Ilaje People

The Project

Ilaje migration and homeland interrelations

The Aiyetoro community in Lagos has been home to a diasporic Ilaje population for over 50 years. The Ilaje, originally from fishing communities in Ondo – approximately 250 kilometers north of Nigeria’s capital – have maintained a strong cultural identity and deep-rooted ties to their homeland. Faced with marginalization by both host communities and government authorities in Lagos, the Ilaje diaspora has developed bottom-up governance strategies. These include initiatives such as participatory land mapping and allocation systems that safeguard women’s land rights.

This partnership project aims to deepen understanding of the dynamic relationships between the Ilaje diaspora in Aiyetoro and their communities of origin. It specifically explores how these connections might be reconfigured to strengthen sustainable ‘ways of living’ in both their rural homelands and urban contexts.

To achieve this, the project adopts an action-oriented research approach, employing qualitative and collaborative methods designed to foster critical reflection and promote tangible, community-driven outcomes.

Our Partners

The Rural-Diaspora Nigeria project is organised in close cooperation with the University of Ibadan, Nigeria, in particular with the Centre for Petroleum, Energy Economics and Law

One of its main objectives is to develop the human capacity needed to formulate and implement energy policies and regulations for the effective management of natural resources in Nigeria and sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), and to provide a platform for energy professionals, institutions and the general public to meet.

Objectives

The project aims to achieve the following objectives:

Map Urban-Rural Relations

To explore and document the various forms of connection the Ilaje diaspora in Aiyetoro maintain with their places of origin – facilitating mutual understanding between communities across urban and rural contexts.

Trace Influence

On the home territory to examine how interactions with the diaspora shape and impact the social, economic, and environmental realities of the Ilaje homeland.

Strengthen Ways of Living

To identify and co-develop opportunities for reshaping diaspora – homeland relations in ways that enhance the potential for sustainable, fulfilling, and prosperous lives in both rural and urban settings.