Anne Shongwe

Last updated

Anne Shongwe
Anne Shongwe (8005676231) (cropped).jpg
Shongwe in 2012
Born
Anne Muthoni Githuku

1964 (age 5960)
Kenya
Other namesAnne Githuku, Anne Githuku-Shongwe, Anne Muthoni Githuku-Shongwe
Occupation(s)International civil servant and entrepreneur
Years active1993–present
Known forAfroes

Anne Shongwe (also known as Anne Githuku-Shongwe, born 1964) is a Kenyan international civil servant and entrepreneur, who has lived for three decades in South Africa. Since 2022, she has been the director of the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) for Southern Africa. She was born in Kenya and then completed a bachelor's degree at St. Lawrence University in Canton, New York, and a master's degree at American University in Washington, D.C. She spent fifteen years working with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and then launched a digital gaming development business to create a learning platform for teaching life skills to youth through mobile phones. Using sponsorships from various corporations and NGOs, Shongwe was able to distribute games as free downloads with a focus on Africa. Her games were designed to teach youth about human rights and social responsibilities. She aimed through the games to have youth question their beliefs in regard to topics such as sexual consent, exploitation and violence; environmental protection; and conflict resolution.

Contents

Shongwe's first two games, Champ Chase and Teka Champs, led to her selection as a finalist in the Cartier Women's Initiative Awards in 2010 and allowed her to open a second office in Nairobi. Her next games Haki 1: Shield and Defend and Moraba each won their categories at the World Summit Youth Awards in 2012 while Moraba also won a Meffy Award from the Mobile Entertainment Forum in London. Shongwe was selected that year for Paris's Netexplo Award and as a finalist for the Mobile Premier Award in Barcelona, Spain. In 2013, she was named a Social Entrepreneur of the Year by the Schwab Foundation and World Economic Forum. Haki 2: Chaguo Ni Lako won the PeaceApp Award in 2015 from the UNDP and United Nations Alliance of Civilizations. That year she launched Job Hunt, a game designed to teach players about financial literacy and employment.

In 2016, Shongwe returned to the United Nations and worked for five years as the Southern African Representative for UN Women. Her office was headquartered in South Africa and her responsibility included implementing programmes to promote women's empowerment and equality throughout Botswana, Eswatini, Lesotho, Namibia, and South Africa. Much of her work focused on educating women about reproductive health and HIV/AIDS and the role power inequalities play in increasing sexual exploitation, unintentional pregnancy, child marriage, and infection from sexually transmitted diseases. She also focused on the development of women-owned businesses and reducing inequalities in the workplace. In 2022, she began working for UNAIDS with the goal of eradicating AIDS in Africa by 2030 by ensuring that those infected with HIV received treatment and were therefore unable to transmit the virus.

Early life, education, and family

Anne Muthoni Githuku was born in 1964 in Kenya, [1] [2] to Mary Wambui (née Kuguru) and John Waruri Githuku. [3] [4] Her mother was a primary school teacher before becoming a writer and entrepreneur, [3] and her maternal grandfather was Davidson Ngibuini Kuguru, former member of parliament for the Mathira Constituency and Minister of Home Affairs. [3] [5] Her father was also a teacher before becoming a civil servant. He served as the Permanent Secretary of Planning and National Development and also as Permanent Secretary of Commerce and Industry. [4] Githuku had three brothers, Tony, David, and Patrick, and one sister, Rose. [3] [4] Education was a priority for the family and Mary and John not only ensured their own children's education, but helped other needy students obtain an education. [6] Githuku attended university in Canton, New York, graduating in 1987 from St. Lawrence University. [7] [8] She pursued further studies, earning a master's degree from the American University of Washington, D.C. in international development in 1991. [9] Githuku married Keith Mantayi Shongwe, with whom she had three children, Zawadi, Malaika, and Kwezi Shongwe. [3] [4]

Career

International development (1993–2008)

