Master of Philosophy Specialising in Inclusive Innovation (MPHIL) Info Session

Join us for an information session webinar about the Master of Philosophy Specialising in Inclusive Innovation (MPHIL) at the UCT Graduate School of Business

When: Tuesday, 28 May 2024 17:30 - 18:30 (GMT+2)
Where:Online
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Event information

Join us for an information session webinar about the Master Of Philosophy Specialising in Inclusive Innovation (MPHIL) at the UCT Graduate School of Business

CREATE UNIQUE SOLUTIONS FOR AFRICAN CHALLENGES Experiment, collaborate and design your own prototype, framework or business model to address a specific social or environmental challenge The MPhil in Inclusive Innovation will equip you to engage critically and innovatively in finding solutions to societal challenges through strategic thinking, design thinking and systems thinking. Delegates will: 

  • gain skills in managing complex innovation-focused projects
  • learn to identify and cope with the challenges of entrepreneurship,
  • tackle business model innovation and plan new ventures and processes

Link HERE to assist you in preparing for the session

Please note: After you have RSVP'd for the session you will get an email with the webinar link and instructions for joining / connecting to the session.

Speakers

Assoc. Prof. Jess Auerbach Jahajeeah

Director: MPHIL Programme
Jess Auerbach Jahajeeah is an NRF-rated anthropologist whose research explores narrative, digital connectivity, sensory experience, communication and education futures. She is passionate about how networks and personal experiences shape individual and collective impact, and she has worked around the world exploring personal and collective transformation. Jess has written two books, From Water to Wine: becoming middle class in Angola (also available open access in Portuguese) and Archive of Kindness: Stories of everyday heroism in the South African pandemic. She is currently working on a third book, provisionally entitled Capricious Connections and a Very Long Line: the politics of knowledge infrastructure in the South Atlantic and Indian Ocean that explores undersea internet cables that plug Africa into global digital networks. Jess has published extensively in academic journals and the public domain on her work on Angola, Mauritius, migration, social stratification, and higher education futures, and won several awards. She is currently an Iso Lomso Fellow at the Stellenbosch Institute of Advanced Study. Jess did her undergraduate degree at UCT followed by an MSc in Forced Migration at Oxford where she was a Rhodes Scholar, and a PhD in anthropology at Stanford University. She has lived and worked in Angola, Brazil, Mauritius, Mozambique, the UK and USA, and is now based mostly in Cape Town.