Nigeria Next: Elevating young people’s voice and dignity in Nigeria, By Kole Shettima

Nigeria Next: Elevating young people’s voice and dignity in Nigeria, By Kole Shettima

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Triple T in General March 26, 2026, 5:20 pm
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Add us on Google Nigeria Next is still in the early stages, but our Nigeria team is excited for the work ahead. By elevating our young people through greater inclusion, innovation, creativity, and civic participation, we hope to make a lasting contribution to Nigeria and its future. I met Balkisu, a TikToker from the quiet town of Bauchi in North-East Nigeria, during the #EndBadGovernanceInNigeria movement in 2024. After high school, Balkisu could not attend college due to financial constraints. Coming from a large family with competing priorities, her parents could not afford the expense of higher education. Still, Balkisu considered herself fortunate: she had access to a smartphone and one meal a day — luxuries that many of her peers lacked. Balkisu’s story embodies the hopes and aspirations of our new grantmaking initiative: Nigeria Next. Nigeria Next, created and led by our Abuja-based staff, will invest in Nigeria’s young people, so they can drive social and economic change. We believe that with greater access to digital tools, spaces that catalyse their creativity, and amplification of their voices in civic spaces, young people can unleash their potential and move us towards a new Nigeria. Nigeria Next represents a collaboration between MacArthur’s On Nigeria, Technology in the Public Interest, and Journalism and Media programmes. Colleagues from these programmes began convening discussions among themselves, grantee partners, and subject-matter experts in 2022. Our New Work team — a group of staff charged with developing new programmes and initiatives for the Foundation — commissioned a paper to understand the challenges and opportunities facing young people better, and several staff members travelled to Nigeria for consultative meetings. We reached out deliberately to communities across the hinterland and coastal cities, including Kafanchan, Enugu, Port Harcourt, Bauchi, Maiduguri, and the hubs of Abuja, Kano, and Lagos. Our intent was to listen to a broad range of voices. Balkisu Through these conversations, interconnected themes emerged related to young people, civic participation, technology, and media. As Africa’s most populous country, Nigeria is a dynamic centre of innovation in finance, technology, agriculture, civic tech, and creative industries. The so-called “youthquake” — a term used by scholars and commentators — captures the profound impact of young Nigerians. From breakthroughs in Lagos’s tech scene to the global reach of Nollywood and Afrobeats, their ingenuity is unquestionable. Empowering Young People to Shape Nigeria’s Future Focusing on young people is essential: we are a young nation with 60 per cent of the population under the age of 30, and 42 per cent under 15 years old. While we recognise the challenges facing young people, we believe focusing solely on problems is not conducive to our goals, so we intentionally chose to view youth as assets. As Africa’s most populous country, Nigeria is a dynamic centre of innovation in finance, technology, agriculture, civic tech, and creative industries. The so-called “youthquake” — a term used by scholars and commentators — captures the profound impact of young Nigerians. From breakthroughs in Lagos’s tech scene to the global reach of Nollywood and Afrobeats, their ingenuity is unquestionable. Young people are also reimagining civic engagement, pioneering new forms of organisations and activism on issues such as clean energy, climate change, democracy, transparency, accountability, and sexual and gender-based violence. Nigeria’s young people are digital natives, having grown up immersed in technology. Virtual communities have amplified voices like Balkisu’s, fuelled mass protests, and created new avenues for participation. The Balkisus of Nigeria represent the promise of this work: a disadvantaged, geographically isolated, digitally savvy young woman with limited access to technology due to cost and harm. Yet, technology enabled her voice to resonate in the civic space. Nigeria Next is still in the early stages, but our Nigeria team is excited for the work ahead. By elevating our young people through greater inclusion, innovation, creativity, and civic participation, we hope to make a lasting contribution to Nigeria and its future. Kole Shettima is the director of MacArthur’s Nigeria Office. This article was originally published by MacArthur Foundation. Share this: Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp Click to share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email Click to print (Opens in new window) Print


SOURCE: https://www.premiumtimesng.com/opinion/866981-nigeria-next-elevating-young-peoples-voice-and-dignity-in-nigeria-by-kole-shettima.html


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