Shongwe began working for the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in South Africa in 1993. [10] Her work for UNDP involved coordinating national programmes on the response to HIV/AIDS, addressing poverty, and evaluating inequality and gender issues. In 2001, she became the policy advisor for Southern Africa on the HIV/AIDS challenges in Africa. [11] Presenting a paper, Drawing Linkages between Gender, Poverty and HIV/AIDS, in 2003 at a meeting on gender mainstreaming and poverty reduction strategies held in Pretoria, Shongwe stated that research had shown that poverty made women and girls between the ages of 19 and 20 six times more likely than similarly aged men to become infected with HIV because of their dependence on engaging in the sex trade or providing sexual favours for their livelihoods. She continued that the loss of workers, either because they were infected by HIV/AIDS or were engaged in caregiving, had heightened food shortages and lowered family incomes while decreasing the ability of governments to meet developmental goals. [12] Working under regional efforts to create solutions for the AIDS epidemic, Shongwe was one of the editors of the book, Turning a Crisis into an Opportunity: Strategies for Scaling up the National Response to the HIV/AIDS Pandemic in Lesotho (2004). [11] Professor Courtenay Sprague described it as a manual to prevent people who are uninfected from becoming infected and to assure that those who have the virus receive proper care and treatment. [13] Sprague lauded the innovations the book proposed and the fact that it was written by Africans, [14] but was critical of its lack of discussion on how to finance treatment and implement strategies, as people in the country could not normally afford the costs involved, and questioned whether national laws and policies were in-line with the proposed goals. [15]

Games developer (2008–present)

In 2005, Shongwe worried about the amount of time her son was spending playing video games. [10] She was also concerned at the negative messaging about Africa in Western media and the lack of positive platforms for youth to learn about the continent. [16] When she realised her son was learning history while playing the game Civilization , Shongwe decided that she wanted to try to develop video games as an educational tool. [10] [16] Her mother was confused as to why she wanted to leave stable employment with the United Nations, but Shongwe felt that it would allow her to make a positive change without having to deal with all the bureaucracy involved in international development work. It took her three years to exit the UNDP and establish her company Afroes, [10] (a combination of the words African and Heroes and Heroines). [10] [16] Lack of access in Africa to computers, the internet or video game consoles led Shongwe into developing games for mobile phones, which were widely used. [17] She spent 2008 researching how to develop a business model for making high-quality yet affordable games for mobile phones. [16] She studied the video gaming industry in South Africa and Kenya and attended gaming conferences in New York. [10] She furthered her studies at the University of Cape Town Graduate School of Business, earning a certificate in social innovation and attended Harvard University to study social entrepreneurship and Jones International University of Centennial, Colorado to study management. [18]

Shongwe hired recent university graduates in 2009, to help her design a business plan and began to engage with producers to commission games. [10] [16] Partnerships with organisations including the Ford Foundation, the Kellogg Foundation, Nokia, and Vodafone, allowed games to be developed which could be offered as free downloads to consumers. [19] She worked with the Nelson Mandela Children's Fund Champions for Children to produce the game Champ Chase, which was launched to coincide with the 2010 FIFA World Cup championship. [10] Champ Chase′s message was to raise awareness of sexual predation against children and promote the use of helpline numbers. [20] The game focused on players saving children from potentially harmful people and situations. [16] The second game she developed, with gamer Mxolisi Sakhile Xaba, was Teka Champs. Using information she learned from speaking with African footballers, the game allowed children to play soccer in various African townships with skill sets that real players had developed. [16] [21] Her work to use games as a focus on human rights and social change [20] led Shongwe to become one of three African finalists in the Cartier Women's Initiative Awards in 2010. [10] [17] The success of these first games allowed her to partner with UN Women's Southern Africa & Indian Ocean Islands division to create a game on preventing gender-based violence. [10] Working again with Xaba, [22] Afroes produced Moraba in 2011, which allowed players to progress in the game by completing quizzes designed to improve awareness of sexual health and attitudes about sexual violence. [23] The questions were created to make players evaluate their values and attitudes about sexual consent, and what constitutes abuse and rape. [24]

