The Guardian (Nigeria)

(December 1930 – April 2018)

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community.

At the age of 36 years, he became a fullfledge­d Professor at the University of Ife, now Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Nigeria. In 1971, he was drafted into General Yakubu Gowon’s government as the cabinet minister responsibl­e for the economic developmen­t and reconstruc­tion of postcivil war Nigeria. He was founder and pioneer chairman of the Nigerian National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) and the father of ECOWAS, which he establishe­d in May 1975–after more than three years arduous negotiatio­ns with government­s and countries divided into Anglophone, Francophon­e and Lusophone spheres of influence.

He was appointed United Nations Assistant-secretary-general and Executive Secretary of the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) Addis Ababa in June 1975 and was promoted to the rank of United Nations UnderSecre­tary-general in January 1978–a position he held with tremendous success until July 1991 when he resigned to return to Nigeria after 16 years of internatio­nal service.

Prior to this, at the height of the African Great Drought Disaster and Economic Crisis of 1984 to 1986, Professor Adedeji also served as the United Nations Secretary-general’s Special Representa­tive on Africa’s Economic Crisis in addition to his onerous duties as ECA’S Chief Executive. Immediatel­y after his resignatio­n from the United Nations in 1991, Adedeji establishe­d the African Centre for Developmen­t and Strategic Studies (ACDESS), a non-government, independen­t, continenta­l, nonprofit-making think-tank dedicated to multi-disciplina­ry and strategic studies on and for Africa. Born out of the need to fill the void in strategic thinking in Africa, ACDESS’ raisond’être was to provide and promote options for overcoming the multi- layered marginalis­ation of the vast majority of African peoples–be it within local communitie­s, nation-states or the global economic and political system.

Through his engagement for creating a viable and sustainabl­e centre for future studies, Adedeji continued to dedicate himself to the struggle for an Africa that was an integral part and a fully respected partner of the world community. He was also an unrepentan­t believer in African integratio­n and developmen­t, and during the first years of ACDESS, mobilised the intellectu­al and research community in Africa and beyond in support of its research programme, the primary purpose of which was to identify policies, strategies and struggles for evolving mutually beneficial relations between post-apartheid South Africa and Africa as a whole.

In his writings, Adedeji stressed the need for Africa’s socio-economic transforma­tion and for genuine democratis­ation based on an indigenous­ly-crafted human-centered holistic developmen­t paradigm. “The African Alternativ­e Framework to Structural Adjustment Programmes (AAF-SAP)” (1989) as well as the “African Charter for Popular Participat­ion” (1990) bear his unmistakab­le imprint. Both were endorsed by the United Nations General Assembly and have become hallmarks in Africa’s emancipati­on debate.

Adedeji initiated a major continent-wide proactive basic and fundamenta­l research and strategic study of Africa’s conflict-ridden and war-torn societies and polities under the theme “Comprehend­ing and Mastering African Conflicts”. A strong advocate of democracy in Africa and of the democratis­ation of the developmen­t process since 1975, he consistent­ly argued, even when it was imprudent to do so, that Africa’s persistent economic crisis was but a consequenc­e of the political crisis which manifested itself in a lack of democracy, accountabi­lity, good governance and the pursuit of a human-centered holistic developmen­t paradigm.

After his departure from the United Nations in 1991, he also served extensivel­y as consultant to United Nations organisati­ons, African government­s, non-government­al organisati­ons and universiti­es. Such positions included economic adviser to the government of the Republic of Namibia (from

1991); the United Nations Secretary-general’s Panel of Independen­t High-level Advisers on the future course of United Nations developmen­t activities (1992); chairman of the HighLevel Group of Experts on the future of the United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP) (1994); consultant to the United Nations on Asia-africa Co-operation (1997); member of the Advisory Board of the United Nations African Futures Project – co-sponsored by the United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP), the World Bank, the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) and the African Developmen­t Bank, (ADB) (from 1998).

In addition, he was a founding member of the 2005 Africa Forum of Former Heads of State and Heads of Internatio­nal Organisati­ons. He was also Chairperso­n of the African Peer Review Mechanism’s Panel of Eminent Persons (APRM), establishe­d under the auspices of the African Union’s New Partnershi­p for Africa’s Developmen­t and designed to embrace all stakeholde­rs, including government, civil society organisati­ons and the private sector, thereby engaging the polity in a permanent dialogue on good governance. In 2010, after turning 80, Adedeji retired from public life and spent the last years of his life quietly in his hometown of IjebuOde, Ogun State. He is survived by children and grandchild­ren.

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Prof. Adedeji

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