What is the African Physical Society?
The African Physical Society is a non-governmental professional association legally incorporated under the laws of the Republic of Ghana, along with the African Association of Physics Students as a subsidiary organization.
It provides a forum to bring together for the purposes of networking, collaboration, and advocacy, all the existing national physical societies, e.g., the Ghana Institute of Physics, Cameroon Physical Society, South African Institute of Physics, Kenya Physical Society. In addition to supporting the existing societies, the African Physical Society endeavors to support and represent physicists and physics students working and studying in countries that do not have a national physical society. It hopes to catalyze the creation of more national physical societies. As an advocate for physics across the continent, the African Physical Society endeavors to increase the resources for physics training and research in Africa, and the economic and social development that follows.
Likewise the purpose of the African Association of Physics Students is to encourage physics students in their scientific and professional work in an African and an international context as well as to promote relations between physics students from all over the world.
The African Physical Society and the African Association of Physics Students are therefore organizations in which all African physicists and physics students can be members, independent of their field of research or country of work or origin. They endeavor to represent the interests of all African physicists and physics students in matters that have a continent-wide and world-wide impact.
Why an African Physical Society?
In the press release announcing the launching of the African Physical Society, Professor Francis Allotey gave one the overriding raisons d’etre of the organization. In the 2008 physics research publication and citation data, no African country, not even South Africa, ranked in the top 20 in physics publications or citations.
“It is unfortunate that most of physics activity is invisible to the rest of the world, said Allotey, “Yet we know that there are pockets of excellence in physics happening all across the continent. African physics needs a global on-ramp for the rest of the world so that these pockets can more easily be linked to the rest of the world. We intend for the African Physical Society to be a strong and unified voice for physics in Africa.We will better organize the African physics community, build better networks on the continent and beyond, be a strong advocate for more resources for physics research and education, and be mentors for students studying physics.
In each country on the top-20 list there are national and regional structures that organize physics and astronomy, as well as S&T investment in general, which propelled them into the upper echelons of gross domestic product. This resonated at the African Union where AU Commission Chair, HE Jean Ping, expressed his well-wishes for the African Physical Society.
“Investment in physics and astronomy is both an important input and output of economic and social development across the continent. said Mr. Ping. The key to physics and astronomy leading economic development is for physicists and astronomers to organize, to advocate, to evangelize, to push back the frontier of science and its relationship to everyday people.
Originally launched as the Society of African Physicists and Mathematicians
On Friday, 26th August 1983, thirty-four African scientists from various parts of Africa out of concern for:
- The present state of Physics and Mathematics in Africa
- Lack of cohesive and functional links among African Scientists.
- The great scientific and technological gap between the industrialized and developing countries of the world, particularly countries in Africa, are aware that Mathematics and Physics are the basis of modern science and technology,
held a meeting at the Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP), Trieste, Italy and resolved to form the Society of African Physicists and Mathematicians (SAPAM).
The formal inauguration of the Society took place fourteen months later in Trieste, on October 8th 1984. This was at the Pan-African Symposium organized by the Society on the “State of Physics and Mathematics in Africa”. It was attended by over 100 participants from all over Africa.
Since its formation, it has organized over 40 workshops, in many countries in Africa, such as Ethiopia, Zimbabwe, Egypt, Ghana, Benin, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Burundi, Cote DIvoire, Liberia, Botswana, Nigeria and South Africa.
SAPAM physics activities in Africa have been supported by ICTP, UNESCO, OPEC Fund, United Nations University, Africa Academy of Sciences, United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP), International Development Research Programme (IDRC), TWAS, Swedish Agency for Research Co-operation with Developing Countries (SAREC) and many more.
SAPAM Recognized by Physical Societies Around the World and by the Organization of African Union
SAPAM has links with American Physical Society, European Physical Society and U.K Institute of Physics and has been participating in IUPAP activities.
On the basis of its achievements in the development of physics in Africa, the OAU recognized it and passed a resolution on the 8th July, 1990 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia giving it an observer status to OAU. From the above it is clear that SAPAM has been acting as an Africa-based physical society since 1983.
Organization of African Physical Society Yahoo.com Groups
In 2000 Professor Abebe Kebede, an Ethiopian-born physicist working in the United States, formed two Yahoo.com email groups called the African Physical Society and the African Physics Students Network. Over the years these email groups were used as a tool to create a grassroot platform for African physicists to share information, build networks and collaborations, increase awareness and interest of the field and thereby attracting highly qualified students to major in physics. It was hoped that these email groups and use of the world wide web would be the first step to connect African physicists with their counterparts around the world, and would lead to the formation of an African Physical Society organized on the continent.
Decision to Relaunch SAPAM as the African Physical Society
At a meeting of over 200 from all over Africa that took place on 24th January, 2007 at the iThemba Laboratory, South Africa, it was resolved that SAPAM should change its name and become known as African Physical Society. This was accepted by the executive officers and members of SAPAM. It was further agreed at that meeting that the re-launch of SAPAM as the African Physical Society should take place in November, 2009 in Dakar, Senegal. All of SAPAM’s reciprocal relationships and observer statuses, e.g, with the African Union and IUPAP, will be transferred to the African Physical Society.
Support of the African Association of Physics Students
In 2005 a group of physics students, primarily in Nigeria but also from South Africa and other countries, organized the African Association of Physics Students (AAPS). They also organized the African Conference of Physics Students (ACPS), which was held in Abuja, Nigeria in November 2005.
After the 2007 EBASI meeting in Cape Town it was decided that the African Physical Society should support the AAPS not only with mentoring and training, but also with organizational infrastructure. It was later decided and accepted by the students that started AAPS that the organization should be incorporated as a subsidiary organization of the African Physical Society.
It was further decided that inasmuch as possible, future ACPS meetings should coincide with conferences of the African Physical Society. This would help ensure that the work of AAPS and AfPS would always be linked, that students would have the opportunity to meet mentors and role models from across Africa and around the world, and that there would be administrative and budgetary efficiencies for the physics student organization in Africa.
Organizational Meeting in Cape Town, South Africa
On November 14, 2009 the South African Institute of Physics and the Institute of Physics (UK) convened a historic meeting in Cape Town, South Africa of many if not most of the existing national physics societies in Africa, e.g., the Cameroon Physical Society, the Ghana Institute of Physics, the Nigerian Institute of Physics, and the Tunisian Physical Society. Representatives from Senegal, Botswana, Algeria, Lesotho, Kenya, Zimbabwe and several others were also in attendance.
At this meeting there was strong and enthusiastic support for the formation of the African Physical Society as a Pan-African professional association of physicists, and as a networking medium and advocate for physics in Africa, reaffirming the decisions made at the 2007 EBASI meeting in Cape Town.
The Dakar Meeting
The 2010 Dakar meeting promises to be a historical event that officially launches the African Physical Society as a bona fide professional society that will not only organize and network physicists, physics organizations and physics students in Africa, but reach out to sister-societies around the world, including the Canadian Association of Physicists, all the member societies of the American Institute of Physics, of the Federation of Latin American Physical Societies (Federacion Latinoamericana de Sociedades de Fsica) and Federación Iberoamericana de Sociedades de Física (FEIASOFI), of the European Physical Society, and of the Association of Asia Pacific Physical Societies. We will also reach out to societies in sub-fields of physics like biophysics, geophysics and medical physics, as well as all other physics-related societies.