The success of these games led Shongwe to open a second office in Nairobi. Working with Nathan Masyuko, Wesley Kirinya, and artist Chief Nyamweya, [25] in 2011 Afroes developed Haki 1: Shield and Defend, [23] (Haki means "justice" in Swahili), [19] which focuses on environmental rights and allows players to protect trees from illegal loggers. [20] Two games developed by Afroes, Haki 1 and Moraba won their categories, respectively Go Green and Power 2 Women, at the World Summit Youth Awards held in Montreal, Canada, in 2012. [20] [22] That year, Moraba was selected as the winner in the category of Social Responsibility and Development for London's Meffy Awards, presented by the Mobile Entertainment Forum. [18] [26] Shongwe was selected as one of the ten laureates who received the 2012 Netexplo Award, given by the Netexplo Observatory, Paris, [2] [18] and she was one of three African finalists at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain, for the Mobile Premier Awards given by Apps Circus. [27] Also that year, Haki 2: Chaguo Ni Lako (Swahili for "the choice is yours" [28] ) was developed in response to an upcoming election. [19] The 2008 elections in Kenya had triggered social unrest and rioting and the game presented alternatives to civic engagement by presenting puzzles and quizzes about ethics, human rights, and leadership aimed at educating voters to resolve conflicts through peaceful interactions. [28] [23]

In 2013, Shongwe was one of two Africans, the other being Njideka Harry of Nigeria, who were distinguished as Social Entrepreneurs of the Year by the Schwab Foundation and World Economic Forum. [18] [29] Haki 2 received the 2015 PeaceApp Award from the UNDP and United Nations Alliance of Civilizations initiative which recognises digital games that promote conflict resolution and peacebuilding. [30] Shongwe wanted to develop a new game which taught financial literacy. [16] Working with Digital Jobs Africa, in 2015 she developed Job Hunt, a role-playing game, which allows players to engage as online workers. [23] [31] Players compete for positions, earn income for tasks completed on time, and learn skills, such as managing resources. The game was launched in Kenya, Nigeria, and South Africa. [31] Scholars such as Jolene Fisher have analysed the use of games for civic learning. [32] [33] Of Moraba, Fisher said that it focused on gender inequality and looked at human and legal rights for both men and women, rather than only for women, but that it did not discuss systemic biases in power dynamics. [34] Looking at the Haki series, Fisher lauded the message fostered by the games that Kenya's salvation comes from within Kenya, rather than from rescue by outsiders. [35] In evaluating Haki 2, she stated that players who engaged in sessions of the game at school and with organisations during Lagos Social Media Week reported enjoying the game and learning information from playing that they did not previously know. Further analysis of responses, however, showed that players were more active in the puzzle-solving portions of the game than in quizzes, which contained educational content. Despite these shortcomings, Fisher noted that the game served as a "catalyst for generating conversations" about contentious issues in society in various community outreach projects. [33]

International development (2016–present)

In 2016, Shongwe returned to the United Nations and became the UN Women representative, in the South Africa Multi-Country Office (SAMCO). [36] Her office was headquartered in South Africa and her responsibility included implementing programmes to promote women's empowerment and equality throughout Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia, South Africa and Swaziland, (now Eswatini). [18] Among the issues that she prioritised were gender-based violence and inequalities in power relationships. [37] [38] In 2017, she was named one of the inaugural Pond's-Vital Voices fellows, in a new initiative created between the skincare brand and the women's empowerment organisation to help leaders network and improve their global outreach in improving environmental, social, and human rights change. [39] [40] At the Higher Education Aids National Youth Conference that year, she addressed the problem of trading sex for marks on university campuses. She noted the links between the cost of obtaining an education and HIV infections, stating that students who struggled to pay for their studies were often the target of instructors who used their vulnerability to demand sex, making students more prone to contracting the virus. Students at the conference suggested the ]creation of an app that would allow them to communicate about instructors who abused their power. Shongwe agreed to analyse the suggestion but cautioned that if a system was implemented, verification processes would need to be put in place. [38] Other issues she worked on were building leadership skills for women, the development of women-owned businesses, and the reduction of inequalities and sexual harassment in the workplace. [41] Of particular interest were changes to government programmes aimed at growing large businesses, as they excluded small and micro-enterprises engaged in by women entrepreneurs. Shongwe stressed that large businesses have a finite ability to employ workers based on company needs, but economies could be positively changed by assisting hundreds of thousands of firms that employ only one person. [42] She also focused on access to health and social services, particularly those that dealt with reproductive health including unintentional pregnancy, childhood marriage, and HIV prevention. [43]

