Investigations, Special Reports & Interviews

Two Years of Tinubu's Presidency: A Legacy of Missed Opportunities

Tinubu’s Neoliberal Economic Model Will Not Lift Nigerians Out of Poverty

President Bola Tinubu’s economic agenda is built on a neoliberal foundation, rooted in the belief that free markets alone can drive growth and prosperity. But for a country like Nigeria, marked by mass poverty, weak infrastructure, and deep inequality, this model is not only unsuitable, it is dangerous. Tinubu’s alignment with neoliberalism is clear. His […]

Tinubu’s Neoliberal Economic Model Will Not Lift Nigerians Out of Poverty Read More »

When Communication Becomes Just PR: Development Fails

When Communication Becomes Just PR: Development Fails

For 15 years, I’ve led communication efforts across top NGOs in Nigeria. Over this time, one truth has become impossible to ignore: Development communication is dangerously misunderstood and undervalued. I have published over a dozen empirical studies on communication theory and practice in respected local and international journals. I currently support three PhD researchers in

When Communication Becomes Just PR: Development Fails Read More »

From Noise to Impact: The Shift NGOs Must Make

From Noise to Impact: The Shift NGOs Must Make

One of the key challenges to Development Communication is that a greater number of NGOs still consider “awareness campaigns” the ultimate achievement. When they erect billboards, air radio jingles, and attain social media trends, they conclude they have achieved meaningful, measurable impact. What needs to be known by a greater number of NGOs is that

From Noise to Impact: The Shift NGOs Must Make Read More »

Kogi Geregu School — Where Hope Meets Broken Walls

Kogi Geregu School — Where Hope Meets Broken Walls

Every day, kids walk through these cracked walls and missing roofs—not because the school is abandoned, but because their dreams won’t wait. Imagine sitting in a classroom with no roof over your head, bare floors under your feet, and no science lab in sight. This is reality for students here in Geregu, Ajaokuta LGA, Kogi

Kogi Geregu School — Where Hope Meets Broken Walls Read More »

Field Notes from Participatory Communication with Rural Women Farmers

During our recent participatory communication engagements in Lapai, Paikoro, Wushishi (Niger State) and Otukpo, Gboko, Oshongo (Benue State), spanning six rural communities in North-Central Nigeria, one message came through loud and clear: Rural women farmers prefer female agricultural extension workers. They shared that: Female extension workers can easily enter their homes, sit with them, and

Field Notes from Participatory Communication with Rural Women Farmers Read More »

Sokoto’s Road Construction: A Symbol of Corruption and Betrayal

In Mabera, Sokoto, what should have been a road to progress has become a fast-fading stain of corruption, MonitNG, a public accountability organization has exposed Under the much-hyped Sokoto Urban Renewal Project, residents were promised infrastructure. What they got was a sham: a thin smear of bitumen on bare earth—no foundation, no drainage, no intention

Sokoto’s Road Construction: A Symbol of Corruption and Betrayal Read More »

Two Years of Tinubu's Presidency: A Legacy of Missed Opportunities

Two Years of Tinubu’s Presidency: A Legacy of Missed Opportunities

Nigerians were promised renewed hope, bold reforms, and decisive leadership two years ago. As President Bola Ahmed Tinubu crosses the halfway mark of his first term, we are left with a growing sense of betrayal. The Centre for Development Communication stands with millions of Nigerians, especially the voiceless, who ask a simple but urgent question: What

Two Years of Tinubu’s Presidency: A Legacy of Missed Opportunities Read More »

Development Work Knowledge 101: No One is Illiterate

Development Communication 101: No One is Illiterate

Having been active on the field for 15 years, I have observed a pattern in development practice. A greater number of practitioners approach solutions to development intervention on the assumption that they are experts, while targeted communities are considered illiterates who know little or nothing. In Nigeria, we simply assume them as illiterates. In my

Development Communication 101: No One is Illiterate Read More »

We Must Change How We Dialogue: True Participatory Communication Cannot Coexist With Hierarchy

We often gather to “dialogue” under chandeliers, around high tables, and behind nameplates that scream status, not solidarity. We say the meeting is inclusive, but the seating arrangement tells another story. What if the very way we sit is part of the problem? In spaces meant to heal wounds, shape futures, and rebuild trust, formality

We Must Change How We Dialogue: True Participatory Communication Cannot Coexist With Hierarchy Read More »

Monitoring & Evaluation (M&E): Beyond the Checklist

Monitoring & Evaluation (M&E): Beyond the Checklist

In my 15 years in the development sector, I have observed that the Monitoring & Evaluation (M&E) practice by a greater number of NGOs is often perceived as a necessary administrative task. For the organisations, it is a task to satisfy donors, complete reports, or tick boxes on a log frame. After spending years in

Monitoring & Evaluation (M&E): Beyond the Checklist Read More »