Feasibility of Nigeria’s Future Membership of the “Francophonie”

Nigeria’s membership of the Francophonie, the theme of this paper presented at the Retreat organized by the NIIA and Nigeria’s Senate Foreign Relations Committee at Victoria Island, Lagos, tagged: “Charting a new Foreign Policy Thrust for Nigeria” (June 1-3, 2014), seeks to examine the urgency of, a...

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Main Author: Akinwande, Peter
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Arts, University of Lagos 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://lnr.unilag.edu.ng/article/view/718
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spelling ftunivlagosojs:oai:ojs.unilag.edu.ng:article/718 2023-10-09T21:56:25+02:00 Feasibility of Nigeria’s Future Membership of the “Francophonie” Akinwande, Peter 2020-03-11 application/pdf http://lnr.unilag.edu.ng/article/view/718 eng eng Faculty of Arts, University of Lagos http://lnr.unilag.edu.ng/article/view/718/597 http://lnr.unilag.edu.ng/article/view/718 Copyright (c) 2020 Lagos Notes and Records Lagos Notes and Records; Vol 21 No 1 (2015): Lagos Notes and Records; 141-160 0075-7640 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article 2020 ftunivlagosojs 2023-09-19T15:17:57Z Nigeria’s membership of the Francophonie, the theme of this paper presented at the Retreat organized by the NIIA and Nigeria’s Senate Foreign Relations Committee at Victoria Island, Lagos, tagged: “Charting a new Foreign Policy Thrust for Nigeria” (June 1-3, 2014), seeks to examine the urgency of, and the modalities for actualizing renewed ties of Nigeria with France and her former colonies the world over, who make up the “French Commonwealth”. The new French politico-cultural family called Francophonie came into being with the inauguration of the famous Agence de Coopération culturelle et technique (ACCT) on March 20, 1970, in Niamey, Niger Republic. Of what significance is the proposed future membership of the Francophonie to the foreign policy of Black Africa’s most populous Nation, which Capital, Abuja, serves as the permanent Secretariat of the 16-member sub-regional body, ECOWAS, dominated by French-speaking countries? Cameroun, one of Nigeria’s neighbors, although located in the Central African sub-region, is a permanent member of the Francophonie while still belonging to the British Commonwealth in line with her bilingual posture, and Ghana, a traditional member of the Commonwealth like Nigeria, became an Associate Member of the Francophonie in 2006. Desirable as the idea is, this writer opines that in view of Nigeria’s cultural and linguistic heterogeneity, and more importantly, in order to ensure that the cultural identity of the World’s most populous black Nation is not compromised, her future membership of the Francophonie, if approved by legislation, should be premised on a cultural agreement to be signed by Nigeria and France, compelling French and Frenchspeaking Nationals to study and research into Nigerian culture and either of her three major languages - Yoruba, Igbo and Hausa (WAZOBIA), while French becomes henceforth Nigeria’s second official language and a compulsory subject in WAEC examination. Article in Journal/Newspaper Victoria Island University of Lagos Journals
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description Nigeria’s membership of the Francophonie, the theme of this paper presented at the Retreat organized by the NIIA and Nigeria’s Senate Foreign Relations Committee at Victoria Island, Lagos, tagged: “Charting a new Foreign Policy Thrust for Nigeria” (June 1-3, 2014), seeks to examine the urgency of, and the modalities for actualizing renewed ties of Nigeria with France and her former colonies the world over, who make up the “French Commonwealth”. The new French politico-cultural family called Francophonie came into being with the inauguration of the famous Agence de Coopération culturelle et technique (ACCT) on March 20, 1970, in Niamey, Niger Republic. Of what significance is the proposed future membership of the Francophonie to the foreign policy of Black Africa’s most populous Nation, which Capital, Abuja, serves as the permanent Secretariat of the 16-member sub-regional body, ECOWAS, dominated by French-speaking countries? Cameroun, one of Nigeria’s neighbors, although located in the Central African sub-region, is a permanent member of the Francophonie while still belonging to the British Commonwealth in line with her bilingual posture, and Ghana, a traditional member of the Commonwealth like Nigeria, became an Associate Member of the Francophonie in 2006. Desirable as the idea is, this writer opines that in view of Nigeria’s cultural and linguistic heterogeneity, and more importantly, in order to ensure that the cultural identity of the World’s most populous black Nation is not compromised, her future membership of the Francophonie, if approved by legislation, should be premised on a cultural agreement to be signed by Nigeria and France, compelling French and Frenchspeaking Nationals to study and research into Nigerian culture and either of her three major languages - Yoruba, Igbo and Hausa (WAZOBIA), while French becomes henceforth Nigeria’s second official language and a compulsory subject in WAEC examination.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Akinwande, Peter
spellingShingle Akinwande, Peter
Feasibility of Nigeria’s Future Membership of the “Francophonie”
author_facet Akinwande, Peter
author_sort Akinwande, Peter
title Feasibility of Nigeria’s Future Membership of the “Francophonie”
title_short Feasibility of Nigeria’s Future Membership of the “Francophonie”
title_full Feasibility of Nigeria’s Future Membership of the “Francophonie”
title_fullStr Feasibility of Nigeria’s Future Membership of the “Francophonie”
title_full_unstemmed Feasibility of Nigeria’s Future Membership of the “Francophonie”
title_sort feasibility of nigeria’s future membership of the “francophonie”
publisher Faculty of Arts, University of Lagos
publishDate 2020
url http://lnr.unilag.edu.ng/article/view/718
genre Victoria Island
genre_facet Victoria Island
op_source Lagos Notes and Records; Vol 21 No 1 (2015): Lagos Notes and Records; 141-160
0075-7640
op_relation http://lnr.unilag.edu.ng/article/view/718/597
http://lnr.unilag.edu.ng/article/view/718
op_rights Copyright (c) 2020 Lagos Notes and Records
_version_ 1779321121976352768