ForeverMissed
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This memorial website was created in memory of our loved one, Prof Akinlawon Mabogunje, 90 years old, born on October 18, 1931, and passed away on August 4, 2022. We will remember him forever.
August 11, 2022
August 11, 2022
Shoes Too Big to Fill

My darling uncle, I knew your time was near but it still came as a shock when I woke up to the news of your departure. I know you were a National Treasure but to me, you were my big uncle, my mother’s big brother. You were the uncle that always sought me out just to check on me and make sure I was okay. You looked for my siblings as well, carving out precious time from your busy schedule just to see us. Who will do that now? Your shoes are too big to fill.

You were my uncle, the first son of your father, making you the head of the Mabogunje family for as long as I can remember. You held the office well, just like you held your academic office well and your national office well, an exemplary force for good wherever you were appointed to. You were a good husband, father, grandfather and even great-grandfather to emulate, a dear brother, uncle, cousin and friend. All that knew you, sing from the same song sheet, you were indeed a great man! Heaven’s gain is now our loss. Who can be all that you have been to this era? Your shoes are too big to fill!

I thank God for your visit to London last Summer, I got to see you one last time. I was honoured to cook for you, you ate the food and said it was tasty, I think I blushed at the praise. I didn’t realise that would be the last time. Thank you, uncle for all you did, for our family, for our nation, for Africa, for Geography world-wide. Who now will wear so many caps, who? Big shoes, shoes too big to fill.

Adieu Uncle, Rest in Peace Sir.
August 11, 2022
August 11, 2022
My Godfather, like no other- Professor Akinlawon Ladipo Mabogunje. (1931-2022).

I have known Prof for as long as I have known myself! He and my father, Bola Ige were classmates at Ibadan Grammar School and University College Ibadan, now University in Ibadan. He and my dad grew up in the North and would speak Hausa, when they didn’t want others to hear their conversation. They both married lawyers, both pioneer female lawyers, who later became Judges.

I am the first of my parents’ children and they took our upbringing very seriously. When I was to be baptised, being a girl, I only had one Godfather and my parents chose a Godfearing Christian who shared the same values as them. They chose the best person for me, Professor Akin Mabogunje. He took his Godfather role very seriously and as I prepared for my Confirmation in 1973, he explained the meaning of the Christian milestone-that I was then old enough to confirm the vows he had taken with my parents at my baptism, that jointly, they would raise me in the ways of the Lord Jesus Christ.

I remember he gave me a white Zondervan Bible for my Confirmation, autographed in his beautiful handwriting.
When I was 21, and I had a thanksgiving service he and his wife, Hon. Justice Titilola Mabogunje( my mum’s lookalike), gave me my first Omega wristwatch- it was a Seamaster edition.
Before I got married, I took my then Fiance, Gbenro Adegbola to meet him and of course, he gave his seal of approval. He gave me a handsome cash gift for my wedding.

Prof and Justice Mabogunje have been at every milestone of my life. They were there at my wedding, 40th, 50th, 55th birthdays. When I shared my vision of running a private secondary school, The Vale College, with him, he was most supportive. Hon. Justice Titilola Mabogunje was one of the Founders’ Day Lecturers in the early years of my school. They both attended nearly every Founders’ Day of the college. In 2020, he and his beautiful wife were given the award of PILLARS OF THE VALE for their support and contribution to the vision of the school. When I was building my College Hall, they gave the biggest donation. I am grateful to them for their generosity.

In 1995 when I moved to the same neighborhood, we became even closer in proximity. When my mum was transferred to Benin and Kaduna, she was happy that I and my family were in good hands, with the Mabogunjes, Ojos and Ade-Ajayis within walking distance.

However in 2003, when I lost both my parents within the space of 16 months, and I was totally emotionally shattered and devastated, my Godfather, now became truly ‘in loco parentis’, our relationship became even stronger. He helped us with the Order of Service for my mum’s service of songs and funeral.
Since his house was within walking distance, I would often, just stroll to spend time with him, sharing both the high and lows of my life. He would cheer and encourage me on.

He and his wife, like my parents, are my role- models in marriage- two professionals united in love yet giving each other space to grow and flourish, without taking the shine off one another. They would both take walks round the neighborhood right till their 80s. I was happy to be present at their 60th wedding anniversary, surrounded by their children, grandchildren and great- grandchildren.
Prof was the epitome of a complete gentleman. Very calm, polite and soft-spoken. He was extremely clever yet not arrogant. He was a man of peace and distinction- very measured, articulate, meticulous and detailed in his dressing as well as his calligraphy.

One of the attributes I love most about him, is his love for family and loyalty to friends. He loved and supported his beautiful wife, Hon Justice Mabogunje. I thank her for the way she looked after him especially in the past one and a half years. Thank you mum, for your unconditional love and care for dad. May the Lord bless and keep you, grant you good health and long life IJN. Amen. I pray that the Holy Spirit the Comforter will suffuse you with His presence and abide with you always IJN. Amen.
Mum and Dad are blessed with such wonderful children- how many families have 2 Professors as children, including Professor Sade Ogunsola, the first female Acting Vice-Chancellor of University of Lagos. He was really blessed and highly favored- Father of Professors, literally and
metaphorically! Indeed God gave him a great measure of His grace.

His children- Segun and Sade Ogunsola, Seun and Toki Mabogunje, Gboyega and Nirvana Mabogunje, Femi and Bimpe Oye and Sola and Sinmi Mabogunje gave him the very best care, medically and emotionally. Indeed Gboyega spent two months at his bedside. What a great family full of sacrificial love for one another. You are all very worthy children and my prayer is that you will all live long in good health and that your children will care and pamper you just as you did for your parents. Amen.

Prof died peacefully in his sleep, quietly and without any pain, just as he lived. A true child of God has returned to his Father who he loved and served all his life. He loved hymns and spiritual songs and would sing lustily in his sonorous voice, knowing the lyrics by heart. To say I would miss him, is an understatement- When my dad died, I told myself ‘Baba ku, baba ku’, now that my Godfather has gone to meet my dad on the other side, all I have left and will always have is my Almighty Father, the Lord Jesus Christ.

I bless God for the past 20 years that I had Prof as a strong father figure in my life. He saw me flourish and saw both my children get married - he was very present at my daughter’s marriage introduction. I cannot thank God enough for sparing his life for the birth of my first two grandchildren, with my granddaughter being born the day before his 89th birthday .

We Yorubas believe that our dear departed ones meet in heaven, I am sure you and your friends- my parents, would have met by now and you can tell them how great a support you have been to me and mine. Rest In Peace my Outstanding Irreplaceable Godfather, I love you very much but I know Jesus loves you more. You lived well, loved much and served God, family, nation and the entire world, to the best of your ability. You gave your all to humanity, impacting and touching millions of lives, directly and indirectly. We are assured that you are in the bosom of our Lord Jesus Christ and so, I bid you Goodnight and see you on the Resurrection morning, when we shall meet to part no more. May the angels carry you and may light perpetual shine upon you. Amen.

Goodnight my one and only Godfather, an icon and exceptional academic and statesman. I will always love you and all that you loved! Rest In Peace my Godfather, like none other!

Funso ADEGBOLA
Nee Ige.
August 9, 2022
August 9, 2022
Prof was a great Father to many of us who were not his biological children.He was very close to my late father Dr Olarewaju Olasimbo and after we lost him almost thirty years ago ,he was always there to support our family.

I always call him on his birthday because we share the same birthday month October
He was a giant in the academic world and highly cerebral in his discussion and always soft spoken

The role he played in my University Olabisi Onabanjo University can never be forgotten as the first pro chancellor and chairman of council
His works in eradicating  poverty in Ijebu land will always be remembered.

Prof continue to rest in the bosom of your savior
Adieu Prof
Dr Olayinka Olasimbo
August 9, 2022
August 9, 2022
Knowing and interacting with Professor and Justice Mabogunje was always a privilege for me. My parent’s closest friend's; uncle and auntie were always there for them, and for my sister and I. Uncle was a professor for as long as I knew him, and undoubtedly, one of the smartest people I’ve met anywhere in the world. Like Einstein, he had an ability to break down the most difficult concepts or ideas, and simplify them in a manner anyone would understand.

If he wasn’t a professor of geography, he would have excelled in whatever he tried, and with his sense of humour and ability as a raconteur, he could have been a professor of comedy.

May his soul RIP, and may the good Lord console and continue to bless Auntie and the entire family.
August 9, 2022
August 9, 2022
By Dr. Akinwumi A. Adesina
AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT BANK GROUP
President
6, Avenue Jean-Paul II – 01 B.P. 1387 – Abidjan 01 (Côte d’Ivoire)

It is with a very heavy heart that I learnt of the passing away of Professor Akin Mabogunje. Nigeria, Africa, and the world have lost a great intellectual giant.

Prof. Mabogunje’s name is synonymous with geography, and he was globally respected in the field.

He was a man of many firsts. He was the first Nigerian professor in geography. He was the first African to be elected to the globally prestigious United States National Academy of Sciences, as a Foreign Associate. A prodigious writer, his work and contributions got him elected as President of the International Geographical Union and he was the first African to hold the position.

He was awarded the Vaudrin Lud Prize, the highest global distinction in geography, widely considered as the ‘Nobel Prize in Geography’ for his immense contributions.

Prof. Mabogunje contributed immensely to the knowledge and understanding of urbanization, spatial economic development, and critical role of rural infrastructure development in reducing rural-urban migration.
Known as the ‘father of geography in Nigeria’, Prof. Mabogunje for decades advised state, regional, and Federal governments with the power of his ideas to support balanced economic growth models that consider the environment and people’s wellbeing.

He was passionate about geography with spiritual fervency, seeing it as an opportunity to serve God in managing land, people and all that dwell on it.
As Prof. Mabogunje said when he was awarded the Vaudrin Lud Prize “the totality of the environment is what geography means to me.’’
A passionate promoter of the need for a balance between development and the environment, Prof. Mabogunje said “nature is now showing that man cannot go beyond certain boundaries. Our pollution has shown us the limits to which we can go. The environment is now more important than it was before.’’

Prof. Mabogunje was exceptional and extremely brilliant, becoming a full Professor at the University of Ibadan at the age of 34 years, just seven years after earning his doctorate degree.

His contributions to Africa’s development were immense. He was the Vice-President, Governing Council for Pan African Institute for Development (1972-78); Chairman, International Committee for Overcoming Hunger in the 1990s (1988-1994); Visiting Research Fellow, World Bank, 1990; Member, Executive Committee, Senior African Leadership Forum (1992-date); Adviser to the Secretary General, United Nations Second Conference on Human Settlements (1994-1999).

