88th Ogden Lecture: His Highness the Aga Khan
Salomon De Ciccio
Auditorium,
5-6 PM
Monday, March 10, 2014
His Highness the Aga
Khan, P'95, founder and chairman of the
Aga Khan Development Network (
AKDN), is the 49th hereditary
Imam (spiritual leader) of the
Shia Ismaili Muslims. In the context of his hereditary responsibilities, His Highness has been deeply engaged with the development of
Asia and
Africa for more than 50 years.
The AKDN is a group of private, international, non-denominational agencies working to improve living conditions and opportunities for people in specific regions of the developing world.
The Network's organisations have individual mandates that range from healthcare (through over 400 health facilities including 13 hospitals) and education (with over
200 schools) to architecture, rural development, the built environment and the promotion of private-sector enterprise.
Together, they work towards a common goal — to build institutions and programmes that can respond to the challenges of social, economic and cultural change on an on-going basis.
AKDN's social development agencies include
Aga Khan Health Services, Aga Khan Planning and
Building Services,
Aga Khan Education Services,
Aga Khan Academies,
Aga Khan Agency for Microfinance,
Aga Khan Foundation,
Focus Humanitarian Assistance as well as two universities, the
Aga Khan University (with 5 campuses and 3 teaching sites) and the
University of Central Asia (whose
School of
Professional and
Continuing Education has served close to 50,000 students in
Tajikistan,
Kyrgyzstan and
Kazakhstan).
The Aga Khan Trust for
Culture co-ordinates AKDN's cultural activities, including the
Aga Khan Award for Architecture,
Aga Khan Historic Cities Programme,
Aga Khan Music Initiative,
Aga Khan Museum, the on-line archive Archnet.org, and the Aga Khan
Program for
Islamic Architecture (at
Harvard and
MIT). The Aga Khan Fund for
Economic Development (
AKFED) is dedicated to building commercially viable enterprises — in tourism, banking, insurance, media, aviation, industry and infrastructure — in the developing world.
The Network works in 30 countries. It employs approximately 80,000 people, the majority of whom are based in developing countries, and has an annual budget for non-profit development activities of approximately US$ 600 million. In
2012, AKFED's project companies generated close to $3b in total revenue — surpluses of which are all reinvested in further development activities. The AKDN enjoys close partnerships with public and private institutions, including amongst others, governments, international organisations, companies, foundations, and universities.
The Aga Khan, the AKDN and the Ismaili community have had long-standing ties to the
United States. Among these are Agreements of Cooperation with the
States of
Texas,
California and
Illinois, which establish a framework for collaboration around issues of mutual interest that advance the human condition and better cross cultural understanding as well as partnerships with the
United States Government in
Central Asia and sub-Saharan Africa.
The Aga Khan has received numerous honorary degrees and awards in recognition of his work including, in the United States, the
University of California San Francisco Medal as well as the ULI
J.C. Nichols Prize for Visionaries in
Urban Development. In addition,
Harvard University and
Brown University conferred honorary
Doctor of Law degrees upon His Highness in 2008 and
1996, respectively.