Pan-African Youth Take the Lead at CorpsAfricas 2025 All-Country Conference in Nairobi
Nairobi: African Youth Transforming the Continent, speakers at the ACC 2025 unanimously called for African governments to institutionalize youth volunteerism as a pillar of national development. They urged policymakers to create enabling environments while aligning volunteer programs with broader socio-economic objectives, including job creation, civic engagement, and education.
According to African Press Organization, at a time when Africa’s youth are calling for meaningful opportunities and a voice in shaping their future, there is a firm belief that they are the solution. Liz Fanning, Founder and CEO of CorpsAfrica, emphasized the vision to cultivate a generation of African leaders rooted in community and committed to sparking sustainable change from the grassroots up.
CorpsAfrica’s ACC 2025 is the organization’s flagship biennial gathering, uniting stakeholders to champion and accelerate youth-driven development across Africa. Building on the momentum of the ACC 2023 in Kigali, Rwanda, this year’s five-day summit aims to elevate the role of African youth as present-day catalysts for community-led, youth-driven transformation.
CorpsAfrica’s ACC 2025 convenes in Nairobi at a pivotal moment, as Africa’s youth champion calls for expanded access to employment, entrepreneurship, and meaningful economic inclusion. Africa is the world’s youngest continent, with more than 70% of sub-Saharan Africa’s population under the age of 30, yet faces a youth unemployment crisis of staggering proportions. For example, Kenya’s youth unemployment rate exceeds 38%, while Nigeria and South Africa grapple with even higher rates of 42% and 46% respectively.
The conference aligns with global recognition of volunteerism’s transformative potential, including the UN Volunteers 2022 State of the World’s Volunteerism Report, which urges nations to formally recognize volunteer time as a measurable national economic asset. Dr. Patricia Kingori-Mugendi, Country Director of CorpsAfrica/Kenya, emphasized reframing volunteerism as transformative leadership and professional development that accelerates public service for the 21st century.
CorpsAfrica envisions ACC 2025 as a catalyst for a fundamental shift, harnessing African philanthropy to scale grassroots innovation across the continent. The June 16-20, 2025 gathering embodies Ubuntu principles through its commitment to pan-African knowledge exchange and collaborative action. Beyond conventional conferences, ACC 2025 delivers actionable outcomes, from youth investment policy dialogues to hands-on social enterprise incubators and community innovation demonstrations.
Participants attended robust professional development workshops and received a professional certificate to accelerate their careers on completion of their volunteer service and become CorpsAfrica Alumni. The Government of Kenya reaffirmed its commitment to youth empowerment and innovation during the conference. Hon. Salim Mvurya, Cabinet Secretary for Youth Affairs, Creative Economy and Sport, challenged African nations to break free from donor dependency, urging a collaborative approach where governments, local businesses, diaspora networks, and communities jointly invest in youth volunteerism programs that deliver tangible opportunities, social inclusion, and dignity.
Africa’s youth have spoken with unmistakable clarity, Mvurya declared. They want jobs, not handouts; platforms, not patronage; and action, not promises. As policymakers, there is recognition of this reality. Young people are not waiting; they are building. CorpsAfrica’s model proves what happens when youth are equipped with both trust and tools to lead.
As the premier organization equipping young Africans to lead sustainable change in their communities, CorpsAfrica demonstrates a transformative model of development conceived by Africans, led by Africans, and implemented by Africans. The All-Country Conference sends a clear message to youth: as Africa’s true transformation architects, your place isn’t just in boardrooms; it’s in villages, farms, classrooms, and clinics. Real leadership begins where people live, work, and struggle, concluded Dr. Kingori-Mugendi.
CorpsAfrica is redefining volunteerism as a powerful professional pathway. By embedding service into education curricula, employment systems, and national development frameworks, CorpsAfrica is creating an ecosystem where community-driven solutions become Africa’s sustainable growth engine.