He helped to chart a path for national recognition of professional academic excellence in Nigeria and was a Member of the National Merit Award Endowment Fund (1983-89) and Chairman of the Fund (1989-1994).

Despite being such an intellectual giant, Professor Mabogunje was incredibly humble. He related with me as if we were contemporaries.

I treasured sharing the same name ‘Akin’ with him, and he always calling me ‘Namesake’. I will greatly miss the precious moments we spoke; he always encouraged me to keep on being an ‘Akin’ (a warrior and conqueror).
Namesake, Professor, you were truly an ‘Akin’: you used your very sharp brain to fight wars on underdevelopment and you conquered many knowledge territories, in Nigeria, Africa and globally.

Your legacy is indelible.

With your passing, Nigeria has lost a great mind, a jewel, an intellectual colossus, an exemplary human being, a great role model, and a national patriot who made Nigeria and Africa so proud.
May God comfort your loving family. Sleep well, ‘Namesake, Professor’! May your soul rest in peace.

August 9, 2022
August 9, 2022
By Tony Marinho

We will not fail to weep when great men and women,who we have never lacked in number, sleep the final sleep.

Such persons are eminently exemplified by Emeritus Professor Akin Mabogunje who tirelessly fought the good fight till very close to the end. Today he has finished the race, breasted the tape between life and eternal glory. Meanwhile we are forced to ask why others are so deaf, their brains impervious to the desperate need of the many and to the 70 years of sound guidance repeatedly given by such greats great men and women as we look around and ask ' How did we get to this dark place here with so much good will, so many meetings, so many conferences, so many papers, so many feasibility studies?
The great man's work is done.
May he RIPP and grant Aunty Justice and the family strength at this time of a painful present and glorious memories. Amen
August 9, 2022
August 9, 2022
From the Department of Geography, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ibadan.


Professor Akin MABOGUNJE, former Dean of Faculty of the Social Sciences, UI (1968 - 1970) joined the triumphant Angels on 4/8/2022

Our Department & Faculty will miss Professor Akin Mabogunje very sorely.

A rare breed, an icon, an institution and indeed a moving archive.

He epitomized sagacity, erudition and uncommon insight.

Yet, the great man was profoundly humble and soft-spoken.

One could always easily relate with an aura of peace and happiness around him.

I remember a few years back when some Britons that visited Nigeria, on a project that Prof. Ibidun Adelekan led its Nigerian component, insisted that they needed to have him sign autographs for them.

Their request was granted and that alone made their trip . He was unarguably a global scholar.

Geography Department will sorely miss him..

Faculty of the Social Sciences will miss him greatly.

University of Ibadan will.. Humanity definitely will..

What a man!

Adieu, an achiever of repute. Adieu, the Geographer. Adieu, the social scientist
August 9, 2022
August 9, 2022
By Sola Adelaja GCI old boy

I am extremely grateful to God for the golden opportunity of thanking Papa directly several times, for the invaluable role God enabled him to play, in blessing me with my wonderful wife, about 23 years ago. The last opportunity I had was at the funeral ceremony of Biodun Ogunmekan's Dad, at Ibadan.

I actually ensured that Biodun witnessed our conversation.

I also recollect what the the former spokesman to the late President Yaradua wrote in his Book on President Yaradua. He quoted President Yaradua 's observation to the effect that Professor Mabogunje was one of the extremely few Nigerians, who never discussed personal favours during or after their Meetings,in Aso Rock.He added that Professor Mabogunje kept very strictly to discussions on the solutions to the problems of Nigeria.

I am reminded about the comment of the son of Sir Christopher Wren, who designed the magnificent St.Paul's Cathedral in London.

Some people in authority asked him for suggestions on memorializing his late father, Sir Christopher Wren.

His reeponse was to the effect that the magnificence of the Cathedral his father designed was the best way of memorializing him.

All will be well !
August 9, 2022
August 9, 2022
By Prof Eyitayo Lambo

ODE TO THE LATE SAGE
He came, he saw, he conquered!
His reputation precedes him.
His name evokes great aura of intellectualism and science .
His presence exudes wisdom.
His works ooze excellence and novelty.
Indeed, a gold fish has no hiding place.

An omnibus of knowledge.
Master of all!
Daring and endearing.
A barrel full of substance,
Not a moment for vain noises.
Hear him speak, wisdom echoes;
Yes, resonating in the minds of the seekers.
His works are knowledge to thrones,
Great wisdom to crowns,
Insightful to scholars and sages.
An ode to the iconic

Behold again Emeritus
Professor Akin L Mabogunje!
The son of the soil.
The first among many.
A great African,
Yet a global pride.
A think tank!
A geographer, a planner, an economist, a linguist, a poet, a philosopher and a statesman.
For the masses he professed.
Yes, a proponent of prosperity for the masses
'O poverty in the midst of plenty' he lamented.

Adieu!
Gandmaster of the greatests!
Professor of professors!
The nation mourns thee!
The world mourns thee!
Geography mourns thee!
I mourn thee!
We mourn thee!
Adieu Emeritus Professor Akin L. Mabogunje.
Good night!

(C) Amiolemen 2022
August 9, 2022
August 9, 2022
My heartfelt condolences go to the Mabogunje family who will surely miss his love and care. I pray that his brilliant soul shall find that absolute peace in the Lord's bosom.
August 8, 2022
August 8, 2022
The Mabogunje clan is dealing with a painful loss, but as the many tributes will undoubtedly show, while this is a sad time we can all attest to and take solace in our patriarch's indelible mark on his immediate and extended family, his country and the world. He was a renound accademic, a fierce champion of his beloved Nigeria and a passionate advocate and teacher. Its been said the true measure of a person is intangiable and can be best be summed up sucintnly in the 5 Cs. Creed, character, conversation, contribution and conduct. Rather than enumerating singular examples of each of these traits from my personal experience with my beloved uncle (there'd be too many mention), I'd rather leave it to each of us to reflect on our own individual interactions with him and each of these traits.
"Uncle the professor" and we fondly called him was a true example of humility, intelligence and honor. He led by example, spoke softly, yet with conviction and took every opportunity to impart knowledge. My early memories of him included him calling my siblings amd me "master" in deference to our young age and marking our transition to manhood by then calling us "mister" as we came of age. He would tell us upon graduation from university that we were now the same as him (we were now graduates), even tough we knew full well this was a joke. He would speak to us in Hausa since we grew up in the north and switch to yoruba with such ease.... all the while probing genuingly, about our progress with school, career and life in general.

like everyone else I relished every opportunity I had to sit and talk with him, his insight into several aspects particularly history of Nigeria and Africa in general was so illuminating, plus it was never the stuff in the history books but first had account of certain histoeic occurences and decisions because he was actually in the room.The nigerian history i expected but he did the same with Zimbabwean history when we spent some time in Harare in '15. That ride was an hour long and yet it felt like a few mintutes on account of his recantment of nuanced detail.The fact that he was on first name basis with more than one Nigerian president and other foreign leaders was fascinating to me. He was called to serve, to advise, to solve problems, to establish processes, to delivery results. In his every endeavor he embodied the 5 Cs unequivocally. May we all be so blessed to live full and rich lives following in his footsteps. Big shoes to fill but...we must try.. Rest well uncle....rest well.
August 8, 2022
August 8, 2022
A veritably distinguished scholar and gentleman of the old school. Sir, to the Glory of God, yours was a remarkably exemplary and eminently accomplished life, which impacted positively on numerous individuals, and very many communities and countries. May the Almighty God graciously grant eternal rest, and may divine consolation abide with the family, amen
August 8, 2022
August 8, 2022
Thank you sir for your contributions to human development especially in theoretical and practical Geography, of which I benefited immensely. May you gentle soul Rest In Peace and May God grant your family the fortitude to bear the irreparable loss.
August 7, 2022
August 7, 2022
My Darling Uncle, assuredly there is a time and season for everything under the sun and indeed it's your time to leave us. We knew it was coming but it still hurts to say goodbye. I sigh heavily as I realise it's time for my generation to rise up and take the helm and learn the precious lessons that you left for us to follow. But who Uncle, can walk in your footsteps? Who can en masse all your qualities, hardwork and dedication and put them on so elegantly just like a cloak and lead as you have led? Who will serve Family,Education, Nation, Continent and beyond all at the same time, all with such humility, I ask who?
Thank you Sir for all you did. Thank you Sir for including me and mine in your agenda. Thank you Sir for heading our great Mabogunje clan with love, understanding and patience, thank you Sir for nurturing the next generation and showing us the way to go. We will not let you down, the name Mabogunje will continue to be synonymous with integrity, by God's grace.
Adieu Uncle, Rest in Peace Sir.
August 7, 2022
August 7, 2022
Adieu uncle! You have left your indelible mark on the sands of greatness and your legacy is larger than life. I watched you sing a Yoruba song from verse 1 to 5 off head once at your granddaughters wedding and I said what a genius! That perception is shared by many around the world.
I pray that God accepts you in His bosoms and grants you a walk with the Saints above. Rest In Peace.
August 7, 2022
August 7, 2022
Baba Mabogunje, I just want to thank God for the opportunity of knowing you and the lessons learnt through you while here with us.
You came, you saw and you conquered, the mark you left in our heart can never be erased because you are a good father
Papa continue to rest in the bosom of your God.
Rest on BABA ONINURE. 
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Recent Tributes
November 13, 2022
November 13, 2022
INTELLECT IN THE SERVICE OF HUMANITY.  - A Tribute to Prof Akin Mabogunje
      
