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As the global order fragments and power shifts across regions, what role remains for Nigeria—and does it still have the capacity to lead?In this first part of a two-part conversation, Professor Eghosa Osaghae returns to examine how the global system has evolved—and what those changes mean for Africa and for Nigeria’s position within it.From the war in Ukraine to instability in the Middle East and persistent conflict across Africa, the international order is under visible strain. Power is fragmenting, alliances are shifting, and long-standing assumptions are being tested.This conversation explores:• Whether Africa has lost agency in a rapidly changing world• The implications of a more assertive United States• The limits of multilateral institutions—and the continued relevance of the United Nations• Nigeria’s foreign policy posture in an increasingly unstable system• The relationship between domestic strength and external credibility• What recent high-level engagements, including the UK state visit, actually signalThe discussion moves beyond events to structure—examining how power operates, how legitimacy is constructed, and how nations position themselves in periods of systemic change.🧭 CHAPTERS00:00 — Opening sequence00:17 — Setting the frame: a shifting global order01:05 — What has changed in the last 12 months?01:21 — The resurgence of American assertiveness02:09 — Ukraine, Gaza, Iran: a system under strain02:48 — The “forgotten wars” in Africa04:08 — Africa’s position in a changing world05:10 — Has Africa lost agency?06:03 — Multilateralism and the United Nations06:48 — Foreign policy vs domestic strength07:18 — The meaning of high-level state visits08:28 — Economic diplomacy and structural ambition10:16 — China, infrastructure, and visible development12:24 — Industrialisation and the Dangote moment13:44 — The UK state visit: what does it actually mean?15:02 — Intangibles: status, perception, and credibility17:02 — Diaspora, diplomacy, and influence19:27 — Investment, signalling, and long-term positioning20:35 — History and Nigeria’s leadership role24:02 — What is the basis of Nigeria’s leadership today?27:38 — The shift from state to non-state actorsThe discussion moves beyond events to structure—examining how power operates, how legitimacy is constructed, and how nations position themselves in periods of systemic change.This conversation builds on a previous ONE2ONE discussion with Professor Eghosa Osaghae, recorded one year earlier. As the global context has shifted significantly, this return offers a re-examination of earlier arguments in light of new geopolitical realities.Part 2 continues with a deeper examination of nationalism, state capacity, and the future of African leadership. Watch Part 2 here: https://bit.ly/one2oneS5EP2📡 Broadcast weekly on Channels TV (DSTV) and Channels 24 UK (Sky 515)🌐 Streamed globally on YouTube, Spotify, and all major podcast platforms© 2026 Intelligentsia One Ltd. All rights reserved.🔔 Subscribe to ONE2ONE for in-depth conversations shaping the future of leadership and governance.#ONE2ONE #EghosaOsaghae #Nigeria #AfricanLeadership #Geopolitics #ForeignPolicy #InternationalRelations #GlobalOrder #Africa #StateCapacity #EconomicDiplomacy #UnitedNations #BRICS #USForeignPolicy #AfricaDevelopment
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