About ORCID-WACA

Advancing research identity and visibility across West and Central Africa

ORCID–WACA is a WACREN-led initiative, supported by the ORCID Global Participation Fund, to drive the adoption of ORCID across West and Central Africa and make the region’s researchers and research more visible, citable, and connected on the global stage. The case for action is clear. Low adoption of persistent identifiers (PIDs) such as ORCID limits the visibility of African scholarship and reinforces the misconception that the continent produces little research. Most African researchers encounter ORCID only when submitting to a journal, institutional and journal mandates remain rare, and awareness is especially low outside STEM, making it difficult to attribute work accurately, demonstrate institutional productivity, or showcase the true impact of African scholarship. WACREN has been steadily laying the foundation for change. Outputs deposited in the BAOBAB repository are assigned Archival Resource Keys (ARKs) for long-term discoverability; a series of regional workshops have introduced researchers, librarians, and publishers to the value of PIDs; and the COPPHA training programme has equipped more than 600 early-, mid-career, and senior researchers in equitable and transparent publishing. Building on this momentum, ORCID–WACA will raise awareness of ORCID’s benefits, support its integration with institutional repositories and other research infrastructure, and grow regional capacity through the Ambassadors Programme and the Community of Practice, closing participation gaps in the Global South and embedding PIDs in the long-term research infrastructure of West and Central Africa.

Why ORCID-WACA Matters

The Challenge

African researchers face significant barriers to global recognition:

  • Name Ambiguity: Common names like Mohammed, Fatima, and Ibrahim lead to frequent citation and attribution errors.
  • Low Visibility: Deep African scholarship is often structurally overlooked or unindexed in dominant international databases.
  • Institutional Gaps: Limited clear mandates or tracking workflows for comprehensive ORCID adoption at institutional levels.
  • Awareness Gap: Many regional researchers unfortunately only learn about utility features late during manuscript submission.
  • Disciplinary Divide: Non-STEM academic fields and humanities researchers are especially underrepresented inside global metrics.

Our Approach

ORCID-WACA systematically addresses these challenges through:

  • Ambassador-Led Outreach: 15 carefully trained regional ambassadors actively conducting local workshops across networks.
  • Community Building: Establishing an open, cross-border Community of Practice for sustained long-term ecosystem engagement.
  • Technical Integration: Piloting direct structural ORCID profile integrations with state-of-the-art RUMBU institutional repositories.
  • Capacity Development: Continuous hands-on training for active researchers, institutional librarians, and academic administrators.
  • Policy Advocacy: Working shoulder-to-shoulder with higher education institutions to adopt explicit ORCID mandates.

Ready to Join?

Become part of a growing community of researchers in West and Central Africa.

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