Pat Utomi

His insights into solution for many of Nigeria’s social problems hit the eardrums with the profundity of the proclamation of a sage. Yet he spoke so gently you wondered where the whispers of nuggets of wisdom were coming from.
I had the privilege of becoming acquainted with tho country’s foremost geographer, planner, development guru and statesman.
The privilege of being associated came first as a student tracking the thoughts of a master, then as one who submitted himself for mentoring and in gratitude, as one who had the privilege of celebrating the genius of another. The Centre for Vdlues in Leadership which I founded had celebrated Prof Akin Mabogunje in its Leader Without Title series just as it did for Mr Akintola Williams, Mr Gamaliel Onosode, Alhaji Ahmed Joda, Professor Grace Alele Williams, Izoma Philip Asiodu and Prof Chinua Achebe among others.
One lesson from his life's journey , I learnt early, is that Nigeria prefes to bestow honorific titles on those who scamper and scramble after such, and not to those whose work deserve honor.
Nothing spoke those sentiments as clearly as the fact that Professor Mabogunje’s work in taking the idea of a new capital for Nigeria from conception to the drawing board and practical implementation, was so huge, yet after major roads in Abuja had been named for all kinds of undeserving people, the system had neglected to name a significant thoroughfare after the father of Abuja, Professor Akin Mabogunje.
But in his humble and gentle nature, he spoke seldom about this discourtesy.
Still he poured out from his huge reservoir of intellect ideas on how to make life better for all in Nigeria in a steady flow and the ease of wisdom from a sage. His deployment of intellect in the service of humanity was emblematic of an era and generation that seems to be passing away.
What defines rhe modern world, as Adrian Wooldridge appropriately captures in a book so titled is: The Aristocracy of Talent. The books subtitle, How Meritocracy made the modern world captures the essential Mabogunje. But in him the Aristocracy of talent and the Kingship of intellect enjoy a bear hug and kiss without the typical snobbery of the intellectual being impatient with those of of less fancied endowments.
It was not freak thinking that led the great American Political Scientist James McGregor Burns to write in the huge tome on Leadership that the intellectual has moral authority. This surely was what the Billy J Dudleys , Kenneth Onwuka Dikes and Sam Alukos shared with the Mabogunjes.
Remarkably he did not dwell in the Ivory tower of his complex contemplation but offered his perspective not in language that had to be deciphered, and thus outside the scope of comprehension by those not initiated with higher research degrees. Clarity and simplicity in elevated expression is not a gift commonly available. His counsel was practical and implementable by regular public service officers.
I recall calling, on one occasion, for a reprogramming of Local Government Administration and treating them as Economic Development machines rather than policy structures of administration. His counsel was that my ideas would be more likely to bear fruit if the process were driven by community development Unions, which were very active in parts of the country like the South East.
Prof. Mabogunje had a great sense of the proper and proportion. About thirty years ago Chief Chris Ogunbanjo hosted the cream of the Business and Political elite St his home town retreat in Erunwon, near Ijebu Ode to discuss the path to Nigeria's tomorrow. When I arrived I literally bumped into Prof. Mabogunje who was grinning in palpable relief. Am I glad to see you Pat, he said. When I was leaving home today one of my children said to me : how come those of you about to die are gathering to discuss the the future of those of us who will live in that future.
Now that I see you I can in good conscience say the future was part of the conversation. I told him he would be around way into that future.
Thankfully God honored my prophesy and blessed us with more than three decades of his thoughtful reflections.
The treasure Professor Akin Mabogunje was could be found to be located in the nexus of the intellectual in his comfort zone of the Ivory tower; the intellectual as policy wonk translating the tines and inspiring advocate for a new order; and the intellectual as mother hen statesman bandaging the wounds of frustrations of rising expectations and consequent discontent from the frustrations of failure. With a nobility of spirit that was uncommon, Prof Mabogunje carried these burdens gracefully.
With all of these he still refused escape into the world of the superman trying to save the world and was a dutiful husband and father much loved by his children, as we found out when CVL honored him.
Our world is truly diminished by his loss but consolation dwells nearby in the immortality his his walk earned.

Patrick Okedinachi Utomi, Founder of the Centre for Values in Leadership is a Professor at the Lagos Business School.
October 18, 2022
October 18, 2022
Dearest Daddy, we would have been celebrating your 91 years on earth today.
And I would have called to wish you a happy birthday as p usually do.
Though, it is sad that you are no longer with us, I thank God Almighty Father for the life you lived,how you touched so many lives and for all the good works you did.
To die,is not the end for those who lived in Christ. Continue to rest with your Lord and Saviour, lovely father.

❤❤❤❤.

Adenike.
His Life

Brief Autobiography of Prof Akin Lawon Mabogunje

August 17, 2022
PROF. AKINLAWON LADIPO MABOGUNJE, NNOM, CFR. CON
Professor Akin Mabogunje, former Chancellor, Bells University of Technology, Ota and Chairman, Centre for Human Security, Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library, Abeokuta, Chairman, Ibadan School of Government and Public Policy and Chairman, Foundation for Development and Environmental Initiatives, Ibadan, was former Executive Chairman of the Development Policy Centre, Ibadan, Dean of the Faculty of the Social Sciences, Director of the Planning Studies  Programme and Professor of Geography of the University of Ibadan, Nigeria.  Born in Kano on the 18th of October, 1931, he attended Ibadan Grammar School, and received his university education at both the University College, Ibadan and the University College, London.  He graduated Doctor of Philosophy in Geography from the University of London in 1961 and taught for many years at the University of Ibadan, Nigeria.  He also taught in a number of Universities outside Nigeria, notably in Britain, Sweden, Brazil and the United States.  In the latter country, he was the Melville Herskovits Distinguished Professor of African Studies for the session 1978-79 and was the first African President of the International Geographical Union, 1980-84.

Mabogunje has served in a number of public sector positions in Nigeria.  Notable among these are as Chairman, Western State Forestry Commission (1968-74), Senior Adviser on Mapping, Nation Population Commission (1972-75), Member,  Federal Public Service Review Commission, (Udoji Commission) 1972-74, Chairman, National Council for Management Development (1976-79), Consultant, Federal Capital Development Authority, 1976-84, Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of the Governing Council of Ogun State University (1982-91), Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Nigerian National Merit Award Endowment Fund (1989-94), Vice-Chairman of the Directorate of Food, Roads and Rural Infrastructure (DFFRI) in the Office of the President (1986-91), Executive Chairman of the National Board for Community Banks (1991-1994), Chairman of the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria (2002-2008), Chairman, Presidential Technical Committee on Housing and Urban Development, 2002 – 2004, Chairman, Interim Lagos-Ogun Megacity Development Authority, 2006 –2011 and Chairman, Presidential Technical Committee on Land Reform, 2009 – 2011.  In the private sector, he was Chairman, First Interstate Bank (1995-2005) which later merged with other banks to form the Unity Bank for which he was also Chairman (2005 -2011). In his hometown Ijebu-ode he was the Initiator and Chairman of the Ijebu Development Initiative on Poverty Reduction, Awujale Palace, Ijebu-ode, 1999 – 2022. 

Mabogunje has been the recipient of numerous honours both within and outside Nigeria.  He is one of the very earliest recipients in 1980 of the Nigerian National Order of Merit (NNOM), the highest national award for distinguished contribution to the academic and intellectual life of the country.  He is also the recipient of the national honours of Commander of the Order of the Niger (CON – 2001) and Commander of the Order of the Federal Republic (CFR – 2011) and is one of the 100 recipients of the Centenary Award to mark the 100th year of the amalgamation of Nigeria (2014).  Mabogunje has been honoured with honorary doctorate degrees by the Stockholm School of Economics, Sweden (1973), Michigan State University, East Lansing (1976) and a number of Nigerian Universities. He is a Fellow of University College, London (1981), the Nigerian Geographical Association (1984) and the Social Science Academy of Nigeria (1999).  He is Honorary Fellow of the Nigerian Institute of Town Planners (1990), the Nigerian Institution of Estate Surveyors and Valuers (2006) and the Nigerian Institution of Surveyors (2010).  He is the first African to be elected Foreign Associate of the United States National Academy of Sciences in 1999. In 2017, Mabogunje was named the “Laureate of the Vautrin-Lud Prize” which is regarded as the “Noble Prize of Geography” and in the same year at the age of 85 he was elected as a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Akin Mabogunje, born of strong Christian parents has always been active in the Church. He loves to sing Church hymns and was a chorister in the Church in his younger days. He attends the Cathedral Church of Saint James the Great in Oke-Ado, Ibadan the city he lives in and has received many honours and recognitions for his contributions in the Church and the diocese. In his lifetime he was a member of the Youth Christian Circle (YCC) in the Cathedral for many years. In his home town Ijebu-ode, he worships at the Cathedral Church of Our Saviour, Italowajoda, Ijasi whenever he visits home and joined the Egbe Ifelodun society of the Church about 30 years ago and served as its 7th President between 1999 and 2002. He remained an active member of the Egbe till his passing.

Akin Mabogunje married his true love and best friend, Hon. Justice Titilola Mabogunje (nee Ogunmekan) on December 28th 1957 and the marriage is blessed with five children (Folasade, Oluseun, Adegboyega, Adebimpe and Olusola) who are now all happily married and have given him many grandchildren and great grandchildren. He is survived by brothers, sisters, nieces, nephews and cousins and was the Patriarch of the Mabogunje family until his death in the early morning of August 4th 2022.

