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About IMANI Center for Policy & Education

IMANI, founded in 2004, is an African based nonprofit, non-government organization dedicated to educating society on the benefits of a free economy and fostering public awareness of important policy issues concerning business, government and civil society. Through seminars, publications and articles, IMANI and its international partners seek to promote enlightened inquiry based on sound values and scholarship. IMANI is headquartered in Accra, the capital of the country of Ghana in Africa. International network partnerships include Instituto Bruno Leoni ( Milan, Italy), The Heritage Foundation (Washington, D.C.), International Policy Network (London, England), Initiative for Public Policy Analysis, Nigeria, Atlas Center for Economic Research (Washington, D.C.), among many others.





Letter from Franklin

Dear IMANI Friends & Partners,

Ideas, they say, are everywhere but knowledge is rare. An authentication process is needed in order to certify that ideas put forward do not breed unintended consequences. The world has learned rather painfully through two world wars how bad ideas ended freedom in the free world. Many Western countries have since labored to build stronger institutions that promoted progress.

We in Africa are still experimenting ideas that failed others in the past. And the results are not farfetched; today average per capita incomes in rich countries are fifty times that of Sub-Saharan African countries. Despite some shining examples in Botswana, South Africa and Mauritius, over 40 African countries continue to invest illogical business regulations, corrupt, bloated and inefficient bureaucracies, scant respect for contracts, and absence of property rights and worrying deficits of free and competitive markets within Africa.

Our institutions of learning are fast losing their credibility as knowledge factories and the results have been ill-equipped graduates unable to grasp the workings of a free enterprise. There cannot be a spontaneous reaction to put off the challenges posed by decades of misrule unless we begin to invest in what Economist Frederic Hayek calls second hand dealers in ideas. The task is arduous but we at IMANI are committed to it.

Our seminars, programs and leadership initiatives offer a chance for restorative reflection on the meaning of free enterprise, leadership, and sound public policy based on non-partisan principles.

Our core mission is to research economic trends for the benefit of government, business and civil society. For that, we have been the sole double recipient in Africa of the John Templeton Prize awarded in recognition of excellence in public advocacy in support of the building of institutions in a free society. We are known for specific and rigorous application of free-market solutions to an array of complex social problems.

Through seminars, policy programs, conferences and leadership development initiatives, IMANI and its international partners seek to promote non-partisan inquiry and an appreciation for open societies.

With your support, we can help Africans learn the keys to building successful economies and responsible leadership.

Franklin Cudjoe

Executive Director, IMANI

Podcasts

Monday, October 26, 2009  

IMANI and AfricanLiberty.org's Franklin Cudjoe speaks to TV3 on why state-sponsored school feeding programme is failing

Listen to the interview here

Monday, October 26, 2009 

IMANI's reaction to Ghana's Presidential Spokesperson attack on one of IMANI's staff.

Listen to the reaction here.

Monday, October 26, 2009

IMANI and AfricanLiberty.org's Franklin Cudjoe speaks to TV  Africa on why Ghana was ranked seventh most well-governed in Africa

Please listen to the interview here.

Radio Discussion on Nation Building Monday, February 02, 2009 Africanliberty.org's editor and IMANI's executive director, Franklin Cudjoe discusses consistency and consensus building in prosecuting governance in Ghana. The discussion was on Ghana's Joy FM, and his co-discussants were, Hon. Haruna Iddrisu, Minister-designate for Communications, Mr. Gabby Otchere-Darko, and Executive of the Danquah Institute and Dr. David Pessey of the Socialist Forum of Ghana. The hour-long discussion begins on Window 10 here. --------------------- Monday, January 26, 2009 IMANI's Senior Fellow, Kofi Bentil discusses extravagant end of service benefits to former Presidents of Ghana with Ghanaian Politicians. The radio discussion was held on Joy FM. You can listen here . Interview begins on window seven.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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