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Africa · Countries / Nigeria

Nigeria

Nigeria is a densely layered society where powerful precolonial kingdoms, Islamic and Atlantic trade networks, and British-imposed statehood converged to create Africa’s most populous nation, a country shaped by oil wealth, religious and ethnic plurality, and a dynamic cultural influence that defines much of postcolonial African modernity.

Capital Abuja
Population 227 Million
Currency NGN
Language English
Modern Snapshot
Strategic industries Oil and gas (dominant), agriculture, film and entertainment (Nollywood), telecommunications, fintech
Demographic trend Africa's most populous country; expected to become one of the world's three most populous nations by mid-century; median age under 18; rapid urbanization and persistent youth unemployment
Security posture Africa's largest military by spending; ECOWAS anchor; ongoing internal security challenges from Boko Haram/ISWAP in the northeast and rural banditry; significant US counterterrorism cooperation
Books for era
Industrial-imperial-age

Book

A History of Nigeria

Toyin Falola

The standard single-volume history from early societies to the modern state.

Why Nigeria matters now

Strategic reasons this country is essential reading today.

Nigeria’s population growth will shape global demographics and labor markets.

Oil dependency, inequality, and corruption highlight postcolonial economic challenges.

Religious and regional divisions test state legitimacy and cohesion.

Nigeria’s cultural output influences Africa and the global diaspora.

Regional & Global Relationships

Who shapes Nigeria — and who Nigeria shapes

United States
Partner

The US provides counterterrorism assistance and is a significant buyer of Nigerian oil; the relationship has periodic friction over democratic governance and human rights records, particularly under military-adjacent governments.

China
Trade

China is Nigeria's largest creditor and a major infrastructure investor; the relationship has grown rapidly but generated concerns about debt transparency, trade imbalances, and the erosion of local manufacturing.

Niger
Tension

The Sahel's fragility—sharpened by the 2023 Niger coup—has created a direct security spillover; Nigeria's ECOWAS leadership and its threatened military intervention tested both regional institutions and Nigeria's own political will.

United Kingdom
Partner

The legacy of British indirect rule, the common law system, and English as the official language keep institutional ties close; the UK hosts a large Nigerian diaspora and remains a significant trading and investment partner.

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A History of Nigeria

Essential

A History of Nigeria

Toyin Falola

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