The Sixth Region Explained
The African Union’s recognition of the global African diaspora as the Sixth Region is a historic acknowledgement—
but recognition alone does not create participation. This page explains what the Sixth Region is, why it matters now,
and what it means to move from symbolism to structure.
Strategy & policy clarity
Youth + capital coordination
Structural participation
What is the Sixth Region?
The Sixth Region refers to the African Union’s recognition of the global African diaspora as an integral part of Africa’s development framework.
Africa’s five regions are geographic. The Sixth Region is civilizational—linking Africans worldwide into one strategic opportunity zone.
Why it matters now
- Demographics: Africa’s youth and diaspora youth form a generational economic bloc.
- Corporate acceleration: investment competition is rising in minerals, energy, infrastructure, and digital markets.
- Diaspora capacity: capital and professional expertise can become leverage—if organized structurally.
Symbolic vs. structural
Symbolic engagement celebrates belonging. Structural engagement creates measurable access—qualification pathways, procurement visibility,
consortium formation, and accountability.
How RoFR connects
RoFR is one proposed mechanism to operationalize the Sixth Region by ensuring qualified African and diaspora entities have a fair opportunity
to match or improve major bids before deals finalize externally. It’s not anti-investment—it’s timing equity and structural access.
