Master Class | Harare, Zimbabwe: “Leadership in a Changing World”.

Join UCT GSB Director Dr Catherine Duggan as she will focus on how leaders can learn from cutting-edge management insights from across the continent and around the world to lead effectively in uncertain times.

When: Tuesday, 16 September 2025 18:00 - 19:30 (GMT+2)
Where:Hyatt Regency Harare The Meikles, Cnr Jason Moyo Ave / Third Street, Harare, Zimbabwe
Register for event More info

Event information

Join us for an engaging Masterclass hosted by Dr Catherine Duggan, the Dean of the University of Cape Town’s Graduate School of Business.

Formerly of Harvard Business School, Dr Duggan brings a unique global perspective to the African context, and her trademark style is sure to provoke new thinking, energise, and invigorate attendees.

The session, Leadership in a Changing World” will focus on how leaders can learn from cutting-edge management insights from across the continent and around the world to lead effectively in uncertain times.

Participants at this free evening Masterclass will:

  • See how the world in which we operate is increasingly characterised by unpredictable dynamics and a level of complexity that defies traditional comprehension.
  • Learn a framework for developing leadership skills in organisations ranging from large multi-national corporations to small start-ups
  • Hear more about the University of Cape Town Graduate School of Business, its programmes and its commitment to developing leaders who understand what it takes to do business in Africa and other complex environments.

There is no cost for attendance, but space is limited, so do ensure that you RSVP to reserve your place for the Master Class."
 

Speakers

Dr Catherine Duggan

GSB Director (Dean)
Catherine Duggan is Director (Dean) of the University of Cape Town Graduate School of Business (GSB). Before joining the UCT GSB she was Vice Dean and Professor of Management and Political Economy at the African Leadership University School of Business (ALUSB) in Rwanda. At ALUSB she was the founding Vice Dean and the business school's first faculty member and helped to design the school's blended MBA curriculum. She also created and taught the popular Politics, Economics, and the Context of African Business (PECAB) course and led the school's executive education programs, including the school's collaboration with INSEAD on an Africa-focused executive education program. She was previously a professor at Harvard Business School (HBS) in the Business, Government, and the International Economy (BGIE) Unit, where she taught leadership and political economy in MBA and executive education programs for nearly a decade. At HBS she was the first woman in the school’s history to win the Faculty Award for Outstanding Teaching in the Required Curriculum two years in a row. She also received the Charles M. Williams Award for Excellence in Teaching and was named the Berol Corporation Fellow. Dr Duggan has been a Visiting Scholar at the University of Oxford’s Saïd Business School (SBS), where she taught the Doing Business in Africa course in the MBA and EMBA as well as Africa sessions in several executive education programs. She has taught courses and sessions on leadership, political economy, and doing business in Africa at various business schools in the United States, Europe, and Africa. Dr Duggan's academic work is on the political economy of development in Africa, with a particular focus on institutional development and financial sector regulation. She has worked on the continent for more than twenty years and gained experience in nearly two dozen African countries. She is the author of a number of case studies on African firms and countries, including cases on South Africa, Nigeria, DRC, Zimbabwe, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda and others. She regularly leads strategy and leadership workshops for corporations and has advised a number of governments and public sector agencies on the continent and beyond. She earned a Ph.D. in Political Science from Stanford University, where she was the G.J. Lieberman Fellow for the Social Sciences, and received a B.A. with honors in Political Science from Brown University.