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Deadline for applications: October 18, 2019, 5pm EAT
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The African Union, Humanitarian Affairs, Refugees and Displaced Persons Division of the Department of Political Affairs, is organizing an “Humanitarian Innovation Challenge" to identify five promising digital technology-based ideas which tackle forced displacement or other humanitarian challenges in Africa.
The challenge is part of the activities of AU’s theme of the Year 2019: The Year of Refugees, Returnees and Internally Displaced Persons: Towards Durable Solutions to Forced Displacement in Africa. The innovations are also expected to tackle other aspects of humanitarian challenges including man-made/natural disasters in Africa e.g. conflicts, famine, droughts, floods, epidemics, etc.
The top five (5) innovators will be invited to a three day-long Prototype Lab in Nairobi (Kenya) on 20 – 22 November 2019 where they will receive professional coaching/mentorship and support to bring their idea to the next level. The event will close with a pitching sessions where the individual /team with the most convincing concept will receive 20.000 EUR to develop their idea into an innovative digital product, service or tool in an intensive accelerator phase.
The accelerator phase of the project will take place in the winners’ country or region in 2020.
The five selected teams will receive the following support:
The team with the most convincing idea/solution (based on the final pitch to a jury at the end of the Prototype Lab) then will receive additional support through:
All intellectual rights on the ideas will remain with the respective teams. Neither the AU nor the GIZ will claim any rights on the ideas.
The AU strongly encourages diversity/balance in terms of age, gender, language and geography.
Please send your filled-out application form (Word/PDF, max 12 MB) to this email address: hic@africa-union.org with the Subject as follows: HIC Application – Submission
Note: If you already built a first prototype of your idea, you should provide a link to that in the application form. But: the idea shouldn’t have been launched to a broader public yet (> ~100 people/users).