International Programme for Law and Development (IPLD) – Africa Plus 2025

 

An Edition Shaped by Dialogue, Collaboration and Co-Creation

From 6 June to 3 July 2025, UNIDROIT welcomed the fourth edition of the International Programme for Law and Development (IPLD) – Africa Plus, bringing together 26 professionals from 15 African countries – Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Egypt, Eswatini, Ethiopia, The Gambia, Ghana, Kenya, Mauritius, Nigeria, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.

The map is provided exclusively for illustrative purposes to depict participation. It does not reflect, nor should they be interpreted as reflecting, the views of UNIDROIT concerning the status of any country or territory, the delimitation of international frontiers, or national boundaries.

Over one online week and three intensive residential weeks at Villa Aldobrandini in Rome, the cohort engaged in a rich, cross-regional exchange of knowledge, practice, and innovation.

What truly distinguished the 2025 Africa Plus edition was its commitment to placing participants’ experience and expertise at the centre. Dialogue, co-creation, and peer exchange were woven throughout the Programme, shaping both content and outcomes.

Setting the Stage: an Engaging Online Start

The journey began online on 6 June, with opening remarks from UNIDROIT President Professor Maria Chiara Malaguti, Deputy Secretary-General Professor Anna Veneziano, and representatives of the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation.

The inaugural week was an essential part of the learning path. Participants presented real cases from their home institutions, prompting lively discussions introducing the diversity of national contexts but also created a shared language for the weeks ahead.

In Rome: Where Knowledge Meets Experience

When the group convened in Rome on 16 June, collaboration took centre stage. Guided by UNIDROIT Secretariat members and guest speakers, the group explored core UNIDROIT instruments and tools, examining their application and adaptability within African jurisdictions.

In the afternoons, the spotlight shifted to emerging themes. The seminar series reflected both UNIDROIT’s ongoing work and participants’ own priorities: sustainability in private law, the role of diasporas in development, the African Continental Free Trade Agreement, and strategies for harmonising private and commercial law across Africa. Each seminar became a platform to test ideas, challenge assumptions, and collectively refine perspectives.

Laboratories of Collaboration: Ideas Evolving into Projects

A hallmark of this edition was the Laboratory Sessions – informal yet structured spaces where participants refined their projects with guidance from UNIDROIT Legal Officers. The UNIDROIT Library and Archives also played a key role offering resources and inspiration, as participants explored how historical legal efforts could inform today’s reform agendas. By the Programme’s final week, initial concepts had matured into well-structured proposals grounded in research, comparative analysis, and peer feedback.

         

Showcasing Solutions for Africa’s Future

On 3 July, the cohort presented their projects to their peers, UNIDROIT experts, and invited guests. These proposals addressed some of the most pressing law-and-development priorities across the continent – from enhancing credit systems for rural economies, to embedding climate resilience in legislative frameworks, to improving mechanisms for heritage restitution.

The day concluded with the Closing Ceremony, which celebrated not only the knowledge gained, but the partnerships, friendships, and shared commitment that will continue long after leaving Rome. As one participant put it, “We are leaving with a network and with tools that we can start using immediately.”

A Lasting Legacy

The 2025 Africa Plus edition reaffirmed the IPLD as far more than a capacity-building initiative. It is a platform for co-creation, where learning flows in both directions: from experts to participants, and equally from participants back to UNIDROIT.

By embedding participants’ perspectives into the curriculum, UNIDROIT ensured that the legal tools discussed were anchored in the realities they are meant to serve.

The legacy of this edition lies not only in the quality of the projects produced, but in the strengthened capacity, confidence, and connections of a growing community committed to advancing law and development across Africa.


Meet the 2025 Africa Plus Cohort!