experts
Jane Munga
Fellow, Africa Program

about

Jane Munga is a Fellow in the Africa Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, where she leads research on technology policy. Her work addresses how African countries can harness digital technologies to advance inclusive and sustainable growth. Her work focuses on the nexus of digital policy, digital partnerships, and developing the foundational elements of digital development.

Before joining Carnegie, Jane served in the Kenyan government as an advisor and economic expert, shaping national and regional digital policies and frameworks. Her policy work supported policy interventions, multilateral and public-private partnerships, and strategic thinking around digital transformation.

At Carnegie, she spearheads the Africa Technology Policy Tracker project, a platform mapping ICT and AI policies across the continent, and convenes high-level dialogues with governments, regional bodies, and global partners. She is contributing expert analysis as a member to the International Advisory Body on Submarine Cable Resilience, and as a senior advisor on the International AI Safety Report, foregrounding African priorities in global digital governance.

Jane’s scholarship has been published on various academic, policy, and media platforms. Her work foregrounds the imperative of sustainable digital development through robust policy frameworks, digital partnerships, and resilient digital infrastructure.

Jane holds a PhD in Political Science and Government, and master’s degrees in Economics and Management from the University of Alabama, along with dual bachelor’s degrees in International Studies and Business Administration from Stillman College. She is fluent in English, Kikuyu and Swahili.

affiliations
education
PhD, University of Alabama, MA, University of Alabama, BA, Stillman College
languages
English, Swahili
featured work
video
These Undersea Cables are the Key to Africa's Future

A network of undersea cables connects the entire world and holds the internet together. In the last few decades, these submarine cables have also allowed millions of Africans to go online. Today, major tech companies and governments like Google, Meta, and China have made great efforts to connect Africa to the online world.

In The Media
in the media
Resetting U.S. Africa Foreign Policy in Trump 2.0: Technology as a Driver

To reclaim its role as a key partner in Africa’s digital landscape, the United States must adopt a technology-driven foreign policy with a focus on AI and digital infrastructure.

Megatrends Afrika Policy Brief
paper
Digital Public Infrastructure: A Practical Approach for Africa

Digital public infrastructure (DPI) has the potential to support Africa’s digital transformation. However, for this to happen, there are crucial baselines that must be considered on the continent, including situating these systems within existing governance and digital frameworks.