May his noble soul rest in peace 

CURRICULUM VITAE - AKIN L. MABOGUNJE

August 17, 2022
Name: AKINLAWON LADIPO MABOGUNJE
Birth: Born 18th October, 1931 in Kano, Northern Nigeria
Address: 13 Oba Olagbegi Road, Bodija Estate, Ibadan
 P. O. Box 2681, Main Post Office, Ibadan
 E-mail: akinmabo@gmail.com.
Parentage: Father: Joseph Omotunde Mabogunje, retired official of the United Africa Co.  Ltd. (Deceased)
 Mother: Janet Adeola Mabogunje, Trader (Deceased)
Education: Holy Trinity School, Kano - 1935-1938
 United Native African Church School, Kano 1939-1941
 Central School, Mapo, Ibadan - 1942
 The Grammar School, Ibadan - 1943-1948
 University College, Ibadan - 1949-1953
 University College, London - 1954-1958
Qualifications: B.A. General Degree (London) - 1953
 B.A. Honours Geography (London) - 1956
 M.A. (London) - 1958
 Ph.D. (London) - 1961
Honorary Degrees: 
 Hon. D. Econ (Stockholm School of Economics, 1973 Stockholm, Sweden
 Hon. D. Litt. (Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, United States 1976
 Hon. D. Sc. (University of Benin, Benin-City) 1995
 Hon. D. Sc. (Ogun State University, Ago-Iwoye) 1996
 Hon. D. Tech. (Bells University of Technology, Ota) 2009
 Hon. D. Env, Tech. (Federal University of Technology, Akure) 2010
Honorary Fellowships:
 Fellow of the University College London (FUCL) 1981
 Fellow of the Nigerian Geographical Association (FNGA) 1984
 Fellow of the Nigerian Institute of Town Planners (FNITP) 1990
 Foreign Associate of the United States National Academy of Sciences 1999
 Fellow of the Social Science Academy of Nigeria (FSSAN) 2002
 Fellow of the Nigerian Institution of Estate Surveyors & Valuers 2006
 Fellow of the Nigerian Academy of Engineering (FNAE) 2006
 Fellow of the Nigerian Institution of Surveyors (FNIS) 2010
Other Honours: 
Prize-Winner in Geography, University College, Ibadan, 1950/51 and 1951/52 
Winner of Parry Prize in Geography, University of London, University College, 1953/54
 Award of the David Livingstone Centennial Gold Medal by the American Geographical Society for distinguished contribution to the Geography of Africa, 1972 
 Murchinson Award of the Royal Geographical Society, London for distinguished contribution of the Geography of West Africa, 1975 
 Melville Herskovits Distinguished Professor of African Studies, Northwesstern University, Evanston, Illinois, USA, 1978
 Nigeria National Order of Merit Award, (NNOM), the highest national award for distinguished contribution to the academic and intellectual life of the country, 1980.
Laureate d”Honneur, Société de Geographié, Paris, 1984
 Anders Retzius Gold Medal of the Swedish Association for Anthropology and Geography, 1985
Social Correspondent of La Societa Geografica Italiana for distinguished contribution to the study of urbanization in the Third World, Rome, 1986
 Honorary Corresponding Member, Academie Royale des Sciences d’Outre-Mer,  Bruxelles, Belgium, 1987
Life Membership, University of Ibadan Alumni Association, Ibadan, 1987
 Merit Award Recipient as a distinguished citizen of Ogun State, Nigeria, 1989
Life Membership, University of Ibadan Alumni Association, Ibadan, 1987
Merit Award Recipient as a distinguished citizen of Ogun State, Nigeria, 1989
Honorary Corresponding Member, Royal Geographical Society, London, U.K.  1991
Recipient of the Grande Medaille of the French Geographical Soceity, Paris, 1992,
Recipient, Certificate of Merit of the Ijebu-Ode Development Association, 1993               
Recipient of the Research Gold Medal of the Royal Scottish Geographical Society,  1994
Distinguished Africanist Award of the African Studies Association of the United States, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA, November, 1997
UNCHS Scroll of Honour for outstanding contributions to human settlements development, Dubai, United Arab Emirates, 1998
Initiator and Chairman of the Ijebu Development Initiative on Poverty Reduction (IDIPR), Awujale’s Palace, Ijebu-ode, 1999 – 2022. 
Foreign Associate of the United States National Academy of Sciences, Washington, D.C., April, 1999
Nigerian National Honours of Commander of the Order of the Niger (CON), 2001
Special Award by the Archbishop of Ibadan Province, Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion),  Ibadan, 2003
Hallmarks of Labour Foundation Role Model Award, 2005
National Union of Geography Students Association (NUGSA) (University of    Ibadan Chapter) Role Model Award, 2005
National Environment Award 2006 (Sustainable Development Man of the Year) 2006
The Zik Prize in Leadership (for outstanding performance in Public Service), 2006
Distinguished Service Award by the Cathedral of St. James The Great at the 150th Anniversary Commemoration of its Founding - 2010
Nigerian National Honours of Commander of the Order of the Federal Republic (CFR), 2011
Centenary Award, Federal Government of Nigeria, 100 Eminent Citizens, 2014
CVL Leadership without Title (LWT) Award - 2016
Laureate of the Vautrin-Lud Prize which is regarded as the Noble Prize of Geography – 2017
Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences – 2017
Heart of the Nation Star Award by the Federal Capital Territory Authousity (FCTA) – June 2022 
University Positions (Nigeria):
                  Lecturer                                               1958-1964
                      Senior Lecturer                                          1964-1965
                      Professor                                                    1965-1981
                      Dean, Faculty of Social Sciences               1968-1970 
                      Director, Planning-Studies Programme     1972-1981
Visiting Professorship (International):
1.   North Western University, Evanston, Illinois, USA  -  1963/64; 1967/68; 1978/79.
2.   McGill University, Centre f or Developing Countries Areas Studies, Montreal, Canada, 1969
3.   Universities of Goteborg and Lund, Sweden, 1970
4.   Universities of London, Oxford, Cambridge and Durham as Commonwealth Professor, 1971
5.   University of Rio De Janeiro, Brazil, 1975
6.   Stockholm School of Economics, Stockholm., Sweden, 1976
7.   University of Cambridge, England, 1978
8.   Visiting Scholar, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, January, 1996.
Other Positions:
National - Professional
Editor, Nigerian Geographical Journal, 1962-65
Editor, Oxford University Press series on Studies in the Development of African Resources, 1967
President, Nigerian Geographical Association 1968-70 
Vice President, Nigerian Economic Society, 1972 - 1982
Vice President, Nigerian Ecological Society, 1973 - 1979
President, National Council for Population Activities, 1986 - 1992
Executive Chairman, Development Policy Centre, Ibadan, 1996 - 2000
Chairman, Governing Board, Development Policy Centre, Ibadan, 2000  - 2003
Chairman, Board of Trustees, Foundation for Development and Environmental Initiatives  (FDI), Ibadan, 2006 
Chairman, Governing Council, Centre for Human Security, Olusegun Obasanjo
Presidential Library, Oke Mosan, Abeokuta, 2012 
Chairman, Governing Council, Ibadan School of Government and Public Policy, Awolowo Avenue, Ibadan, 2015 -
National - Public Sector
Chairman, Enumeration Area Demarcation, Western Nigeria Census Board, 1961-1963
       Member, Western Nigeria Economic Advisory Council, 1967 - 71
       Chairman, Western State Forestry Commission 1968-74
       Member, Western National Committee on Kainji Lake Research Project, 1968~74
       Member Federal Public Service Review Commission, 1972-74
       Consultant on Enumeration Area Demarcation, National Census Board, 1973-75
       Chairman, Nigerian Council for Management Development, 1976 - 79
       Consultant, Federal Capital Development Authority, 1976-84
       Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of Council, Ogun State University, Ago-Iwoye, 1982-1991
       Member, Board of the Directorate of Food, Roads and Rural Infrastructures, Office of the President, 1986 - 1993
       Member, Board of Trustees, Nigerian National Merit Award Endowment Fund, 1983-1989         
       Chairman, Board of Trustees, Nigerian National Merit Award Endowment Fund, 1989-1994       
       Executive Chairman, National Board for Community Banks, 1991-1994
       Member, Committee on the Merger of the Federal Mortgage Finance Limited and the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria, (Chairman - Alhaji M.I.Yahaya), 2000
Member, Presidential Committee on Urban Development and Housing (Chairman - Governor Peter Odili), 2001
       Chairman, Presidential Technical Committee on Housing and Urban Development, 2002 - 2004
       Chairman, Presidential Technical Board, Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria, 2002 – 2007
       Member, Technical Committee on the Reform of Local Government Councils in Nigeria,           2003  2004
       Member, Federal Capital Territory Honorary Ministerial Advisory Committee, 2004  2005
       Chairman, Presidential Committee for the Redevelopment of the Lagos Megacity Region,           2005  2006
       Chairman, Interim Lagos-Ogun Megacity Development Authority, 2006 –2011
        Chancellor, Bells University, Otta, 2007 - 2015
       Chairman, Presidential Technical Committee on Land Reform, 2009 - 2011
National - Private Sector
       Member, Board of Directors, Nigerian Agricultural Products Co. Ltd., 1965-76
       Member, Board of Directors, Academy Press Plc., 1976 - 2006
       Vice-Chairman, Pai Associates International (Nigeria) Ltd., 1979 - 89
       Vice Chairman, Board of Directors, Pi International Co. Ltd., 1990 -
       Chairman, Board of Directors, Fountain Publications Limited, 1990 -
       Member, Board of Directors, First Interstate Merchant Bank (Nigeria) Ltd., 1993-95
       Member, Board of Directors, Shonny Investment and Properties Co. Ltd., 1994 -
      Chairman, Board of Directors, First Interstate Merchant Bank (Nigeria) Ltd. 1995  99
     Chairman, Board of Trustees, Estate of Late Chief Timothy Adeola Odutola,      1995 -
     Chairman, Board of Trustees, Ijebu Development Initiatives for Poverty Reduction, 1999 -       
      Chairman, Board of Directors, First Interstate Bank Plc., 2000 - 2005
       Chairman, Board of Directors, Unity Bank Plc., 2006  2011
       Member, Board of Trustees, Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library,            2008 -
International:
      Member, International Geographical Union Commission on Quantitative Methods, 1964-72
      Member, International Geographical Union Commission on Regional Aspects of Development, 1972-76
      Member, International Council of Scientific Union, Scientific Committee on Problems of            the Environment, 1973 - 76
      Vice-President, International Geographical Union, 1972~80
      Member, United Nations Secretary-General-Adhoc Advisory Committee on Regional 
      Development advising on the United Nations Centre for Regional Development, Nagoya,            Japan, 1972-86
      Vice-President, Governing Council, Pan-African Institute for Development, 1972-78
      Chairman, International Geographical Union Commission on Regional Systems and                     Policies, 1976 - 80

      Member, Board of Trustees, Population Council, New York, 1977 - 85

      President, Governing Council, Pan-African Institute for Development, Douala, Cameroon, 
      1978 - 84

     President, International Geographical Union, 1980-84

     Member, Board of Trustees, Settlement Study Centre, Rehovot, Israel, 1982 - 88
     Chairman, International Committee for Overcoming Hunger in the 1990s, World Hunger  Program, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, 1988 - 94
     Visiting Research Fellow, World Bank, 1990
     Member, Executive Committee, Africa Leadership Forum, 1992 - 1996
     Chairman, UNDP/UNCHS/World Bank Advisory Committee on the Urban Management Program, 1993 - 2000
     Senior Adviser to the Secretary-General for the United Nations Second Conference on Human Settlements, 1994 - 96
     Member, SAIL Project Committee of the Ministry of Development Cooperation, Government           of the Netherlands, 1997 - 2001 

     Member, Policy Advisory Board, World Bank, Cities Alliance, 2001 - 2006

     Member, US National Academy of Sciences, Committee on the Geographic Foundation for                Agenda 21, Washington D.C. 2001 – 2002

     Member, US National Academy of Sciences, Committee on Africas Lost Crops, Washington            D.C. 2003  2004

     Member, Board of Directors, African Center for Health and Security, George Washington                  University, Washington D.C., 2004  

     Member, US National Academy of Sciences, Committee on Urban Environmental Sustainability,     Washington D.C., 2005 - 2006