In 2022, Shongwe became the regional director for East and South Africa of the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS). [18] She partnered with Jacqueline Nzisabira, the Regional Policy Advisor for UN Women in Eastern and Southern Africa in 2023, in an initiative to educate women about local resources available for them to fund programmes and use resources to protect the health of their local communities. They noted that traditional norms and practices, as well as power inequalities, often left women out of policy development strategies and focused on biomedical solutions. The programme aimed to support grassroots activists in tailoring responses to the HIV crisis to local conditions. [44] Shongwe stated that poverty, inter-generational relationships, sex work, and violence cause higher infection rates for women, [45] but also stressed that men were less likely to be tested or treated, and if they sought treatment were less likely to continue with long-term care. [46] She urged continued diligence in the region, stating at the end of 2023 that Botswana, Eswatini, Rwanda, Tanzania and Zimbabwe were on the path towards meeting the goal of eliminating AIDS by 2030 because 95 percent of those living with HIV were in treatment and had reached the stage where the virus could no longer be transmitted. [47]

Selected works

Written works

Games

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lucy Kibaki</span> First Lady of Kenya (2002–2013)

Lucy Muthoni Kibaki was the wife of former Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki and was the third First Lady of Kenya from 2002 to 2013.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Margaret Ogola</span> Kenyan author

Margaret Atieno Ogola was a Kenyan Catholic novelist who wrote The River and the Source and its sequel, I Swear by Apollo.

Kate Copstick is a Scottish actress, television presenter, writer, critic, director and producer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Keep a Child Alive</span> US-based non-profit organization

Keep a Child Alive (KCA) is a nonprofit organization that provides healthcare, housing, and other support services to HIV/AIDS-affected communities in Africa and India. Co-founded by Leigh Blake and Alicia Keys, the organization aims to "realize the end of AIDS for children and families, by combating the physical, social and economic impacts of HIV." Keep a Child Alive organizes the annual fundraiser gala The Black Ball, established in 2004, where celebrities and philanthropists gather to support and raise awareness for the cause. Since the first Black Ball, the organization has raised over $28.7 million for HIV/AIDS treatment.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Miriam Were</span> Kenyan public health advocate and academic (born 1940)

Miriam Khamadi Were is a Kenyan public health advocate, academic, and recipient of the first Hideyo Noguchi Africa Prize. In 2022, she has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for her work in public health.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kenya women's national football team</span> Womens national football team representing Kenya

The Kenya women's national football team represents Kenya in women's football and is controlled by the Football Kenya Federation.

The video game industry is a young industry in Kenya. Though various start-up companies have appeared in the country since 2007, the existing businesses are dealing with funding issues and few successes have been made. However, shared spaces, support programs and government grants introduced over the past few years have allowed the industry to grow large in a short period of time. The introduction of broadband internet in 2009 spawned a generation of young ICT savvy people in the country and the Kenyan game industry is as of 2015 among the largest in Africa.

Agnes Odhiambo was a Kenyan human rights activist, who worked as a senior researcher and advocate for women's rights at Human Rights Watch, from 2009 to 2023.

Stellah Wairimu Bosire, is a Kenyan physician, corporate executive, human rights activist and author, a former co-executive director of Uhai Eashri and previously served as the chief executive officer of Kenya Medical Association and as the vice-chair of the HIV and AIDS Tribunal of Kenya.

The Beyond Zero Campaign is an initiative launched by Kenya's First Lady, Margaret Gakuo Kenyatta. Its goals are to improve maternal and child health in Kenya, and to reduce new HIV infections among children. The campaign was unveiled in 2013 on World AIDS Day, and launched on 24 January 2014. Many international organizations have joined Kenyatta and the Kenyan government in supporting Beyond Zero.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Elizabeth Ngugi</span> Nurse and public health researcher

Elizabeth Ngugi was a Kenyan Professor of Community Health at the University of Nairobi, and a nurse by trade. Her major contributions to her university's program was her research and work with local prostitutes to prevent HIV/AIDS transmission. Ngugi is described as the first Kenyan nurse to become a professor.

Karithi Ruth Wanjiru Nduati is a Kenyan Pediatrician and Epidemiologist who also teaches at the University of Nairobi College of Health Sciences. She is also currently leading an interdisciplinary program through the University of Nairobi School of Medicine to educate physician-researchers to best implement HIV treatment and prevention methods backed by research. The program was funded by the Fogarty Training Grant which is a part of the PEPFAR funds the country of Kenya received.

