Behind the Paper

Exploring the impact of sister city partnerships on emerging African cities

Eldoret’s designation as a city in 2021 marked its rise from a colonial railway stop to a fast-growing urban hub. This research asks: How do new African cities position themselves globally while safeguarding local identities? Sister city partnerships offer a lens to explore this balance.

The Story Behind the Paper: Exploring the Impact of Sister City Partnerships on Emerging African Cities

When Eldoret was officially designated as a city in Kenya in 2021, the event was not merely ceremonial. It marked a new chapter in the town’s evolution from a colonial railway stop to one of East Africa’s fastest-growing urban centers. As I followed the discussions on what it means for a town to become a city, I was struck by a central question: How do new African cities position themselves globally while safeguarding their local identities? This question became the seed of my research and eventually the basis for my paper Exploring the Impact of Sister City Partnerships on Emerging African Cities. The idea was simple yet powerful. In a globalized era where cities, not just nations, compete for recognition, resources, and resilience, sister city partnerships provide an important lens for understanding how emerging cities like Eldoret navigate modernization.

Why Eldoret

You may know Eldoret City as the athletic capital for long distance runners, hence the name “City of Champions” because of its production of world-class long-distance runners, it also anchors a strong agricultural economy and a growing manufacturing sector. Yet it also embodies the contradictions of urban Africa: rapid expansion alongside infrastructural strain, global ambitions alongside deeply local roots.

What drew my attention was how Eldoret had quietly woven itself into international city networks, building sister city agreements with Bad Vilbel in Germany, Indianapolis and Minneapolis in the United States, and Ithaca in New York. These agreements were not symbolic handshakes. Each partnership opened opportunities: sports diplomacy through athletics, knowledge exchange in agriculture, collaborations in manufacturing, and cultural linkages through festivals and student exchanges. I began to wonder whether these relationships could go beyond ceremony and shape Eldoret’s growth, diplomacy, and identity.

Conceptual Spark

The inspiration was also intellectual. Sister city partnerships are often dismissed as ceremonial and rarely feature in mainstream urban studies. African urban scholarship typically concentrates on megacities such as Lagos, Johannesburg, or Nairobi, leaving smaller but rapidly growing cities under-examined. Eldoret provided an opportunity to look at this overlooked category.

Another aspect that intrigued me was the language used to describe such partnerships. Terms like “twin towns,” “Partnerstadt,” “Ville Jumelée,” and “Stedenband” carry cultural histories and different shades of meaning, yet few studies bring together this semantic richness with empirical economic analysis. I wanted to test whether partnerships had measurable impacts on Eldoret’s trajectory while also situating them in broader traditions of urban collaboration.

Methodological Choices

The first challenge was methodological. How does one measure the impact of an intangible relationship like a sister city agreement? We adopted a comparative and mixed-methods approach. I reviewed historical and policy documents to trace the origins and activities of Eldoret’s partnerships. I also looked for a quantitative marker that could anchor the analysis. GDP trends emerged as a useful indicator. By comparing Eldoret’s GDP before and after the establishment of partnerships, I could assess whether these relationships correlated with economic shifts.

The regression model showed that post-partnership years explained about 37 percent of the variation in Eldoret’s GDP, with a positive slope estimate of 1.64 billion US dollars. While correlation is not causation, these results suggested that sister city ties may be linked to tangible economic outcomes.

The Human Side of Partnerships

Numbers only tell part of the story. What stood out most were the human stories.

Through athletics diplomacy, Eldoret’s runners have acted as cultural ambassadors. Partnerships with cities like Indianapolis created opportunities for scholarships, sponsorships, and global branding that reinforced the city’s identity. In agriculture, collaboration with Bad Vilbel brought exposure to sustainable farming techniques that supported food security. Student and institutional exchanges with Ithaca expanded opportunities for young people, instilling a global outlook in a city still deeply rooted in communal traditions.

These examples revealed that sister city agreements are not hollow rituals. They are vehicles for soft power, mutual learning, and identity building.

Broader Reflections

Writing the paper made me reflect on the politics of urban belonging. African cities are often portrayed in deficit terms: overcrowded, under-planned, and perpetually catching up. Yet Eldoret’s experience tells a different story. By leveraging partnerships, emerging cities can proactively define their modernization pathways, blending external linkages with local strengths.

At the same time, challenges remain. Partnerships can reproduce asymmetries, where African cities are positioned as recipients rather than equals. The task ahead is to ensure reciprocity, where Eldoret not only learns from Minneapolis but also contributes insights on resilience, athletics, or community solidarity.

Contributions to Scholarship

The story of Eldoret fits into a larger puzzle: what role do international networks play in shaping Africa’s urban frontier?

My paper makes three contributions. First, it empirically links sister city partnerships to economic trends, something rarely attempted in African urban research. Second, it reframes these partnerships as dynamic tools of cultural diplomacy rather than symbolic gestures. Third, it highlights the role of emerging cities as laboratories for studying globalization from below, moving beyond the overemphasis on megacities.

Lessons Learned

The biggest lesson for me was the importance of interdisciplinarity. Studying sister city partnerships required insights from economics, anthropology, linguistics, and urban planning. Cities are complex organisms shaped by both numbers and narratives, by flows of capital and flows of culture.

I also realized that stories matter. When athletes from Eldoret compete in Boston or Berlin, they are not only chasing medals. They are carrying the story of their city, projecting its identity, and forging global connections.

Moving Forward

This paper is a beginning. Future research could compare Eldoret with other emerging African cities such as Kisumu, Arusha, or Gulu to see if similar patterns emerge. It could also examine the sustainability of partnerships when political leadership changes or funding declines. Another area worth exploring is how ordinary residents perceive and benefit from these ties.

Ultimately, I hope this research encourages policymakers, planners, and communities to see sister city partnerships not as side projects but as strategic levers for development and identity-building.

Final comments

The story behind this paper mirrors the story of Eldoret itself: a city in motion, balancing tradition with modernity, local pride with global ambition. By examining its sister city partnerships, I sought to show that emerging African cities are not isolated. They are active participants in shaping globalization. And perhaps, in tracing these connections, we are reminded that cities, like sisters, grow stronger not in isolation but in relationship with each other, with their histories, and with the world.