Corridors That Work reframes African economic corridors as integrated policy-infrastructure-institution systems rather than just road or rail projects. It began with a deep-dive analysis of the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway and drew lessons from global examples like LAPSSET, Maputo, and LAKAJI. The project emphasises that successful corridors depend on security, land governance, trade facilitation, and financing arrangements. It also birthed the Capital Policy Roundtable, a high-level dialogue platform bringing together operators, policymakers, financiers, and technical experts to drive corridor performance.