Session
Mini OSPOs, Mega Impact: How Local Champions Can Kickstart Open Source Cultures in Africa
Open Source Program Offices (OSPOs) are often seen as the domain of Big Tech and elite universities—but what if the next open source revolution in Africa is being led by local champions in universities, startups, NGOs, and public institutions?
This session reimagines the OSPO model through an African lens, introducing the concept of Mini OSPOs: lightweight, community-driven, resource-conscious initiatives that advance open source adoption, digital public goods (DPGs), and talent pipelines—even in contexts with limited infrastructure or funding.
You’ll learn what an OSPO is, why it matters, and how to bootstrap one without needing millions in budget or a corporate title. Through real examples like Kenya’s UN-backed OSPO pilot and the grassroots momentum from the Open Source Community Africa network, we’ll explore how Mini OSPOs can:
Evangelize open source values tailored to African realities
Offer mentorship, skill-building, and structured contribution pathways
Bridge academia, government, and industry to grow sustainable ecosystems
Navigate governance, licensing, and compliance with minimal overhead
Scale regionally through collaboration and global partnerships
Backed by case studies, emerging research, and practical frameworks, this talk offers both strategic insight and actionable tools. You’ll walk away with a Mini OSPO Starter Kit—playbooks, maturity models, and community templates—to launch or grow an open source initiative wherever you are.
Whether you're a student, developer, policymaker, or open source advocate, this session will leave you informed, inspired, and equipped to help shape Africa’s open source future—from the ground up.
Joan Njeri
Software Engineer & Open Source Contributor
Nairobi, Kenya
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