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Reframing Resilience (II): A Climate-Informed Drug Strategy for Protecting Nigeria’s Youth

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Resilience has become one of the most overused words in Nigeria’s public discourse. We invoke it whenever we speak about young people “adapting” to hardship, “coping” with stress, or “pushing through” difficult realities

By Omonon Chidi-Nwafor

Resilience has become one of the most overused words in Nigeria’s public discourse. We invoke it whenever we speak about young people “adapting” to hardship, “coping” with stress, or “pushing through” difficult realities.

But beneath this familiar language lies a growing unease: what if our youth are no longer coping at all? What if the pressures confronting them – the economic, psychological, environmental pressures are converging in ways we have not fully understood?

This second part of Reframing Resilience explores a space that Nigerian policy rarely considers: the intersection between climate stress and substance vulnerability among young people. And in this emerging terrain, two institutions – the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) and the Flag Foundation of Nigeria whose mandate amongst many is restoring hope through the instrumentality of the Nigerian flag have roles that, together, could fundamentally reshape how Nigeria protects its future generation.

For decades, NDLEA has been perceived through a single lens: the agency that arrests, seizes, intercepts, and prosecutes. But in recent years, something more interesting has been happening beneath the surface. Through new data initiatives, a national drug survey soon to be released, and a forthcoming National Drug Control Master Plan, NDLEA is quietly signalling a pivot. The agency is recognising that the roots of drug abuse are no longer only social or criminal, but are often environmental, psychological, and economic. This requires more than enforcement; it requires intelligence, prevention, community partnerships, and public-health approaches.

Yet awareness alone cannot solve the issue. This is where the Flag Foundation becomes a crucial but often overlooked player. With its focus on instituting hope and patrotic conciousness among the youth, community resilience, and environmental stewardship, the Foundation brings a systems perspective that aligns naturally with NDLEA’s evolving preventive mandate. While NDLEA brings national reach, regulatory authority, and data intelligence, Flag brings community language, behavioural insight, and youth-centered models that speak to lived reality.

The missing link tying both together is climate stress, which is a factor that is silently shaping youth vulnerability in ways we have not accounted for. When a young person loses farmland to flooding or herdsmen attack, when a family migrates due to drought, when there is a disruption in income sources or force displacement, the result is not simply physical hardship. It can manifest as anxiety, hopelessness, fractured social networks, disrupted identity, and exposure to risky environments. These emotional and social fractures create fertile ground for substance misuse, not because youth are “wayward,” but because the society around them is becoming more unstable.

Nigeria’s drug crisis, therefore, cannot be separated from Nigeria’s climate crisis. And both cannot be separated from Nigeria’s youth crisis.

This is where a new model becomes possible, a model that neither NDLEA nor any NGO can achieve alone. Imagine, for instance, a coordinated early-warning system that overlays NDLEA intelligence with environmental stress data to identify communities where climate shocks are likely to trigger spikes in drug use. Imagine youth hubs in vulnerable regions where preventive education, mental-health first aid, climate-resilience training, and livelihood opportunities exist in one space.

Imagine an initiative where young people at risk of drug exposure are instead recruited into green-job pathways: restoring wetlands, supporting urban greening, building climate-smart farming systems, or working within community energy projects.

Such models are not abstract ideas; they are feasible, cost-effective, and capable of transforming youth from victims of overlapping crises into resilient actors in Nigeria’s environmental future.

This kind of integrated approach would also reshape public awareness. For years, NDLEA’s messaging – though important, has been framed solely around danger, deterrence, and enforcement. But the deeper message Nigeria needs today is more nuanced: “climate stress affects mental health”, “mental health affects choices”, and “choices shape vulnerability”. A joint NDLEA–Flag communication model could help young people understand these hidden linkages, and help society empathize rather than stigmatize.

Research must also evolve. Nigeria has little empirical work examining how climate shocks influence substance use patterns. A co-authored national report: NDLEA providing national data and enforcement patterns, Flag Foundation contributing behavioural and community insights would become a foundational document for policymakers, donors, and resilience planners.

Ultimately, this approach is about shifting from emergency response to long-term design. We can no longer treat drugs as a standalone security issue, climate as an environmental issue, and youth as a social issue. They are expressions of the same structural pressures reshaping Nigeria’s development landscape. The sooner our institutions act together, the sooner we build a shield strong enough to protect a generation navigating unprecedented uncertainty.
NDLEA’s transformation, paired with the Flag Foundation’s community intelligence, offers a rare gateway to redesign youth protection in a climate-stressed Nigeria. This is more than policy innovation; it is a moral responsibility.

Our young people are facing a world more unpredictable than anything previous generations have known and they deserve integrated systems that understand their reality, anticipate their risks, and strengthen their capacity to thrive.
If resilience is Nigeria’s favourite word, it is time we give it meaning. Not by asking our youth to endure more, but by building the conditions that allow them to rise.

Omonon serves as the Counselor/Recovery Coach and Head of Programs at the Flag Foundation of Nigeria. She welcomes engagement from researchers, practitioners, and institutions working at the intersection of youth resilience, mental health, climate stress, and substance-use recovery.

She can be reached via email at omydel@yahoo.com or WhatsApp at 0706 928 8295 for collaboration, program support, or further inquiry.

   

About author
Time Nigeria is a modern and general interest Magazine with its Headquarters in Abuja. The Magazine has a remarkable difference in editorial philosophy and goals, it adheres strictly to the ethics of Journalism by using the finest ethos of the profession to promote peace among citizens; identifying and harnessing the nation’s vast resources; celebrating achievements of government agencies, individuals, groups and corporate organizations and above all, repositioning Nigeria for the needed growth and development. Time Nigeria gives emphasis to places and issues that have not been given adequate attention by others. The Magazine is national in outlook and is currently being read and patronized both in print and on our vibrant and active online platform (www.timenigeria.com).
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