Munk School graduand Anowa Quarcoo gets bored easily. It’s a quality that she’s transformed into a great strength; she uses it as a signal to learn new skills. Her journey to the combined Master of Global Affairs/Master of Business Administration (MGA/MBA) program was a winding road, with stops in public service along the way. “I have a background in journalism and started off wanting to be a journalist. Then the 2008 financial crisis happened,” says Quarcoo. “It was really hard to get a job as a journalist, so I ended up working in corporate communications. I was a generalist, I did a bit of everything: digital, public relations, marketing, crisis management, and corporate social responsibility.”
Quarcoo, who will graduate at U of T’s online fall convocation ceremony on November 21, came to the MGA/MBA with eight years of work experience in corporate communications. She worked for all three levels of government and, of all of her duties, it was the corporate social responsibility (CSR) work that piqued her interest the most. “One of the companies I worked for didn’t really have a CSR program, so I ended up building one. It made me think ‘how can you have a social impact and what does that look like?’ I started looking for opportunities to explore that. I wanted to do something that had meaning and could impact people.”
This credo informed Quarcoo’s time at the Munk School (MGA) and U of T’s Rotman School of Management (MBA). Many projects she worked on allowed her to look at the intersection between technology and social issues. For instance, Quarcoo traveled to Tanzania with the Reach Alliance in 2019 to research Tanzania’s medical supply chain. She ended up co-authoring a report with the findings, detailing how Tanzania successfully distributes medication to rural areas. “I've always been a fan of interdisciplinary learning and the Reach Alliance was a cool opportunity to do something tangible that has the potential to have an impact,” says Quarcoo. “I was really drawn to the fact that I would be able to learn about research methodology, from getting approval from the ethics board to publishing an accessible and academically rigorous report.” Born to Ghanaian parents and having grown up in Kenya, Uganda and South Africa, Quarcoo says her learnings with the Reach Alliance were also an encouraging example of locally-led development. “I think often when people talk about the continent, they talk about the work that international organizations are doing. They don’t talk about the amount of agency that Africans have in their own development. The Reach Alliance project was even more interesting when we uncovered that. It was a great story of agency.”
Quarcoo’s interest in tech and social impact also underscored her internship with the MGA program. Through funding from a fellowship with the Open Society Internship for Rights and Governance (OSIRG), Quarcoo worked with Africa’s Voices, a non-profit organization in Nairobi that finds ways to use technology to centre African citizens in Africa’s development. While at Africa’s Voices, she worked on a consultancy project with the Mastercard Foundation, looking at how to use technology to engage with their program beneficiaries. “When you think about development programs you often think of folks sitting in offices in Geneva saying ‘oh, we're doing all of these great things!’ But the beneficiaries of these programs don't really have an opportunity to be involved or give voice to what they're experiencing,” says Quarcoo. “So Africa’s Voices aggregates data to give a clearer idea of what issues beneficiaries are dealing with. That allows us to measure actual impact.” Through OSIRG, Quarcoo also had the opportunity to attend a two-week seminar in Hungary.
Quarcoo’s interest in tech and social impact goes beyond the classroom. She is the co-founder of Civic Tech Toronto, a group that uses technology to address or examine civic issues. “Civic Tech Toronto finds ways to use technology to solve civic problems,” says Quarcoo. “One of our early projects was something called Budgetpedia. The premise was to help people better understand Toronto’s budget and see where funds have been allocated. Since then Civic Tech’s incubated a bunch of really interesting projects. A lot of tech folks program and code, but they don’t often get to do things that have a social bend to it, and vice versa. So that makes Civic Tech attractive to people.”
Quarcoo is currently working at the Ministry of the Attorney General and will be celebrating Convocation Day with two Zoom parties: one with friends and one with her family members scattered across the globe. And she has food for thought for her fellow graduates: “Every generation has an opportunity to shape the future. There’s a saying in the civic tech community: ‘nobody is coming, it’s up to us.’ Don’t wait for someone else to make the changes you want to see in the world — you should be the change you want to see.”
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