Publications:
(A) Theses:
         Changing Pattern of Rural Settlement and Rural Economy, Egba Division, Southwestern 
         Nigeria, (Unpublished M.A. Thesis for the University of London, 1958)
         Lagos: A Study in Urban Geography, (Unpublished Ph.D. for the University of London, 1961)
(B) Books:
1962: Yoruba Towns, Ibadan University Press, 22p
1967: with P.C. Lloyd and B. Awe, (eds), The City of Ibadan, Cambridge University Press, 280p
Report on Forest Policy and Management in the Western State of Nigeria, Ministry of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Ibadan, 1967, 141p (with J. Omer-Cooper) Owu in Yoruba History, Ibadan University Press, 123p.
Growth Poles and Growth Centres in the Regional Development of Nigeria, United Nations Research Institute for Social Development, Report No 71, 3, Geneva 81p
1968. Urbanization In Nigeria, University of London Press, 365pp.
1972: Regional Mobility and Resource Development in West Africa, McGill University Press (Keith Callard Lectures) No 6, 156p
1973:   (ed. ) Kainji Lake Studies, Vol. 2, Socio-Economic Aspects, University of Ibadan            Press, 196p
1974:   Cities and Social Order, Ibadan University Press, (Inaugural Lecture Series), 36p
1977:   (With A. Faniran (eds), Regional-Planning and National Development in Africa, Ibadan University Press, 326p
  (with M. 0. Filani), Absorption of Migrants into Kano City, Nigeria, Geneva ILO,         Work Employment Programme Research, Working Paper No 29, WEP-2, 19/WP29     154p
   With Filani et al), Ondo State: Guidelines for Physical and Regional                         Development  Plan, Akure, Ministry of Works and Housing, 137p
   (with Filani et al), Akure Physical Development Plan, Akure, Ministry of Works and     Housing, 35p
1978:            (with J. E. Hardoy & R. P. Misra), Shelter Provision in Developing Countries                                        (Scope II, John Wiley & Sons), 94p
1980:                The Development Process: A Spatial Perspective, Hutchinson University Library                               Press, London 379p
1981:        (with R.P. Misra (eds)), Regional Development Alternatives: International                             Perspectives,  Maruzen Asia, (for UNCRD, Nagoya, Japan), Singapore, 322p
1984:                     The Geography of Aid, Norma Wilkinson Memorial Lecture 1984, University of                           Reading, Department of Geography, Geographical Papers, No 90, 41p
1985                 (with Bertha K. Becker), Rural Development: Capitalist and Socialist Paths,                                             Vol.2,Brazil and Nigeria, Concept Publishers, New Delhi, India, 278p.
Last Things First: Re-appraising the Fundamentals of Nigerials Development               Crisis,Nigeria National Merit Award Lecture, Government Printer, FGP                         268/1085/1000(013), NA, Lagos 28p.
1987:             The End of the Beginning: Reflections on the Development Crisis in Sub- Saharan Africa, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 25p.
1989:                       The Development Process: A Spatial Perspective, (2nd Edition), Unwin Hyman                            Ltd., London, 390p.
1992:                  Perspective on Urban Land and Urban Management Policies in sub-Saharan                                    Africa,(Washington D.C.: World Bank Technical Paper No.196, Africa Technical                           Department Series).
1997:        State of the Earth: Contemporary Geographic Perspectives (Oxford:                                                                   Blackwell Publishers/UNESCO), 428pp.
2006:       Ijebuland: Challenges of Local Governance in the Modern Era, (Ijebu-Ode:       Association of Ijebu Development)
2007:      Health Challenges of Nigerian Urbanization, The Benjamin Oluwakayode
     Osuntokun Ninth Memorial Lecture, (Ibadan: Book Builders)
2009     Surveying and Geoinformatics in National Development: Reflections on 100 Years of the Federal School of Surveying, (Oyo: Federal School of Surveying: Centenary Lecture), 30pp
2010     Bridging the Gap & Unleashing the Genius: The Challenge of Universities of Technology in Nigeria, (Akure: Federal University of Technology, Convocation Lecture), 41pp
2011      Promoting Good Governance: What Can We, The People, Do, Fourth Splash     105.5FM Anniversary Public Lecture, (Ibadan: Oluben Printers), 34pp.
2011     A Measure of Grace: The Autobiography of Akinlawon Ladipo Mabogunje,                                        (Ibadan: Bookbuilders-Editions Africa), 709pp
2012     Revisiting the Environmental Challenges of Lagos Megacity, (Lagos: Johnny Enis, First Oye Williams Biennial Lecture, Nigerian-Spanish Association), 39pp
2016     Issues and Challenges of Governance in Nigeria, (Ijebu-Ode: Aafin Awujale & Olabisi Onabanjo University),  33pp.
(C) Articles and Reviews:
1958:       "The Yoruba Home",  Odu: Journal of Yoruba and Related Studies, No.5
1959:         "Rice cultivation in Southern Nigeria", Nigerian Geographical Journal, 2, 59-69
 "Source Material for the Study of Historical Geography in Nigeria", Research                                Notes, Department of Geography, University of Ibadan, No 12, February, 15-27                           
1960:       "Review of “The Study of History, Vol.  XI, Historical Atlas and Gazetter”, by A.J.                      Toynbee and F.D. Myers, in Ibadan, No 8, March, p.40
1961:        (with Oyawoye, M.O.) "Problems of Northern Yoruba Towns: The example of Shaki", Nigerian Geographical Journal, 4, pp. 2-10
Some Comments on Land Tenure in Egba Division, Western Nigeria, Africa: Journal of the International African Institute, vol.31, no.3, July, pp.258-269 
"Lagos - Nigeria's melting pot", Nigerian Magazine, No 68, March, 1961
"The Market Women", Ibadan, No 11, February, 1961
1962: "The Growth of residential districts in Ibadan", Geographical Review, 52, pp.56-77 
 1964: "The evolution and analysis of the retail structure of Lagos, Nigeria", Economic Geography, vol.46, no.4, October, pp.304 - 323
                          "Economic Implications of the pattern of urbanization in Nigeria,", Nigerian
Journal of Economic and Social Studies, Vol 7, No 1, pp. 9-30
1965: "Urbanization in Nigeria, a constraint on economic development" Economic Development and Cultural Change, Vol 13, pp. 413-438                       
                          "Land, People and Tradition in Nigeria", in L.F. Blitz (ed) The Politics and  Administration of Nigerian Government, London, pp. 11-46
"Water Resources and Economic Development in Nigeria" Chapter in D.W. Brokensha (ed.), Ecology and Economic Develoipment in Africa: Current Research and Problem, University of California Press, Berkeley, pp. 147-159
"Some Thoughts on being Underdeveloped", Ibadan, No 15, March, pp 22-26
"Local Government for what" Nigerian Opinion, Vol 1, No 2, February, pp 8-9
1967:                 "African Cities and some theoretical underpinnings in Urban Geography", in
D.W.Brokensha and M. Crowder, (eds), Africa in the Wider World, Oxford, pp 163-186
"Review of Indian Cities: Characteristics and Correlates, by Quazi Ahmed, University of Chicago, Department of Geography, Research Paper, No 102. 1066, 184P in Nigerian Geographical Journal, Vol 10, No 1, June pp. 67-68
1968: "Geography and National Reconstruction". Nigerian Geographical Journal; Vol II, No 1, June, pp. 3-10
"Urban Land-Use Problems in Nigeria", Institute of British Geographers, Special Publication, No 1, November pp. 203-215
"Research in "Urban Geography in Nigeria", Nigerian Geographical Journal, Vol 3, No II, December, pp 101-114
            "Review of The City in Modern Africa by Horace Miner (ed.) New York, in Journal  of Developing Areas, vol.3, no.1, October, pp.99 - 101      
1969:               "Industrialization within an Existing System of Cities", Nigerian Geographical Journal, Vol 12. No 1, June, pp 3-16
"Urban Patterns in Africa" in J. Paden and E. Soja (eds), The African Experience,
Northewestern University Press, pp 383-420
"Agricultural Development in Africa", Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, April, pp 21-23
"The Africa City-Dwellers", Insight and Opinion, Vol.1, No 2
1970: "System Approach to Rural-Urban Migration", Geographical Analysis, Vol 2, No 1, pp 1-18
"A Topology of Population Pressure on Resources in West Africa", in R.M. Prothero, L. Kosinski and W.W., Zelinsky (ed.), Geography and a Crowding World, Oxford University Press, pp 114-128
"International Trade and National Integration in Nigeria", Journal of Business & Social Studies, Vol 3, No 1, December, pp 94-104
"Migration Policy and Regional Development in Nigeria", Nigerian Journal of Economic and Social Studies, Vol 12, No 2, July, pp 243-262
"Review of West Africa, by W.B. Morgan and J. C. Pugh, Methuen and Co., London, 1969, 788p" in Geographical Review, Vol 60, No 2, April, pp 290-292
1971: "Lands and People in West Africa", Chapter in the Volume by M. Crowder and J.F. Ajayi (eds), The History of West Africa, 1971, pp 1-32
"Quantification and Statistical Methods in Geography" in J.A. Majasan (ed.), New Dimensions in Nigerian High School Geography, Ibadan University Press.
 "Changes in Socio-Economic and Cultural Patterns caused by the industrialization of Nigeria - a regional differentiation", Afrika Spectrum, Vol 3, pp 34-45
"Nigeria: Physical and Social Geography" in Africa South of the Sahara,.  Europa
Publications, Europa Publications Limited, London, 1971, pp 551-552
"International Migrations and Full Employment: The Example of West Africa", in OECD Publication", The Challenge of Unemployment to Development and the Role of Training and Research Institutes in Development.' OECD Development Centre, Paris, pp 159-174
"Spatial Redistribution of Population in Africa: Colonization, Resettlement and
Urbanization", UN Economic Commission for Africa, E/CN 14/POP/45, November 28pp
1972: "Regional Planning and the Development Process: Prospects in the 1970-74 Plan" in K.M. Barbour (ed), Regional Planning in Nigeria, Ibadan University Press, Ibadan, pp. 4-15
"The Perceptual Dimension in Regional Economic Development: two African examples", International Social Development Review, No 4.. pp 20-27
"Urban Land Policy and Population Growth in Nigeria", in S.H. Ominde and A. Ejiogo, Population Growth and Economic Development in Africa, University of London Press 
"Environment and the Development Process in the Third World", CERES, FAO Publication, Rome, Italy pp 26~30
Industrialization and Metropolitan Development in Nigeria" in La Croissance Urbaine en Afrique Noire et a Madagascar, Centre National de la Recharche Scientifique, Paris, pp 827-840
1973: "Manufacturing and the Geography of Development in Tropical Africa",      
                          Economic Geography, vol.49, no.1, January, pp.1-20
            "Role of the City in the Modernization of Developing Countries", Canadian Geographer, vol.17, no.1, pp.67-70
"The Humanities and the Social Sciences" in J F Ade Ajayi and T.N. Tamuno (eds.) The University of Ibadan 1948-73: A History of the first twenty five years, Ibadan University Press, 1973, pp 168-190
"Infrastructure in the Development Process: The Metropolitan Level", Royal Town Planning 1972, Summer School Report
1974: "Urbanization and Regional Inequalities in Nigeria" in R.S. Thoman (ed.), Proceedings of the Commission on Regional Aspects of Development of the International Geographical Union, Vol 1, Methodology and Case Studies, California State University, Harvard, pp. 527-554
"Training and Research for Regional Development in Africa South of the Sahara: The present situation and prospects for the future" in United Nations Development Programme (ed.), Issues of Training and Research in Regional Development, United Nations, New York, DOP/UN/INT-71-400, pp. 176-184
"Migrants and Innovation in African Societies: Definition of a Research Field", African Urban Notes, Winter 1974/75, Ser B No 1, pp 49-57
"Urbanization in Africa: A consumer Innovation" in Salah El-Shakhs & R Obudho (eds.), Urbanization, National Development and Regional Planning in Africa,
"Regional and International Coordination" in the Environment Sciences in Developing Countries, Butler University, Indianapolis, pp 337-350

