Winners from L-R: Mary Dinah, Edwin Oyoma
Akpotor, Dolapo Oladayo Olaniyan, David Oluwadiya Ashaolu, Oluwaseun Ayodeji
Osowobi, and Yemisi Christiana Fawibe.
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Six Nigerians have
been selected out of eleven finalists for the second cohort of the British
Council Future Leaders Connect programme. The eleven finalists pitched their
policy ideas at the Nigeria Heat event which took place recently in Lagos.
The Future Leaders
Connect programme identifies exceptional individuals (aged 18-35) from around
the world and builds a long-term network of emerging policy leaders. At the programme
the young leaders are trained on how to develop their policy making expertise
and gain the skills to make genuine impact. To participate in the programme,
interested future leaders were asked to apply stating their area of policy
interest and proposed intervention.
In this edition, over
nine thousand people applied for the programme in Nigeria and eleven finalists
were selected by a panel in the UK and Nigeria. The eleven finalists were
invited to a pitch event in Lagos to present their policy ideas to a panel of
judges and a live audience.
Each finalist gave a
five-minute presentation explaining why their policy idea will improve the
world, and demonstrate that they had the competence to lead on the desired
change. The winners will join others around the world from Canada, Egypt,
Indonesia, India, Pakistan, Kenya, Mexico, Morocco, Tunisia, the USA and UK in
the British Council’s Future Leaders Connect programme. The programme is
scheduled to take place in the United Kingdom in October this year, where
members of Future Leaders Connect will meet with members of the UK Houses of
Parliament, learning from today’s decision makers, seeing effective policy
making first hand, and discussing the most significant global issues facing
the next generation globally.
They will also meet with inspiring leaders and policymakers and take part in a
number of days of advanced leadership training and policy discussions at The
Møller Centre, Churchill College Cambridge.
Discussed at the heat
event were policies around female genital mutilation, increasing access to
contraceptives, violence against women and gender inequality, cyber-bullying
laws, access to healthcare, and more. The 2018 winners are Mary Dinah, Edwin
Oyoma Akpotor, Dolapo Oladayo Olaniyan, David Oluwadiya Ashaolu, Oluwaseun
Ayodeji Osowobi, and Yemisi Christiana Fawibe. They will be travelling to the
UK in October to become part of a global network of emerging policy leaders.
While commenting on
this year’s event, Adetomi Soyinka, Director Higher Education, Skills and
Enterprise British Council alluded that “through Future Leaders Connect
programme we are helping a new generation to understand practical policy
development by putting them in contact with the leaders of today and helping
them to develop the skills and international contacts they need to make
positive change.”
Speaking on the
selection process, one of the judges Habiba Balogun, an Organisation
Effectiveness Specialist, Certified Leadership Coach and the Director and
Principal Partner, Habiba Balogun Consulting said: “All the finalists’
presentations were impressive and reaching a decision was quite an intense
process. However, the process was made transparent and fair for me and the
other judges due to the predetermined criteria againstwhich the contestants
were judged which were; relevance of policy, clarity and presentation, and
leadership quality.”
For more on Future
Leaders Connect programme, visit www.britishcouncil.org.ng.
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