Wednesday 21 February 2018

Corps Members as Change Agents: From National Service to Social Entrepreneurship.

Community Outreach by Youth Corps Medical Team
By Andrew Ogara

“It is expected that Corps members ….be agents of change, contributing towards the development of their host communities.”

“The Community Development Service (CDS) is aimed at harnessing the skills, creativity and innovativeness of corps members ….in identifying the needs of their host communities and mobilizing members of their host communities to embark on the project”
-NYSC on their Traditional Community Development Service and Integrated Rural Development.

Every corps member participating in the mandatory one-year Community Development Service (CDS) of the NYSC scheme should see his/her position and role as essentially that of a change agent for societal development. By seeing themselves from this perspective, corps members are able to have a clearly defined purpose for participating in the scheme. It equally makes it possible for corps members to be adequately orientated or trained, to ensure efficiency and effectiveness in the discharge of their duties.

I have mentioned elsewhere that the NYSC scheme is indeed an essential platform for youth participation in development since corps members are not only critical actors in Nigeria’s quest for development, they constitute a potential reservoir of power, knowledge and influence, that will in the near future participate in shaping and setting the nation’s human and sustainable social development agenda.

We live in a region and a nation affected by diverse national and global development challenges. These challenges and concerns range from widespread poverty, environmental concerns/ climate change, human right issues, social injustice/inequality, corruption, bad governance/misrule, to general ill – health among the citizens, homelessness, widespread unemployment, dearth of essential social services and infrastructure, famine and food insecurity, violent crimes including rape, rural – urban migration, trafficking in human persons, drug use and drug abuse, communal conflicts etc.

Although government is making effort to address these challenges, however, given the magnitude of the problems, government cannot do it alone. Government’s effort need to be supported by every Nigerian, especially the Nigerian youth, who represent a major stakeholder in the nation’s overall development effort. NYSC therefore presents an important platform for youth participation in development. Personally, I regard the NYSC scheme as a national development intervention programme, deliberately put in place by the nation’s visionary leaders to prepare a critical mass of socially and educationally empowered Nigerian youths for practical participation in the nation’s social and human development sector.

However, it is important to note that central to the overall success of the scheme is the Community Development Service (CDS) component which was conceived as a rural development strategy with the goal of promoting the active involvement of corps members who are potential leaders of the nation in tackling and addressing the nation’s rural and urban development challenges.

Consequently, many corps members have been motivated and many of them have gone beyond their normal duties and assignments to execute and implement various people – centred projects and programmes in their target communities across the nation. Executing such development projects by corps members has become the bench mark for measuring individual corps members’ performance. It has equally become one of the criteria or standards for giving awards and honour by the federal, state and local governments.

Transiting from National Service to Social Entrepreneurship

The activities of corps members as agents of change in their host communities during their one-year Community Development Service (CDS) include identifying societal or social challenges, problems and areas of need in their host communities and adopting innovative ways of addressing these concerns. Corps members have embarked on various people – oriented projects/programmes in areas such as health, education, water and sanitation, housing, environmental protection, economic empowerment, improving the plight of the urban poor, provision of rural infrastructure etc.

This is similar to the field of social entrepreneurship. They both seek to solve societal problems through innovative practices. While corps members’ participation in the compulsory one year CDS basically helps to expose them to the concept of public good, public interest or social mission only, social entrepreneurship incorporates both financial and social mission. As a social entrepreneur, one has the opportunity to start, develop, lead or manage your own innovative company or organization.

Whether your discipline or passion is in the field of education, health, politics, ICT, youth development, engineering, women empowerment, law/human rights, reproductive health, agriculture, transportation, environmental/ climate change, urban or rural development, social entrepreneurship, provides one with the opportunity to turn one’s passion in addressing these national and global issues into a prestigious endeavour and a financially rewarding career.

In the next blog, we will be sharing on the vast and limitless career/job opportunities available in the social sector and how development finance and philanthropic resources are currently directed to social entrepreneurship organizations to support young men and women with ideas and insights on how to address these societal problems.


Tuesday 6 February 2018

Empowering Women to Lead The Way On Climate Change


UNDP Goodwill Ambassador

November 16, 2017



Women are poised to be grass-roots leaders for climate action, since implementation at the local level will largely fall on their shoulders. Photo: Giacomo Pirozzi/UNDP Benin



As world leaders meet for climate talks this week in Bonn, at the UN Climate Change Conference, they should embrace the tenacity, spirit and energy of women to promote more effective climate actions across the globe.