"Towards an Urban Policy for Nigeria" " Nigeria Journal of Economics,and Social Studies,  March, Vol 27, No 2, pp 282-30

                      "Migration and Urbanization in West Africa" in J.C. Caldwel (ed.) Populaition 
                       Growth and Socio-Economic Change in West Africa, Columbia University Press,                          New York, pp 153-169

1976:            Spatial Production Organisation and Integration in Developing Countries: The                              Case of Africa"Geoforum, Vol 7, pp 233-237

                      "Urban Situation in Nigeria", Chapter 11 in S. Goldstein (ed.) Patterns of                Urbanization: Comparative Country Studies, IUSSP Publications, Ordina Editions, pp. 569-641

                      "The Population Census of Nigeria, 1973",  in J.T.Coppock & W R D Sewell (ed.),                        Spatial Dimensions of Public Policy, New York, pp.207-226

1977:             "In Search of Spatial Order: Geography and the New Programme of Urbanization                          in Nigeria" in D R Deskins Jr., George Kish, J D Nystuen & Gunnar Olsson (eds.)                        Geographic Humanism: Analysis and Social Action.  Ann Arbor (Michigan                                   Geographical Publications No 17, pp.347-376

                        "International Circumstances Affecting the Development Trade of Developing                              Countries" in Bertil Ohlin, Per-Ove Hesselborn & Per Magnus Wijkman (eds. )                             The International Allocation of Economic Activity, Proceedings of the Nobel
                         Symposium held at Stockholm, London, pp 432-447

                        "Development of World Production and Trade up to the year 2000 - a Third                                  World View", Geojournal, Vol No 3, pp 7-14

"Geographical Dimension of Manpower Planning" in D E Iyamabo, (ed.), Report of the National Seminar on Manpower Planning for Agricltural Development in Nigeria, Ibadan, pp 123-133


                       "Prolegomenon to Urban Poverty in Nigeria", in Poverty in Nigeria, Proceedings of the 1975 Annual Conference of the Nigerian Economic Societv, Ibadan, 1977, pp 69-91

 1978: "Growth Poles and Growth Centres in the Regional Development of Nigeria", in      Antoni Kuklinski (ed. ), Regional Policies in Nigeria, India and Brazil, Mouton      Publishers, The Hague, pp.3-93

"Emerging Policies for Regional Development in Nigeria", in R. P. Misra, D. V.      Urs & V K Natraj (ed.), Regional Planning and National Development, Vol 5, No  2/3 pp 64-66

 "Settlement Policies and the Transformation of Traditional Economies", Habitat 
                       International, vol.3, no.3/4, pp.407-413

1979: (with 0. Arowolo)"Social Science Research in Population and Development in Africa South of the Sahara", Appendix 7, 55p in Carmen A Miro & J E Potter (eds.),  Social Science Research for Population Policy: Directions for the 1980s, Mexico City, June

1980: "The Dynamics of Centre-Periphery Relations: The Need for a New Geography of Resource Development" , Institute of British Geographers, Transactions, New Series, Vol 5, No 2

1981: "Crisis in Rural Development Planning Nigeria (or the Parable of the Old Wineskins) "in Research for Development, Vol 1, No 1, January pp. 1-10. 

"Geography and the Dilemma of Rural Development in Africa", Geografiska Annaler Vol 63B, No 2, pp 73~86

"The Dilemma of Rural Development in Africa", Regional Development Dialogue, Vol 2, No 2, pp 1-19

1982:              "Cities and Social Order", Habitat International, Vol 6, No 3, pp 343-364

"Profile of the Social Sciences in West Africa" in L D Stifel, R K Davidson & J S
Coleman (eds.), Social Sciences and Public Policy in the Developing World, Toronto, pp. 167-187

1983:               "The Case for Big Cities", Habitat International, (Otto Koenigsberger           
                          Festschrift, Vol 7, No 576, 1983 pp 21-31

1984:    "The Poor Shall Inherit the Earth: Issues of Environmental Quality and the Third     World Development", Geoforum, Vol 15, No 3, pp 295~ 306


"Geography as a Bridge Between Natural and Social Sciences", UNESCO Nature     and Resources, vol.20, no.2, April-June, pp.2-6 

1986: "The Demobilization of the Nigerian Peasantry in R P Misra and Nguyen Tri Dung (eds.), Third World Peasantry: A Continuing Saga of Deprivation, New Delhi (Sterling Publishers), pp 230-244

"Reflections on Local and Regional Development in Third World Countries: The Special Case of Africa", Chapter 17 in Mohammed Shafi and Mehdi Raza (eds.), Spectrum of Modern Geography: Essays in Memory of Prof.  Mohammed Anas, (Concept Publishing Co.), New Delhi, pp. 317-333
"Backwash Urbanization: The Peasantization of Cities in Sub-Saharan Africa", in Machael P. Conzen (ed.), World Patterns of Modern Urban Change (Essays in Honour of Chauncy D Harris), Chicago, University of Chicago, Department of Geography, Research Paper No 217~218, pp. 255-272
1987:            "Organizational Challenges for Self-Reliant Development" Nigerian Management                                Review,Vol 2, No 2, June 1987, pp. 79-84
1988:             "Coping with Structural Adjusment: The Nigerian Experience", pp.191-208 in Ronald                       Cohen (ed.),  Satisfying Africa's Food Needs: Food Production 
                      and Commercializaton in African Agriculture, Carter Studies on Africa, 
                       Lynne Rienner Publishers, Boulder/London
1989: "Agrarian Responses to Out-migration in Sub-Saharan Africa", in Geoffrey McNicoll and Mead Cain (eds.), Rural Development and Population: Institutions and Policy, New York: Oxford University Press pp 324~344, (Supplement to Population and Development Review, Vol. 15
1990:            "The organisation of urban communities in Nigeria", International Social Science                                  Journal,Vol 42, No 3, August 1990, pp 355-366
"Mobilizing Nigerias grassroots for increased food production: Reaching out from the Centre", Food Policy, August 1990, pp 306-312
"Urban Planning and the Post-Colonial State in Africa: A Research Overview", African Studies Review, Vol. 33, No 2, September, 1990, pp 121-203
"Africa's Economic Development: The Role of Urban Centres and Resource Mobilization".  Urban Perspectives, Vol. 1, No 2, December, 1990, pp 1-2 (formerly the Housing and Urban Development Digest)
1991               "Traditional Institutional Radicalization as a Development Strategy", Ibadan 
Socio-Economic Group Occasional Paper Series, no.1, December
1992 "A New Paradigm for Urban Development", Proceedings of the World Bank Annual Conference on Development Economics 1991, pp. 191-208
"New Initiatives in Urban Planning and Management in Nigeria", Habitat International, vol.16, no.2, 1992, pp.73-88
"Sustainable Provision of Infrastructure: Issues of Governance, Empowerment, Participation and Non-Governmental Organizations", Municipal Development Program Publication Series No.12, World Bank, Technical Department, Africa Region, Infrastructure Division, December.
"Science, Political Leadership and the African Experience in Development", pp.28-45 in A.O.Anya (ed.), Science, Leadership and National Development, Proceedings of a National Symposium organised by the Nigerian Academy of Science, Lagos, 3-4 March, 1992 
1993 "New Dimensions in Banking: A Focus on Community Banks", The Nigerian Banker, (Journal of the Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria), Jan-March, 1993, pp.22-28
"Infrastructure: The Crux of Modern Urban Development", The Urban Age, (World Bank), vol.1, no.3, Spring, 1993, p.3
1994 "Overview of Research Priorities in Africa", pp.19-46 in Richard Stren (ed.), Urban Research in the Developing World, vol.2 - Africa, (Toronto: University of Toronto Press)
1995 "The Environmental Challenges in Sub-Saharan Africa", Environment, vol.37, no.4, pp.4-9
"The Capitalization of Money and Credit in the Development Process: The Case of Community Banking in Nigeria", pp. 277-296 in Jane I. Guyer (ed.), Money Matters: Instability, Values and Social Payments in the Modern History of West African Communities, (Social History of Africa Series), (Portsmouth, NH.: Heinemann)
Institutional Radicalization, Local Governance and the Democratization Process in Nigeria, pp.1-13 in Dele Olowu et al.,(eds.), Governance and Democratization in Nigeria, (Ibadan: Spectrum Books)  
"Local Institutions and an Urban Agenda for the 1990s", pp.19-46 in Richard Stren and J.K.Bell (eds.), Urban Research in the Developing World, vol.4 - Perspectives on the City, (Toronto: University of Toronto Press)
1996 Institutional Viability of Autonomous Think Tanks, Building Capacity: Quarterly Newsletter of the African Capacity Building Foundation, vol.IV, nos.3 & 4, July-December, 1996, pp.10-17
1998 Preparing African Cities for the Bond Market, Urban Age: The Global City Magazine, vol.5, no.4., Spring 1998
History of the Department of Geography, University of Ibadan, pp.1-18 in Olusegun  Areola & Stanley I. Okafor (eds.), Fifty Years of Geography in Nigeria: The Ibadan Story, (Ibadan: Ibadan University Press)
Deepening the Paradigm Shift in Nigerias Economic Management, Economic Indicators, Vol.4, no.3, September 1998, pp.7-10 
2000 Institutional Radicalization, the State and the Development Process in Africa, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Washington D.C., vol.97, no.25, December
2001 Nigeria and the Good Urban Governance Campaign, Report on the Launching of the Global Campaign for Good Urban Governance in Nigeria, (Abuja: Federal Ministry of Works and Housing, Fountain Publication, Ibadan)
2002 Poverty and Environmental Degradation: Challenges within the Global Economy, Environment, vol.44, no.1., Jan./Feb.
2014 Promoting Good Governance: What Can We the People Do? pp. 75-96 in Splash F.M., Commitment to Truth: A Compendium of Splash FMs Annual Lecture Series, (Ibadan: West-Midlands Communications)


