After decades of decline, African higher education is now arguably in a new era of revival. With
the prevalence of knowledge economy discourse, national governments in Africa and their
development partners have increasingly aligned higher education with poverty reduction plans
and strategies. Research capacity has become a critical development issue; and widening
participation to doctoral education is seen as an instrument for enhancing this capacity. Against
this backdrop, this paper presents a review of emerging initiatives and policies that have some
bearing on the PhD in select sub-Saharan African nations, namely Ethiopia, Ghana and South
Africa. The findings show a shared optimism about the economic value of higher education, and
explicate divergences and convergences in the framing of problems and policy responses related
to doctoral education across the three nations. In the conclusion we reflect on challenges and
policy omissions in the pursuit of the African PhD.