Brenthurst Foundation
The Brenthurst Foundation was a Johannesburg-based think-tank established by the Oppenheimer family in 2004 to support the Brenthurst Initiative in seeking ways to fund African development and to organize conferences on African competitiveness.
On 16 July 2025, research director Ray Hartley announced the Foundation's closure in a post on LinkedIn.
History
The Foundation was created to build on the Oppenheimers' Brenthurst Initiative, designed to instigate a debate in South Africa around policy strategies to achieve higher rates of economic expansion.The Foundation went on to have a wider African focus, aiming to find ways to draw the investment needed for "continental regeneration and prosperity". The organisation intended to make a worthwhile contribution to economic growth in Africa by creating an environment conducive to positive economic change in order to strengthen the importance of Africa in the global market. It worked to set up government policy platforms for economic development through organizing high-level governmental dialogues, supporting economic and political research on topical and important issues, and disseminating practical policy advice to relevant actors.
The Foundation has been active in a range of roles in various countries across the continent, including in Ghana, Zambia, Kenya, Zanzibar, Malawi, Lesotho, Somaliland, Sudan, Rwanda, Mozambique, Mali, Eswatini, Morocco, Zimbabwe, Namibia, and Ethiopia.
The Foundation also organized regular policy study-tours for its African partners to a number of countries. These aimed to expose African opinion-formers to development 'best practice'. These trips have included participation by officials up to the prime-ministerial level, and incorporated meetings with current and former heads of state. Countries visited in the past include: Vietnam, Singapore, Cambodia, Panama, Colombia, Costa Rica, El Salvador and Morocco and Poland.
The Foundation publishes op-ed articles and discussion papers on matters related to growth and security and hosts election monitoring missions in Africa. It also conducts opinion surveys on key policy matters and on election attitudes.
People
Advisory BoardThe Brenthurst Foundation Advisory Board comprised a number of eminent and notable government officials, academics, and business leaders. It is chaired by Olusegun Obasanjo, the former President of Nigeria. Other members of the Board include Jonathan Oppenheimer, the Foundation's Director, Dr Greg Mills, Deputy Chair to Commission to the African Union Erastus Mwencha, Former Prime Minister of Ethiopia Hailemariam Desalegn, Former President of Liberia and Nobel Laureate Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Professor INCAE, Former Minister of the Economy in Argentina Alfonso de Prat Gay, Counsellor to H.M. King Mohammed VI in Morocco André Azoulay, Greek Politician and Public Figure Anna Diamantopoulou, Member of the Presidential Council on Minority Rights in Singapore Barry Desker, Former President of Sierra Leone Ernest Bai Koroma, Former Ambassador of Colombia to the United States Juan Carlos Pinzón Bueno, Managing Partner of the Africa Legal Network, Former President of South Africa Kgalema Motlanthe, Former Deputy Minister of Finance in South Africa Mcebisi Jonas, Former Chief of Defence in the United Kingdom Nick Carter, Former United States Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Richard Myers, Former Secretary of State for International Development of the United Kingdom Rory Stewart and Ambassador of the Kingdom of Denmark to South Africa .
Associates
The Brenthurst Foundation benefits from the knowledge and expertise of a wide range of scholars, policy-makers and experts from all over the world.
Books
The Brenthurst Foundation has published an array of since 2004 including:In the Name of the People: How Populism is Rewiring the World
Better Choices: Ensuring South Africa's Future
The Ledger: Accounting for Failure in Afghanistan
Expensive Poverty: Why Aid Fails and How it Can Work
The Asian Aspiration: Why and How Africa Should Emulate Asia
Vital Signs: Health Security in South Africa
Democracy Works: Re-Wiring Politics to Africa's Advantage
Making Africa Work: A Handbook for Economic Success
A Great Perhaps? Colombia: Conflict and Convergence
How South Africa Works - And Must do Better
Why States Recover: Changing Walking Societies into Winning Nations, from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe
Somalia - Fixing Africa's Most Failed State
Africa's Third Liberation
On the Fault Line: Managing Tensions and Divisions within Societies
Why Africa is Poor: And What Africans Can Do About It
Victory Among People: Lessons from Countering Insurgency and Stabilising Fragile States
From Africa to Afghanistan: With Richards and NATO to Kabul
Big African States: Angola, DRC, Ethiopia, Nigeria, South Africa, Sudan
Tswalu Dialogue
The annual Tswalu Dialogue meeting series was established in 2002 as a premier African forum to discuss issues of concern to continental development and security. Hosted by Jonathan Oppenheimer at the Tswalu Kalahari Game Reserve in South Africa’s Kalahari Desert, the Tswalu Dialogue has involved active collaboration between a variety of international partners. Attended by a mix of policy-makers, analysts, academia, civil and military personnel, media and businesspeople, the Tswalu Dialogues remains an annual event.The Gdansk Declaration
From 21–23 June 2023, the European Solidarity Centre and The Brenthurst Foundation staged a conference on 'Rolling Back Authoritarianism' in Gdańsk, Poland, the epicentre of political change in Poland and in Europe in the late 1980s. The event was attended by more than 50 leaders from Africa, Latin America, Poland and the Baltic States. At the end of the event, the was adopted unanimously. It lays out the commitment of all delegates to ending authoritarianism and introducing democracy, accountability and transparency.The event was held at the historic Gdańsk shipyard where the tide turned against authoritarianism in Eastern Europe in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Nobel laureate Lech Walesa, who led the shipyard uprising and later became President of Poland, addressed the meeting and signed the declaration along with 57 other leaders. Ukrainian Nobel laureate, Oleksandra Matviichuk, Head of Centre for Civil Liberties, also signed the declaration.