Consultancies

August 17, 2022
FIELD AND CONSULTANCY EXPERIENCE
 i)                   Client:      Western Regional Government, Nigeria
Date          1962 - 1963
Title:         Regional Demarcation of Enumeration Areas for the 1962-63 Census
Description: The estimation of population, their delimitation into enumeration areas, the production of sketch-maps of these enumeration areas  to facilitate effective census operations. 

 ii) Client:   Western State Government, Nigeria
Date:      1966 - 1967
Title:      Forestry Policy and Management in the Western State
Description:  To review the over-exploitation of the forest resources of the State and recommend more realistic policy of developing and managing the resources.

iii) Client:   Federal Government of Nigeria
Date:     1966 - 1968
Title:     Socio-Economic Aspects of Kainji Lake Development
Description:To investigate the impact of the construction of the Kainji Dam on the economy and social life of the population living upstream of the dam and recommend ameliorating measures to ease the stress of their resettlement. 
iv) Client: United Nations Research Institute for Social Development, Geneva,                                 Switzerland
Date:     1969-70
Title:   Growth Poles and Growth Centres in the Regional Development of                                   Nigeria
Description:  An investigation into the emerging growth poles and growth centres in Nigerias spatial economy in the 1960s

v) Client: United Nations Research Institute for Social Development, Geneva,                                                       Switzerland 
Date:     1971
Title:      Unified Approach to Development
Description: An attempt to integrate both the economic, social and spatial dimensions in planning 

vi)                 Client:    Federal Government of Nigeria
Date:       1972
Title:     Training of Planners in the New States in Preparation for the 1975-80                               Development Plan
Description:  Involved training on problem identification and planning techniques to planners from all the 12 States of the Federation in preparation for the 1975-80 National Development Plan 

vii)                 Client:     Lagos State Government, Nigeria
Date:        1973-74
Title:         Regional Development Plan for Lagos State
Description:  Involved a survey of the natural resources of the State and proposal for effective regional development planning for the State

viii)               Client:     Federal Government of Nigeria
Date:       1973 - 75
Title:     National Demarcation of Enumeration Areas for the 1973 Census Description:   Description: The estimation of population nation-wide and their demarcation into         enumeration areas bearing in mind the distinction between urban and rural areas

ix)             Client:     International Council of Scientific Unions (Scientific Committee  on                                                              Problems of the Environment) (ICSU/SCOPE), Paris, France
   Date:         1974-75
   Title:        Standards and Criteria for Shelter Provision in Developing Countries
   Description:    Investigated the problems of shelter provision for the masses in              developing countries arising from the retention by their governments of building            standards and criteria deriving from their colonial past

x)                      Client:      International Labour Organisation, Geneva, Switzerland 

    Date:        1976-77
    Title:        Absorptive Capacity of Informal Sector Activities in Kano City
     Description:    An investigation into migration into Kano City and the extent to              which migrants secure employment within the informal sector of the city=s                   economy 

xi)                      Client:      Ondo State Government, Nigeria
     Date:         1976
     Title:         (a)   Strategic Plan for the Development of Akure as State Capital
                       (b) Guidelines for the Physical and Regional Development of                                                 Ondo State
     Description:   Involved developing infrastructural and land-use planning proposals       for Akure in view of its new status as a State Capital and investigating the regional       developmental potentials of different areas of the new Ondo State.

xii)                     Client:       Federal Government of Nigeria
     Date:         1976 - 78
      Title:         Ecological Survey of the New Federal Capital Territory
      Description:   The project involved not only the ecological survey of the New                Federal Territory but also a complete census of the non-removable assets of the             population that would be displaced from the territory and the identification of the         actual site of the new Federal Capital City.  

xiii)                     Client:       Population Council, New York
      Date:         1978 - 79
      Title:         Social Science Research in Population and Development in Africa                                                         South of the Sahara
      Description:   A literature-search investigation of the contribution of social science       research to the understanding of various aspects of the population-development            interrelationships in sub-Saharan African countries.  

xiv)                Client:       United Nations Centre for Regional Development, Nagoya, Japan
Date:         1979-80
Title:         Evaluation of the First World-Bank Assisted Agricultural                                                                  Development Project, Funtua, Northern Nigeria
Description:   An assessment of the sustainability of the Funtua ADP giving the various special conditions under which it was initiated and made to operate

xv)                 Client:       The Nigerian Industrial Development Bank, Lagos, Nigeria
Date:         1979-80
Title:         The Nigerian Industrial Sector: A General Survey
Description:    Entailed looking at the experience of countries such as India, the  Philippines, Brazil and Yugoslavia to provide a prospectus for advising on how the Bank should strive to shape the industrial development of Nigeria. 


xvi)                Client:       Federal Government of Nigeria (Committee on Green Revolution)
Date:          1980- 81
Title:    The Nigerian Rice Industry: A General Technical and Economic                                                                Analysis
Description:    An evaluation of the feasibility of establishing viable and efficient facilities for rice production and processing in Nigeria

xvii)               Client:      Oyo State Government
Date:         1981 - 82
Title:     Pilot Study on Improving Local Government Revenue and Municipal                                                       Services
Description:    Addresses vital policy issues of how urban communities can be made less of a drain on the resources of State Government and be particularly less dependent on the historical fiscal burden which had been long shouldered by the rural economy

xviii)             Client:     Federal Ministry of Housing and Environment
Date:       1981 - 82
Title:   Pilot Study on Urban Solid Wastes Disposal and Environmental                                                                 Management
Description:   An attempt to define empirically the magnitude and scope of the problem of solid wastes and to evolve urban management models to cope with the wide range of operational problems.  Also investigated the major institutions in the country involved with the problems and defined future role of the Federal Government in the sector.

xix)               Client:     Federal Ministry of Housing and Environment
Date:       1982 - 83
Title:        Managing the Nigerian Environment: A Sector Plan (1984-1995)
Description:    Provide a framework of data and rational perspectives to facilitate the formulation of realistic plans, feasible programmes and systematic policies for the nation’s environmental sector

xx)                 Client:     Oyo State Government, Nigeria
Date:        1982 - 85
Title:        Geo-coding of Ibadan, Oshogbo, Ilesha and Ogbomosho: A Pilot Study
Description:    A follow-up on the pilot study on improving local government revenue and municipal services through tackling the problems of building identification and developing an urban management information system.
xxi)                Client:      Federal Ministry of Housing and Environment, Lagos
Date:        1985
Title:        Training Programme for Solid Wastes Management Cadres in Nigeria

Description:   As a follow-up on previous consultancy, a comprehensive training  programme for top and middle management cadres in environmental management organizations in all tiers of government in the Federation was designed and executed.

xxii)              Client:       Ministry of the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja
Date:         1986 - 87
Title:     Study of the Industrial and Commercial Requirements of the Federal                                                        Capital Territory, Abuja (1986 - 2000)
Description:   An attempt to formulate critical policy guidelines and articulate a viable investment programme for meeting the industrial and commercial requirements of the Federal Capital Territory for the period 1986 to 2000.

xxiii)   Client:   Federal Ministry of Works and Housing (Urban & Regional                                                                                Development Division)
Date:          1988 - 1990
Title:           Integrated Regional Plan for Nigeria
Description:   A major study to examine problems of planning and managing urban and regional development in Nigeria, investigate the various institutions and agencies concerned with the problems,  advise on potentially feasible and necessary projects, programmes and policies and submit an articulated and phased plan for a feasible urban and regional development programme for the period 1983-2000.

xxiv)        Client:    African Studies Association/Social Science Research Council, New                                                                 York
Date:             1988-89
Title:             Urban Planning and the Post-Colonial State in Africa
Description:    A research overview of the trend in urban planning in most countries of Africa.  The emphasis is on the changing broad conceptual framework that underpin urban planning in many of the countries over the last thirty years of post-independence.  

xxv)              Client:       The World Bank, Washington (Africa Technical Division)
Date:          1990
Title:          Urban Land and Urban Management Policies in Sub-Saharan Africa
Description:   A review of policies on urban land and urban management in the context of dynamic city-creating activities of civil societies and the weak capabilities of the State in most of sub-Saharan Africa.

xxvi)              Client:       United Nations Development Programme, New York
Date:          1991
Title:     Forward -Looking Assessment of the UNDP/UNCHS/World Bank                                                             Urban Management Programme

Description:   An assessment of the first phase of a ten-year programme on urban management in which the World Bank and UNCHS as contractors had undertaken various studies on land management, municipal finance and administration, urban infrastructure and urban environment.  

xxvii)             Client:        United Nations Development Programme, New York
Date:           1995
Title:   Evaluation of the Management of Sustainable Growth and                                                                             Development of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
Description:   An evaluation mission to assess the success and sustainability of the environmental management strategy which has been initiated in Dar es Salaam, capital of the Republic of Tanzania since 1991 by the UNCHS.

xxix)              Client:        Urban Management Programme, (UNCHS), Nairobi
  Date:            1995
Title:             Role of Traditional Leaders in Local Government in South Africa
Description: An advisory mission to South Africa to provide policy makers comparative advice in support of the local government legislation drafting process on the role of traditional leaders in local government.

xxx)    Client:   United Nations Education, Scientific & Cultural Organisation                                                                                 (UNESCO), Paris
Date:             1994 - 1997
Title:             The Current State of Geography
Description:  A consultancy to author/edit a volume by an international team of geographers which was to focus on areas of current geographical interest and address some of the fundamental challenges facing the human race at the end of the twentieth century.  

