imihigo » illustrates how culture can become a governance tool. Rooted in a tradition where individuals publicly pledged to meet demanding goals or face dishonour, it has been adapted into a national performance contract system. Local governments sign « Imihigo » with the state and are regularly evaluated on delivery, turning a cultural practice of public commitment into a mechanism for accountability and better services.

    Jazz improvisation and the informal sector: navigating uncertainty

    According to the African Development Bank, Africa’s average real GDP growth is projected at 4.2 per cent in 2025 and 4.3 per cent in 2026. That is encouraging. But we know there will be shocks and uncertainty.

    In this context, informality is a technology of survival, adaptation and a shock absorber. It is how millions of Africans manage risk where formal systems are absent, slow or exclusionary: they work with what they have, rely on trust-based networks, adjust quickly and find workarounds that keep economic life moving. This capacity to operate in uncertainty is not marginal to Africa’s political economy – it lies at its core. It may be a silver lining for rethinking a governance that is nimbler and more honest about the world we live in.

    The Davis–Hancock anecdote captures improvisation at its highest level with responsible adaptation. That is what the informal sector does instinctively: it does not wait for ideal conditions; it iterates constantly and turns constraints into workable solutions.

    Directed improvisation for economic transformation and shared prosperity

    For political scientist Yuen Yuen Ang, effective states rely on what she calls “directed improvisation”: they set direction and boundaries, then experiment and adjust, treating policy as a series of trials rather than a fixed script. This resembles what we did with a pilot project after the construction of a new National Treasury building. Instead of a conventional tender that might have selected a shell company and delivered mediocre imported furniture, we chose a competitive, though simplified, responsive process targeting local informal-sector carpenters in Conakry.

    We identified craftsmen through a structured process familiar with the woodworking sector, ran a restricted consultation and asked candidates to produce a sample desk based on the Ministry’s specifications. A committee assessed quality and ranked the outputs. Around a dozen carpenters were selected and guided through the process, including very practical steps of formalisation and basic tax obligations.

    Visiting their workshops was eye-opening. Capacity varied sharply: equipment was uneven, working conditions often unsafe, electricity unreliable, and premises precarious. Yet many were training young apprentices, including those in social reintegration, proof that informal enterprises carry social value and transmit skills. The result of the pilot was striking: the carpenters delivered the full order, on time and with quality. For me, this is what inclusive, transformative governance looks like in practice: an entrepreneurial state that uses real instruments – such as procurement – to create pathways from informality to capability, from exclusion to economic opportunity, and from imports to local value chains.

    For too long, we may have been looking in the wrong direction – outward – when many of the answers were already inside our societies. Accepting reality as it is, drawing from our cultures, learning from what the informal sector does instinctively and adopting an entrepreneurial posture is one way to shape a governance that serves the many. Transformative governance, in this sense, is not theatre. But as we enter 2026, it might just be jazz!



    Source link

    Post Views: 106
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Ewang Johnson
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Why ‘masterpiece’ Wuthering Heights is so misunderstood

    February 3, 2026

    NFL's Bad Bunny gambit embraces socio‑political artistry for high-stakes halftime show

    February 3, 2026

    The policeman who inspired Al Pacino’s Serpico

    February 2, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Who is Duma Boko, Botswana’s new President?

    November 6, 2024

    Kamto Not Qualified for 2025 Presidential Elections on Technicality Reasons, Despite Declaration of Candidacy

    January 18, 2025

    As African Leaders Gather in Addis Ababa to Pick a New Chairperson, They are Reminded That it is Time For a Leadership That Represents True Pan-Africanism

    January 19, 2025

    BREAKING NEWS: Tapang Ivo Files Federal Lawsuit Against Nsahlai Law Firm for Defamation, Seeks $100K in Damages

    March 14, 2025
    Don't Miss

    $800K awarded by jury to 2 public defenders who sued for discrimination

    By Olive MetugeFebruary 3, 2026

    Home Daily News $800K awarded by jury to 2 public defenders… Public Defenders $800K awarded…

    Your Poster Your Poster

    Local young scientists scoop medals in India

    February 3, 2026

    BRED Abu Dhabi returns this April

    February 3, 2026

    Dami Atiba-Sogules: What No One Tells Men About Fertility Until It Becomes a Problem

    February 3, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo

    Subscribe to Updates

    Sign up and get the latest breaking ABS Africa news before others get it.

    About Us
    About Us

    ABS TV, the first pan-African news channel broadcasting 24/7 from the diaspora, is a groundbreaking platform that bridges Africa with the rest of the world.

    We're accepting new partnerships right now.

    Address: 9894 Bissonette St, Houston TX. USA, 77036
    Contact: +1346-504-3666

    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
    Our Picks

    $800K awarded by jury to 2 public defenders who sued for discrimination

    February 3, 2026

    Local young scientists scoop medals in India

    February 3, 2026

    BRED Abu Dhabi returns this April

    February 3, 2026
    Most Popular

    $800K awarded by jury to 2 public defenders who sued for discrimination

    February 3, 2026

    Did Paul Biya Actually Return to Cameroon on Monday? The Suspicion Behind the Footage

    October 23, 2024

    Surrender 1.9B CFA and Get Your D.O’: Pirates Tell Cameroon Gov’t

    October 23, 2024
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms Of Service
    © 2026 Absa Africa TV. All right reserved by absafricatv.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.