Sope Willams Elegbe

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Sope Williams
Born9 August
Geneva, Switzerland
NationalityBritish-Nigerian
EducationUniversity of Lagos

London School of Economics

University of Nottingham
OccupationProfessor of Law
EmployerStellenbosch University
Known forPublic Procurement Anti-Corruption
Notable workFighting Corruption in Public Procurement (2012);Public Procurement and Multilateral Development Banks (2017); Public Procurement Regulation for 21st Century Africa (2018); Public Procurement Regulation in Africa: Development in uncertain times (2020).
AwardsAnti-Corruption Ambassador(UNODC), Open Contracting Partnership Anti-Corruption Champion (2021)

Sope Williams is a Nigerian professor of Law, public procurement scholar and anti-corruption champion.[1]

She is known for being an advocate for and speaker on Open Governance, Blockchain, Gender responsive public procurement, integrity and anti-Corruption, and sustainable development.

Sope is a consultant for different governments, the World Bank and is currently on the anti-corruption sub-committee of the International Bar Association in charge of exclusion and debarment[2] In December 2022, she was awarded the prestigious Sheikh Tamim Bin Hamad Al-Thani International Excellence Award for Anti-Corruption Research and Education in recognition of her research, education and training on anti-corruption law. https://aceaward.com/en/news/details/89

Life[edit]

She was born in Geneva,[3] to Chief and Mrs F.O Williams. She attended Geneva English School and later Home Science Primary School, Ikoyi, for her early education. She went on to Queen’s College, Yaba, and the University of Lagos. She was called to the Nigerian Bar in 1999 after which she went to the London School of Economics where she obtained an LLM with distinction in 2000.

Career[edit]

Sope Williams started her career at the University of Stirling, Scotland, as a lecturer in business law in 2000. In 2003, moved to the University of Nottingham and joined the School of Law. In 2008 she was co-opted to work on a project on the World Bank’s expert group that helped the Bank reform its procurement process which lasted till 2011. She obtained a PhD in public procurement and anti-corruption law in 2011 from the University of Nottingham.

Sope was the Head of Research at the Nigerian Economic Summit Group, Lagos from 2014 till 2016.[1] In 2016, she moved to South Africa and was appointed a professor of law at Stellenbosch University, South Africa. From 2018 to 2021, she was the Head of the department of Mercantile law, and is currently the Deputy Director of the African Procurement Law Unit.[4] She is also on the Board of the international NGO- SlaveFree Trade and counter-corruption institute- the Pavocat-Stellenbosch Academy.

Life and work[edit]

Her research work is the area of public procurement, anti-corruption, digitalization of the public sector and sustainable development law, with a focus on human rights and sustainable public procurement and the impact of corruption on sustainable procurement.[5] She is the author of over 5 books and over 60 peer reviewed academic papers. She has consulted for governments within and outside Africa and is the author of several influential policy reports on open government, on anti-corruption and gender responsive procurement.

On February 15, 2016, she trained Nigerian Lawmakers in the House of Assembly on Nigerian public procurement law. Her training highlighted that Nigeria has been defrauded because of the loopholes in the public procurement act and the failure of agencies to enforce the law. Sope Williams, said that a solution was to engage legislative, institutional and organisational changes in public procurement reforms.[6] From 2016-2029 she trained over 300 investigators from the South African Office of the Public Protector in investigating public procurement corruption.

Sope is the Vice-Chair of the Debarment and Exclusion sub-committee of the International Bar Association and a member of Transparency International’s Working Group on Debarment and Exclusion. She is also a Fellow at the Public Procurement Research Group, University of Nottingham since 2020, and an advisor international institutions and government bodies on procurement and anti-corruption matters who trains the public and the private sector in ethics and anti-corruption law.[7]

She co-runs the LLM and PG Diploma in Public Procurement Policy and Regulation in Stellenbosch University.[8]

In 2019, the South African National Research Foundation rated her to be an “Internationally recognised researcher" with a B2 rating. The Open Contracting Partnership selected her as an anti-corruption champion in 2021. She has been an invited and keynote speaker at over 100 conferences in over 30 countries.

She has published work on Public Procurement, Open Governance, Integrity and Anti-Corruption, WTO Law and Development Law.

Works[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "The Evolution of World Banks Procurement Framework.: Reform and Coherence for 21st Century" (PDF). Journal of Public Procurement. 16: 22–51. doi:10.1108/JOPP-16-01-2016-B002.
  2. ^ Williams-Elegbe, Sope (2013). "The World Bank's Influence on Procurement Reform in Africa". African Journal of International and Comparative Law. 21: 95–119. doi:10.3366/ajicl.2013.0053.
  3. ^ "Black People Have To Be Excellent In Order To Succeed In A Global Workplace". tribuneonlineng.com. Retrieved 2020-11-20.
  4. ^ "Sope Williams". Retrieved 2020-11-12.
  5. ^ "African Procurement Law".
  6. ^ "Public Procurement Lawmakers Advocate Reform to Check Corruption". Channels Television.
  7. ^ "Public Procurement Research Group".
  8. ^ "Opinion: Why this pandemic means leaders don't have to choose between the economy and people's lives". The Independent. 2020-06-02. Archived from the original on 2022-05-24. Retrieved 2020-11-20.