
CRC-TRR 228
Envisioning the Future of Rural Africa
Latest News
GSSC Seminar Series: Is the Africa Charter a Helpful Tool in Creating a More Inclusive and Transformative Global Science Culture?
Be a Student Reporter at Tropentag 2025
Global Histories of Violence (c.1800-2025) Conference at the University of Warwick
Bonn Diversity Days 2025: Family Matters – Balance & Belonging
Energy Expansion in Kenya: Prospects, Challenges and Implications for the Global Energy Transition – Talk by Frankline Ndi
Dissemination Workshop in Dodoma: Discussing Futures of Rural Transformation
Video: Anna-Katharina Hornidge on Research, Training and Value Chain Development in Tanzania
New Publication: The Unintended Socio-Economic Transformations of Kenya’s Green Energy Boom
Professor Theobald Frank Theodory Appointed to NEMC Board of Directors
New Publication: How Land-Use Change Shapes Carbon Storage in African Savannas
Bridging Science, Policy, and Community: Reflections from a Season of Conferences
New Publication: Kenya’s SGR Fuels Land Inequality. How Different Land Tenure Systems Offer Varying Degrees of Protection and Vulnerability
CRC-TRR Public Lecture: Kai Koddenbrock
Peter Dannenberg Awarded Funding for Priority Programme Investigating the Sustainable and Crisis-Resilient Design of Supply Chains
Exploring Platformization in Africa: Insights from a Workshop on Digital Transformation
Picture: Nairobi, Kenya © wollwerth, Envato Elements
Our Projects
Exploring Future Making and Social-Ecological Transformation in Rural Africa
The CRC is structured in three project groups, each organized around a bridging concept that addresses specific aspects of SET and future-making. Project group A (‘coupling’) studies the articulation between social and ecological subsystems, B (‘boundaries’) looks at the shifting zones of interaction and confrontation, and C (‘linkages’) explores cross-scalar drivers, connections and causations. Empirical research focusses on development hubs in the Kenyan Rift Valley (KRV), the Southern Agricultural Growth Corridor of Tanzania (SAGCOT), and the Kavango Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area (KAZA). The CRC builds upon profound research experience from the applicants and African partners, amplifies the unique combination of expertise at the universities of Bonn and Cologne, fosters partnerships with scholars and scientific institutions in Africa, and aims at making Bonn-Cologne one of the leading centres of innovative research in the emerging field of futures studies and social ecology in Africa.
CRC Events
We host a variety of events
We regularly organise a variety of events bringing together academics, experts, the general public and other stakeholders to discuss the results of research conducted within the CRC. The goal is to to explore innovative approaches to future-making in rural Africa and to address some of the challenges arising in the context of our research. Events include the CRC Public Lecture Series, various exhibitions aimed at transfering our research results to a wider audience and internal events such as summer schools, workshops, booklaunches, research-retreats and more.
Our Partners
CRC Members
Our Team of Experts
We are proud to have a talented and dedicated team of researchers and coordinating staff who are working together to achieve our mission. Our team of researchers is made up of individuals from a wide range of disciplines including geography, anthropology, political science, agroeconomics and soil science. The CRC emphasizes international collaboration and the contributions of team members from our African partner institutions are critical for our success.