What African metropolitan areas teach the world about inclusive transitions

What African metropolitan areas teach the world about inclusive transitions

Author: Júlia Palmarola, Metropolis

The exchange consisted of four online sessions, each designed to facilitate peer learning among diverse territories —from North Africa to West, Central and East Africa. These sessions combined case-sharing, collaborative exercises and guided reflection to identify what works, what doesn’t and what is needed to move forward. The insights that emerged are not only relevant for Africa. They offer guidance for metropolitan areas around the world, including those in Europe, and they are now feeding directly into the development of the MICAD Toolkit, the project’s main output.

Metropolitan areas governing metropolitan challenges without formal metropolitan structures

A striking pattern across nearly all participating metropolitan areas was their ability to manage metropolitan-scale problems despite lacking formal metropolitan authorities. Issues such as land use, commuting, public transport, waste management or climate resilience routinely spill across municipal borders. Yet governance frameworks often do not.

African metropolitan areas described navigating:

  • overlapping mandates between municipal, provincial and national levels;
  • unequal technical and financial capacities across neighbouring jurisdictions;
  • unstable political environments that interrupt long-term strategies;
  • dependence on donor-funded programmes that may not be sustainable.

Despite these barriers, metropolitan areas are moving forward. They rely on pragmatic coalitions, informal coordination, and strong political leadership to address problems that require collective action. This resourceful, adaptive form of governance holds important lessons for regions with more rigid or centralised institutional systems.

Innovation is not just digital, it is collaborative

The Solutions Lab highlighted a second major insight: innovation in African metropolitan areas is rarely driven by technology alone. Instead, it emerges from processes that bring actors together —local governments, communities, civil society, academia and sometimes the private sector— to test new ideas in real-life conditions.

Several examples illustrated this clearly:

  • Addis Ababa’s use of data to guide corridor rehabilitation and green infrastructure planning.
  • Nouakchott’s community-centred climate adaptation strategies, rooted in nature-based solutions.
  • Casablanca and Tangier’s efforts to strengthen water management, mobility and environmental governance through intergovernmental collaboration.

These cases show that metropolitan innovation is, above all, a social and institutional process. Digital tools help —but only when they reinforce inclusive, transparent and collaborative ways of working.

Nouakchott, Mauritania: skyline of the sprawling Moor capital – buildings, palm trees and minaret – photo by M.Torres

Inclusion is the fundation, not the “extra”

Perhaps the most powerful lesson from the four sessions is that inclusion is not an add-on. It is a prerequisite for successful climate and digital transitions. Metropolitan areas consistently pointed to barriers that keep certain groups excluded from decision-making:

  • Limited outreach and communication formats that do not reach women, seniors, people with low digital literacy or communities in informal settlements.
  • Technical language that makes policy processes inaccessible.
  • Unequal access to digital tools needed to participate in planning or public services.
  • Difficulty engaging the private sector, a key actor in both transitions.

Yet the Solutions Lab also showcased strategies that bring inclusion to the centre:

  • multilingual platforms and simplified digital interfaces;
  • co-creation sessions involving youth, migrants, persons with disabilities or informal workers;
  • community-led climate awareness campaigns;
  • gender-responsive approaches to safety and digital governance;
  • local training to help residents use digital public services.

What emerges is clear: a transition can only be successful if the people most affected by it are part of the process from the outset.

The Solutions Lab is not an isolated activity. It is a core element of MICAD’s knowledge-gathering strategy. Before designing a Toolkit that should be internationally relevant, MICAD must understand how transitions are experienced in very diverse institutional, cultural and economic contexts. African metropolitan areas are not “beneficiaries” of European research —they are knowledge partners whose experiences are essential for creating tools that any metropolitan area, anywhere, can use.

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