The surveys are carried out by region through a partnership of the
Ghana Center for Democratic Development (CDD Ghana), the
Institute for Justice and Reconciliation in
South Africa, and the Institute for Development Studies at the
University of Nairobi. The Institute for Democracy, Citizenship and Public Policy in Africa at the
University of Cape Town and the Department of Political Science at
Michigan State University are technical partners. Afrobarometer surveys are conducted in more than 40 African countries and are repeated on a regular cycle. The Afrobarometer is carried out in
Algeria,
Benin,
Botswana,
Burkina Faso,
Burundi,
Cameroon,
Cape Verde,
Côte d'Ivoire,
Egypt,
Eswatini,
Ethiopia,
Gabon,
Ghana,
Guinea,
Kenya,
Lesotho,
Liberia,
Madagascar,
Malawi,
Mali,
Mauritius,
Morocco,
Mozambique,
Namibia,
Niger,
Nigeria,
São Tomé and Príncipe,
Senegal,
Sierra Leone,
South Africa,
South Sudan,
Sudan,
Tanzania,
Togo,
Tunisia,
Uganda,
Zambia, and
Zimbabwe. The Afrobarometer currently covers 21 survey topics: Conflict and crime, Democracy, Elections, Gender Equality, Governance, Identity, Macroeconomics and Markets, Political Participation, Poverty, Public Services, Social Capital, Tolerance, Access to Justice, Citizenship, China, Energy Supply, and Pan-Africanism/Regionalism.
Methodology Afrobarometer achieves this measurement through a series of face-to-face interviews with a random sample of 1,200, 1,600 or 2,400 people in each country. Because the instrument asks standard set of questions, countries can be systematically compared. Trends in public attitudes are tracked over time. Results are shared with decision makers, policy advocates, civic educators, journalists, researchers, donors and investors, as well as average Africans who wish to become more informed and active citizens. == History ==