Inaugural council meeting of the African Physical Society, 2010
In 1983, leading African physicists and mathematicians convened to form the Society of African Physicists and Mathematicians, the precursor to the African Physical Societyn (AfPS).
The inaugural council meeting of the AfPS would take place in Senegal decades later, from January 11-16, 2010. During that time, Francis K. Allotey (Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology; Consulting Director of the Institute of Mathematical Sciences) of Ghana was elected Founding President, Sekazi K. Mtingwa '71 (MIT) of the U.S. was appointed American Liaison Officer, and James Uhomoibhi (University of Ulster) of the U.K. was appointed European Liaison Officer for the society. The National Society of Black Physicists has been a major supporter of the AfPS since its inception.
The society aims to act as a forum to bring together physicists from across the nations of Africa for collaborations and to promote the field, especially in countries that don’t have a national physical society. [The] AfPS will host scientific conferences, publish a peer reviewed journal and establish a formal means to advance the status of physicists and physics research throughout the African Union. In addition, the Society includes an African Association of Physics Students as well as awards for outstanding work by African physicists.