BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — Building on decades of collaborative research, international partnerships and global health efforts in Africa, Indiana University has formally launched a new Global Gateway office in Accra, Ghana. IU is the only public university in the United States to have a gateway of this sort on the continent.
“At Indiana University, we have ambitious goals for faculty to pursue transformational research with partners around the globe and for our students to have extraordinary educational experiences abroad,” IU President Pamela Whitten said. “The IU Ghana Gateway formalizes decades of IU engagement in the region and places us at the center of the world’s fastest-emerging economic hub.”
This bold step comes at a formative time for both the university and the continent. Africa represents the future of innovation and education, with 70% of Sub-Saharan Africa’s population under the age of 30. The United Nations projected that by 2050, Africa’s population will reach nearly 2.5 billion. The establishment of the IU Ghana Gateway also aligns with the university’s commitment — as part of its IU 2030 strategic plan — to fostering engagement, partnership and collaboration that strengthen the vitality of Indiana, the nation and the world.
Read stories about IU’s engagement in Africa
Like IU’s other international offices in Mexico City, New Delhi, Bangkok, Beijing and Berlin, the IU Ghana Gateway is designed to strengthen and broaden IU’s global engagement across world regions. Since the Beijing and New Delhi gateways were established nearly 10 years ago, these offices have connected more than 2,200 IU students with global internships, virtual exchanges and study abroad.
They have also served as interdisciplinary embassies for IU researchers abroad; gathering spaces for the university’s more than 140,000 internationally engaged alumni; proxy campuses for prospective international students; and hubs for cultural exchange between IU and its international university partners, nongovernmental organizations and local governments.
“Universities foster intercultural learning and competence, skills necessary for our students to thrive in a globalized world,” Kahn said. “Too often we are limited by geography to conversations that stop at our borders, but by committing to having a physical presence in Ghana, IU engages with rising social, economic and cultural leaders across Africa where they are. The Ghana Gateway will continue to connect students and scholars to global conversations and collective problem-solving on the African continent.”
Distinguished Professor of Linguistics Samuel Obeng will serve as the IU Ghana Gateway’s academic director, playing a key role in expanding IU’s strategic connections in the region. A leading scholar known for his pioneering contributions to the study of African language phonetics, Obeng was inducted into the Ghana Academy of Arts and Sciences in November 2023 and gave his inaugural lecture on May 20 following the gateway launch.