
By Omonon Chidi-Nwafor
Nigeria’s youth are frequently described as the nation’s greatest asset. Yet in practice, they are still largely treated as a population to be protected, managed, or restrained, particularly as climate pressures intensify. This framing, while well intentioned, is increasingly misaligned with the complexity of the risks Nigeria now confronts.
Across the previous editions of Reframing Resilience, we examined how climate stress shapes youth health outcomes, drug use patterns, social dislocation, patriotism, and the emergence of an overlooked “climate generation.” What now emerges clearly is not a deficit of programs or goodwill, but a structural gap: young people remain peripheral to the systems that govern climate response, public health, and social protection.
Resilience is often framed as an individual virtue, I mean something young people must summon through discipline, awareness, or moral resolve.
At the national level, however, resilience is institutional. It is built into how societies detect risk early, coordinate responses, and adapt under pressure. Without structural inclusion, appeals to resilience become expectations placed on those least empowered to shape outcomes.
Nigeria’s youth policy ecosystem remains largely reactive. Health responses tend to arrive after harm has occurred. Drug strategies are frequently enforcement-led, disconnected from the environmental and economic stressors that shape vulnerability. Climate policy often focuses on future scenarios, even as millions of young Nigerians already live within its effects. Rising temperatures disrupt sleep, learning, and emotional regulation. Flooding fractures access to education and healthcare. Food insecurity intensifies psychological strain and narrows economic choices. Climate change, in this sense, is not an abstract environmental challenge; it is a force that compounds health, social, and economic risk.
This intersection is particularly visible in the growing overlap between climate stress and substance vulnerability among young people. Here, institutions such as the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) and partners like the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) occupy a critical but evolving role. While enforcement and control remain necessary, the scale of emerging risk demands a broader lens, the kind that recognizes how climate-induced stress, displacement, and unemployment increase susceptibility to drug use and related harms. Addressing these dynamics requires not only interdiction, but intelligence, prevention, and community-level resilience.
Civil society has begun to play a bridging role in this space. The FLAG Foundation of Nigeria, with its emphasis on values, patriotism, and youth development, represents an important interface between state institutions and community engagement. In a climate-challenged era, such platforms are increasingly relevant, not as moral arbiters alone, but as channels through which young people can be mobilized into constructive national service, data gathering, peer education, and early intervention.
Yet despite these efforts, young people remain largely absent from the governance mechanisms that shape climate adaptation, public health surveillance, and drug prevention strategies. They are rarely embedded in environmental monitoring, community health intelligence, or localized risk assessment systems. This absence limits the quality of feedback available to institutions such as NDLEA and UNODC, and weakens the ability of the state to anticipate rather than merely react to emerging threats.
A more durable model of resilience requires repositioning youth as operators within these systems. Nigeria’s young population is uniquely distributed, digitally fluent, and locally embedded. When trained and trusted to support climate and health data collection, contribute to early-warning systems, or participate in community-based prevention networks, they transform from perceived risk groups into resilience assets. For agencies tasked with drug control and public safety, this shift offers access to real-time, ground-level insight that enforcement alone cannot provide.
This reframing also carries economic implications.
Resilience cannot remain an unpaid expectation. Climate adaptation, public health intelligence, and community-based prevention can form legitimate employment pathways when properly structured. Integrating youth into these functions professionalizes prevention, strengthens institutional reach, and aligns social protection with economic opportunity.
For this transition to take hold, policy orientation must evolve. Government agencies, international partners, and civil society must move beyond fragmented pilots toward integrated civic infrastructure. Youth engagement should be embedded within climate, health, and drug control strategies, not as peripheral outreach, but as core operational capacity.
Institutions such as NDLEA and UNODC, working alongside national foundations and community platforms, are well positioned to anchor this shift if mandates are expanded to fully embrace prevention and resilience-building.
As earlier editions of this series have argued, patriotism remains a powerful force, but its meaning must adapt. In a climate-stressed Nigeria, patriotism is no longer defined by endurance or symbolism alone. It is expressed through participation in national problem-solving systems: gathering data, strengthening prevention networks, supporting institutional responsiveness, and protecting collective wellbeing. Initiatives that appeal to national values, such as those championed by The FLAG Foundation of Nigeria, gain renewed relevance when paired with tangible pathways for youth contribution.
Nigeria’s future resilience will not be secured by shielding young people from risk alone. It will be built by embedding them into the mechanisms that detect, absorb, and respond to it. Youth are not merely a demographic category; they are the country’s most underutilized resilience infrastructure.
The choice before Nigeria is therefore clear. We can continue managing vulnerability at the margins, or we can begin converting it into national value by finally placing young people where resilience is built: inside the system.
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





