Author: Ali Nabende

As artificial intelligence rapidly transforms corporate governance worldwide, Uganda’s professional company secretaries are calling on government to enact AI legislation before the technology outpaces regulation. “The major threat is the ethical component,” warns ICSA Chairperson Jane Okot P’Bitek Langoya. Without legal guardrails, they argue, Uganda risks job losses, misinformation, and erosion of corporate accountability.

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Across Africa, a quiet revolution is taking place. Not the revolution of protests and parliaments, but the revolution of digital transformation. From e-governance platforms in Uganda to mobile tax systems in Kenya, technology is reshaping how governments operate, how citizens participate, and how power is distributed. But this transformation comes with risks—data colonialism, surveillance, and exclusion. This piece examines the promise and peril of technology in African governance.

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Digital skills are no longer a luxury for the few—they are a necessity for national survival. Yet Uganda continues to produce graduates who cannot type a proper email, civil servants who fear computers, and a youth population watching the digital economy pass them by. This opinion piece argues that without urgent investment in digital literacy, Uganda risks becoming a consumer of technology rather than a participant in the global digital economy.

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