Professor Nnenna Ifeanyi-Ajufo

Professor Leeds Beckett

  • Leeds

Nnenna Ifeanyi-Ajufo's teaching and research focuses primarily on Cyber governance, cyber security and governance of digital technologies.

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Biography

Nnenna is a Professor of Law and Technology at the Leeds Law School. She is a Technology and Human Rights Fellow at the Carr Centre for Human Rights Policy, Harvard University (2022-2024), and an Associate Fellow of the Africa Programme at Chatham House, United Kingdom. Her teaching and research interests focus primarily on the governance of digital technologies, cybersecurity, digital rights, and rule of law in cyberspace. She has partnered with various organisations for the delivery of research projects aimed at shaping academic and policy discourses on the governance of digital technologies. She was a member of the International Law Association Steering Committee on Digital Challenges for International Law. The Committee delivered a White Paper on Digital Challenges for International Law - Digital Challenges for International Law - Ila Paris 2023. She recently delivered a commissioned stakeholder mapping project on ‘digital financial security’ on the CyberFI Project of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

In addition to her regular teaching and research, Nnenna serves as the Chair of the Cybercrime Working Group of the Global Forum on Cyber Expertise (GFCE), and the Vice-Chairperson of the African Union Cyber Security Experts Group (AUCSEG). She advices the African Union Commission (AUC) and African Member States on existing international, regional and national legal frameworks related to cybersecurity. She also serves as a delegate to the United Nations ‘Ad Hoc Committee to Elaborate a Comprehensive International Convention on Countering the Use of ICTs for Criminal Purposes’, as well as the United Nations Open-Ended Working Group (OEWG) on ICTs.

Nnenna serves on the editorial and advisory boards of various journals. She is a contributing editor for the ‘Directions’ of the Cyber Direct Project of the European Union Institute for Security Studies and an Editor of the Commonwealth Cybercrime Journal. She is also a member of the Research Committee of the GFCE and has served as an expert or consultant for notable organisations such as the Chatham House, the Commonwealth and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA). She has taught at various universities including, Swansea University, University of Bradford, Buckinghamshire New University and Lancaster University Ghana.

Industry Expertise

Legal Services
Education/Learning

Areas of Expertise

Law
Cybersecurity
Human Rights
Law and Technology
Cybercrime
Intellectual Property Law

Accomplishments

Africa Legal Innovation Awards

2020

2021 Teacher of the Year for the School of Law

Dr Nnenna Ifeanyi-Ajufo was named the “2021 Teacher of the Year for the School of Law” at the annual Swansea Academy of Learning and Teaching (SALT) Teaching Awards.

Education

University of Abuja

LLB

Law

2005

Nigerian Law School

BL

Law

2006

Robert Gordon University

LLM

International Information Technology Law

2009

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Affiliations

  • Global Forum on Cyber Expertise (GFCE) : Chair of the Cybercrime Working Group
  • African Union Cyber Security Experts Group (AUCSEG) : Vice-Chairperson
  • Commonwealth Cybercrime Journal : Editor

Languages

  • English

Media Appearances

Security Council Meets on Addressing Evolving Threats in Cyberspace

UN Security Council  

Nnenna Ifeanyi-Ajufo, Vice Chair of The African Union Cyber Security Experts Group, speaks at the Security Council meeting on addressing evolving threats in cyberspace.

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Digital Breakthroughs Must Serve Betterment of People, Planet, Speakers Tell Security Council during Day-Long Debate on Evolving Cyberspace Threats

United Nations  online

2024-06-19

NNENNA IFEANYI-AJUFO, Professor of Law and Technology, Leeds Beckett University and Vice-Chair of the African Union Cyber Security Experts Group, stressed the need to acknowledge both “our cybersecurity commonalities”, as well as the differences between regions and country-specific realities. Drawing attention to the various frameworks currently in place in Africa, she pointed to the Digital Transformation Strategy for Africa — 2020-2030, adopted by the African Union Commission in 2014, as well as its Convention on Cyber Security and Personal Data Protection (the Malabo Convention), which entered into force in June 2023. The Union also adopted, in January 2024, the Common African Position on the Application of International Law to the Use of Information and Communication Technologies in the Cyberspace, “the first position document on the application of international law in cyberspace that includes a section on capacity-building”, she pointed out.

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Nnenna Ifeanyi-Ajufo: “The current state of cybersecurity in Africa is the tendency towards a cyber-militarisation approach”

Global Economic Governance Programme  online

Nnenna Ifeanyi-Ajufo is a Professor of Law and Technology at Leeds Beckett University, United Kingdom and Vice Chairperson of the African Union Cyber Security Experts Group (AUCSEG) and has been actively involved in advising the African Union Commission (AUC) and African Member States on existing international, regional and national legal frameworks related to cybersecurity, as well as promoting cybersecurity in the region.

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Articles

Tech alone won’t improve trust in Nigeria’s elections

Chatham House

2023-02-23

Election technology has been deployed in a growing list of African countries, from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) to Ghana and Kenya, raising hopes for improved transparency, integrity and trust in electoral democracy.

But technology alone is not a guarantee of credibility and security. It’s also a new frontier for election fraud amid concerns over vulnerabilities to hacking and manipulation. Complaints of interference by Ghana’s Electoral Commission (EC) and security issues with the DRC’s electronic voting system highlight how technology can lead to contested results and damage public trust.

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Cyber governance in Africa: at the crossroads of politics, sovereignty and cooperation

Policy Design and Practice

2023

Africa has recently focused on an ambition to achieve digital transformation through the pursuit of various flagship initiatives which are aimed at achieving its ‘Agenda 2063’ objectives. Digital transformation will be better achieved through appropriate cyber governance policies and mechanisms, and the success of Africa’s Digital Transformation Strategy 2020-2030 hinges on diverse factors.

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Digital Financial Inclusion and Security: The Regulation of Mobile Money in Ghana

Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

2022

Ghana's digital financial services industry, most notably the market for mobile money services, has grown significantly during the pandemic. To achieve full digital financial inclusion, however, the country still must build capacity, skills, trust, and security. The Cybersecurity, Capacity Development, and Financial Inclusion project, or CyberFI, brings together a robust, transparent community of practitioners and researchers working on digital financial inclusion. This series focuses on understanding financial inclusion ecosystems on their own terms—what countries are doing, what is working, and what isn’t.

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