xxxi) Client:       United Nations Centre for Human Settlements, Nairobi, Kenya
Date:       1999 2001
Title:      City Consultation for Poverty Reduction in Ijebu-Ode, Ogun State, Nigeria
Description:   A consultancy that seeks to investigate the effectiveness of the City                                Consultation process for initiating, promoting and sustaining a poverty reduction                                 strategy in a medium-size city in south-western Nigeria. 
xxxii) Client:      Federal Ministry of Works and Housing, Abuja, Nigeria
Date:      2001
Title:      Merging of the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria and the Federal                   Mortgage Finance Limited
Description:  A project for merging the above two mortgage institutions so as to consolidate Federal Governments attention on secondary mortgage activities for promoting mass housing in the country. 


xxxiii)            Client:        United States National Academy of Sciences, Washington, D.C., USA
Date:       2002Title:           Down to Earth: Geographic Information for Sustainable Development in       Africa
Description: Member of an international collaborative effort to apply a new generation of earth observation data and GIS-linked technologies to ongoing sustainable development problems in Africa in preparation for the World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, South Africa in August, 2002
xxxiv) Client:        The Presidency, Federal Government of Nigeria
Date:        2002  2003
Title:        Presidential Committee on Urban Development and Housing
Description: Member of a national committee under Dr. Peter Odili, Governor of Rivers State of Nigeria to report on the state of housing and urban development in Nigeria and make appropriate recommendations
xxxv) Client:        The Presidency, Federal Government of Nigeria
Date:        2003  2005
Title:        Presidential Technical Committee on Housing and Urban Development  Description:  Chaired the Committee saddled with responsibility of implementing the Report of the Governor Odilis Committee to re-structure the housing delivery system in the country through emphasis on private sector real estate developers and a robust mortgage finance system as well as promote a new strategy for urban development in the country.
xxxvi) Client:       The Presidency, Federal Government of Nigeria
Date:       2003 2007 
Title:       Presidential Technical Board for the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria
Description: Chaired this Board to re-structure the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria and enhance its capability to serve as a secondary mortgage finance institution through operating on the nations capital market to access considerable additional mortgage finance from institutional investors notably pension funds and banks.
xxxvii) Client:       The Presidency, Federal Government of Nigeria
Date:       2003  2004
Title:       Technical Committee on the Reform of Local Government Councils in       Nigeria
Description: Served as a member of the Committee under the chairmanship initially of of the Etsu Nupe and, with his death, Alhaji Liman Ciroma, to report on the possibility                      of re-structuring the Local Government System in Nigeria
xxxviii) Client:      Ministry of the Federal Capital Territory 
Time:      2004 2005 
Title:      Honorary Ministerial Advisory Committee on the Federal Capital Territory
Description: Served as a member of the Committee under Chief Ajose-Adeogun to advise the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory on the planning, development and effective governance of the Federal Capital Territory
xxxix) Client:      The Presidency, Federal Government of Nigeria
Time:      2005  2006
Title:      Re-development of the Lagos Megacity Region
Description: Served as Chairman of a Committee to report on and provide recommendations for the re-development of the Lagos Megacity Region that embraces the continuous built-up area extending from Lagos to Ogun State
xxxx) Client:      The Presidency, Federal Government of Nigeria
Time:       2006 2011
Title:       Lagos-Ogun Megacity Development Authority
Description: Appointed Chairman of the Interim Lagos-Ogun Megacity Development Authority to implement the many recommendations in the Report of the Committee  earlier set up for the Re-development of the Lagos Megacity Region


Recent stories
August 30, 2022

Akin Mabogunje: An African institution.

August 18, 2022
Akin Mabogunje: An African institution.

By Owei Lakemfa.

PROFESSOR Akinlawon ‘Akin’  Ladipo Mabogunje was an African institution established for all-round development. He is also widely accepted as the Father of African Geography. By 2000, the Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC, was fed up with the National Housing Fund, NHF, which in the eleven years of its establishment had failed to deliver on mass housing for workers. Under the scheme, all those earning the National Minimum Wage and above, contributed 2.5 per cent of their monthly income.

Although workers had contributed about N6 billion to the fund, the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria, FMBN, which administered the fund had disbursed only a paltry N280 million, while the FMBN and its Siamese twin, the Federal Mortgage Finance Limited, FMFL, had become fat bureaucracies by dipping hands into the fund.  Even with this, they were heavily indebted, including owing outstanding pension to their retired workers, totalling N5.5 billion  

The NLC instructed workers to stop paying to the fund. Many state governments also joined in stopping the deductions to a fund that was not even audited. Rather than fight back using its federal might to enforce the NHF law, the Obasanjo administration on  March 6, 2002 established the Presidential Technical Committee on Housing and Urban Development chaired by Professor Mabogunje. The Committee asked the NLC for a meeting to explain why the NHF had not delivered and what was being done to reverse the trend.

I was part of the NLC Negotiation Team. Mabogunje had picked Mr. Tanimu Yakubu as the new Managing Director of the FMBN. Some of us in the labour delegation were familiar with Tanimu because together, we had been student union leaders and knew he was passionate about workers. When we got back to review the meeting and plan for subsequent ones with the Committee, I told the delegation that we needed technical support as this was an unusual government team.

I explained who Mabogunje was, including his being part of a group of intellectuals who in the First Republic had evolved an ideology called ‘Democratic Socialism’ which was adopted by the main opposition party, the Action Group. There was Mr. S.P.O Fortune-Ebie who as head of the Federal Housing Authority, FHA,  had built the sprawling FESTAC Town in Lagos, and  Ms Kare Yekwe, a brilliant lawyer I had known over the years.

The Mabogunje Committee was open and showed so much sincerity that even when it had to lay off some workers in order to bring in professionals through public advertisement and transparent interviews, the NLC could not raise objections.

Mabogunje was a major professional in the building of the new capital of Abuja. He came away with  a number of lessons that still defines Nigeria. He had led a team of scientists to the site to determine the ecological conditions of the proposed capital, how many people were to be displaced, the range of assets and compensation to be paid for them. First, a professional in his team, Mr. Bawa Bwari had to be dropped, not because he was incompetent but because the Emir of Abuja did not find him acceptable.

Bwari’s ‘crime’ was that he had served as the Secretary of the  Gwari Students Association, an organisation that was insisting on the rights of the indigenous Gwari people not to be ruled by traditional rulers from outside.

 When Mabogunje needed a manager for the field station, the Emir brought a man who had not even passed basic school certificate and had zero experience. When he enquired why he could not hire a professional and experienced Gwari indigene, he was told this was not politically acceptable. Mabogunje wrote: “This was historical and derived from the colonial administration’s  obsession with the indirect rule system creating or imposing a traditional ruler even in areas where such did not exist before.”

Then, Mabogunje and his team needed accommodation and the Executive Secretary of the Federal Capital Development Authority, FCDA,  decided to import porta cabins for the purpose from the United States. By the time they arrived, the work was over and the scientists were packing to leave. When it came to building the new capital city, Mabogunje argued that it should be handled by distinguished  Nigerian town planners and architects who would go through competitive bidding assessed by an international panel. But the government rejected this and rather advertised abroad for planners to design the new capital. Subsequently, an American group, International Planning Associates, IPA, was awarded the contract.

The Mabogunje team had to provide the firm all data collected. Despite this, Nigerian professionals had to join the IPA in reworking its basic design to provide a final and acceptable design. Mabogunje said of this sad tale: “ …If we had arranged to critique the design of a group of Nigerian planners as vigorously as we did that of the foreign firm, we could have had as good, if not better, a product  for our money.” In analysing why there is an obsession for foreign contractors, he said:  “It is difficult to dismiss the insinuations that this is because it is easier to secure foreign exchange through graft when contracts or professional consultancies are handed over to foreign organisations.”

One more experience of Mabogunje on Abuja. For a man who was so involved in building the city, all his applications for a plot of land were unsuccessful as plots of land were allocated by officials “mainly to friends”. He said one day, as the Chairman of the National Board of Community Banks, he visited then FCT Minister, General Gado Nasko, to request for land to build its national headquarters. During the discussions, he let it known that despite his choosing the exact site Abuja city was built, and participating actively in its construction, he did not have even a square foot of land in the territory. He said when the Minister confirmed this, he was allocated a plot  in Asokoro. But it took him eight years to secure a certificate of occupancy for the land; the result of a skewed civil service.

Mabogunje traced Nigeria’s problems to the deliberate ploy by British colonialists to “frustrate all serious developmental efforts” and lay faulty political foundations that led to a civil war and three decades of military rule. He agreed that the country, given its diversities, needs an inclusive  system: “But to use  the idea to catapult relatively unqualified  and inexperienced individuals to strategic management  positions  simply   because they come  from a particular  part of the country, is to court  a situation  where every major  institution  of our national life  has failed to live  up to expectation.”

The global, intensely intellectual and professionally-minded Professor Akin Mabogunje held to his positions until Thursday, August 4, 2022 when at 90, he left, leaving us his very rich legacies.




Saying goodnight to an extraordinary man...

August 17, 2022
Sade and I were born 2 months apart in the same year, I in September and Sade in November. Our dads were lecturers at the University of Ibadan and we lived there as our families grew. We were very close family friends, more family than friends. 

Daddy, I can comfortably say that I have known you all of my life. You, Sir, were a very special person and people like you are very rare. I remember your family once spent Christmas with us in Offa. I remember very fondly your relationship with my dad. You were the calm one. Whenever my dad got angry you always remained so calm. You lived an impactful and fulfilled life and your achievements are unbelievable. 

In addition to your many impressive accolades, you were so gentle, caring and your smile was so infectious. You loved people so much and you were a family man to the core. I admired you so much Sir. Your love for Nigeria was inspiring. You always advised us to stay in Nigeria and do whatever we could to help the nation. 

When my son got married in March 2019, I was so happy and highly honoured that you and mummy attended the wedding. Your grandson, Akin, happened to be the Best Man. I remember you refused to sit on the special guest table in front. You wanted a table with young people who you could engage in conversation. Thank you so much Sir for the generous gift you and mummy gave us. The gift came with a personal letter from you which I have read repeatedly. It means so much to me and brings me so much joy. I will treasure it forever. 

I thank God for the opportunity to have known you Sir. May your beautiful soul rest in perfect peace, amen. May God comfort and strengthen the entire Mabogunje family In Jesus' Name, Amen.

Dunmomi Layonu (nee Oyawoye) 

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