Teresia Mbari Hinga was a Kenyan Christian feminist theologian and a professor of religious studies at Santa Clara University in California. She was a founding member of the Circle of Concerned African Women Theologians.

Scholastica Kimaryo is a Tanzanian life coach and women's rights advocate, who formerly worked as an international civil servant and journalist for three decades. Born in the Kilimanjaro Region of Tanzania, she fought against tradition to earn her secondary and tertiary education. After attending the Girls' High School in Tabora, in 1971 she earned a Bachelor of Science in home economics through a cooperative arrangement with Victoria University of Manchester and the University of East Africa, of Nairobi. She worked as a journalist and earned a post-graduate diploma in journalism from the University of Dar es Salaam, in a programme sponsored by the government-owned Tanganyika Standard.

Susan Wakhungu-Githuku is a Kenyan business executive, writer, and publishing house founder, who in her youth was ranked as Kenya's top women's tennis player. She was born in Bungoma in British Kenya and around the age of 11 moved to Nairobi. While attending Loreto Convent Valley Road High School, she began to play tennis. In 1978, she qualified to play in the Junior girls' singles at the Wimbledon Championships. According to the sports journalist Ross McLean, she was the first Kenyan to play in a Junior Grand Slam tournament and until 2022 was the only Kenyan to have qualified for and played in a Junior Grand Slam event at Wimbledon. At the 1978 All-Africa Games she won the gold medal in women's doubles and the silver medal for the women's singles. While studying at St. Lawrence University in Canton, New York, she played in the college circuit. After winning a women's singles title at the World University Games in Mexico City in 1979, she became Kenya's top women's player. She was the 1983 women's champion at the Robbialac Classic Tournament and won the tournament's women's doubles title with her sister Judi Wakhungu the following year. In 1984, she was the winner of the women's matches at the Kenya Closed Championships and in 1987 won the bronze medal in ladies' doubles at the All-Africa Games, before retiring from tennis.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Norah Olembo</span> Kenyan biochemist and biotechnology policy advocate

Professor Norah Khadzini Olembo was a Kenyan biochemist and policy developer, who helped establish standards for use of biotechnology in Kenya. She was the first African to become a professor and chair of the biochemistry department at the University of Nairobi. Raised in Western Kenya during British rule, Olembo studied biology at Butere Girls High School before completing her A-level studies at The Mount School in York, England. She earned a bachelor's, master's, and PhD in botany, chemistry, and zoology at the University of Nairobi before taking post-graduate courses in biochemistry and molecular biology at the University of London. While teaching at the University of Nairobi, she founded the Biotechnology Trust Africa in 1992. The organisation funded research into development of disease-free crops and vaccines for animal diseases.

Doreen Alice Maloba Othero is a registered nurse, academic, and research and policy analyst in Kenya. She specialises in interdisciplinary solutions to development to ensure that the interrelated needs of the population and their health are incorporated into environmental conservation projects and policies. She is a senior lecturer at Maseno University and has been involved with the Lake Victoria Basin Commission conducting research and advising on policy since 2008. Her work has focused on HIV/AIDS control and management and sustainable economic and environmental development. Since 2014, she has been the regional coordinator for integration of population, health, and the environment for the East African Community.


Litha Musyimi-Ogana is a Kenyan, who has worked as an international civil servant and development advisor for many years. Since 2022, she has been an elected member of the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights, chairing the committees responsible for Indigenous people and people living with HIV. She organised the Women's Peace Train, which traveled from Kampala, Uganda to Johannesburg, South Africa to advocate for ending conflict and bringing stability for women and children in Africa for the Earth Summit 2002. From 2007 to 2015, she was the director of the African Union Commission's department of Women, Gender and Development. In 2013, she was recognised by Malawian President Joyce Banda as one of the distinguished women of Africa in a ceremony which was part of the decennial celebrations of the African Union's Maputo Protocol and in 2020 she was honoured with the African Women of Excellence Award by the African Union's Diaspora African Forum.

Susan Karanja is a Kenyan neurosurgeon. Upon her graduation in 2015, Karanja became the second female neurosurgeon in Kenya.

References

Citations

Bibliography