Publications /
Policy Paper

Back
Cultural Flows: The Development and Global Influence of Nigeria’s Creative Industries
Authors
Zineb Faidi
June 27, 2024

Nigeria’s cultural and creative industries (CCIs) illustrate the dynamic interplay between cultural production and economic growth. Through Nollywood and Afrobeat, Nigeria has effectively leveraged its creative capital to strengthen its economy and broaden its global cultural influence. These sectors show how local cultural elements can be blended with universal themes, achieving widespread resonance. Beyond their economic contributions, these industries play crucial roles in cultural diplomacy and nation branding, significantly enhancing Nigeria’s soft power globally. This paper contextualizes CCIs within their historical and economic frameworks, and addresses key debates in the field, such as the tension between the economic commodification of culture and the pursuit of authenticity. It also challenges the traditional view of ‘cultural imperialism’, which suggests a one-way flow of culture and aesthetics from the North to the South. The opening sections delve into the origins of Nollywood and the growth of Nigeria’s music scene, illustrating how crises can spur a surge of creativity and a do-it-yourself mindset crucial for success in these sectors. The impact of digitalization and networking on content circulation and collaboration is also explored, highlighting how these sectors now generate significant revenue and create jobs, despite facing challenges including copyright issues, funding gaps, and infrastructural deficiencies. The second part of the paper examines how Nigerian cultural exports are perceived and received in other African nations, including the DRC, Tanzania, and Cameroon, through the lens of soft power and cultural diplomacy. It highlights how Africans adapt other African products to their national contexts, and the different combinations that derive from these exchanges. The paper then discusses how Afrobeat has achieved global prominence, turning Nigerian artists into icons of the ‘African dream’. This approach breaks away from the cultural imperialism theory, redefining soft power within an African framework.

RELATED CONTENT

  • December 21, 2021
    يخصص مركز السياسات من أجل الجنوب الجديد حلقة برنامجه الأسبوعي "حديث الثلاثاء" التضخم : أي انعكاسات على انتعاش اقتصاد المغرب ؟, مع عبد العزيز آيت علي، باحث رئيسي في الإقتصاد بمركز السياسات من أجل الجنوب الجديد. التضخم كظاهرة اقتصادية هو ارتفاع الأسعار بشكل عام، أي أنه لا يقتصر في منتوج و...
  • December 16, 2021
    حدد المغرب أهدافه للتنمية الإقليمية استنادا على مختلف أدوات التدخل كسياسات التنمية القروية وبرامج الهياكل الأساسية والخدمات الاجتماعية، وكذلك برامج التنمية المستدامة والبرامج المتعلقة بأقاليم محددة كالواحات والجبال والمناطق الحدودية. وقد أكد تقرير نموذج التنمية الجديد على ضرورة تعزيز قد...
  • December 7, 2021
    يخصص مركز السياسات من أجل الجنوب الجديد حلقة برنامجه الأسبوعي "حديث الثلاثاء" لتقييم التواصل والأداء العمومي في المغرب مع عزيز بوستة، مدير النشر بصحيفة بانورابوست. يلعب التواصل العمومي دورا بارزا في تقوية صلة الوصل بين المواطن والمؤسسات العمومية وتكريس مبدأ الشفافية والمشاركة، إضافة إلى...
  • Authors
    December 6, 2021
    Between January 2020 and June 2021, the world spent about US $16.5 trillion (18% of world GDP) to fight COVID-19, and this amount does not even include the most important losses such as deaths, mental health effects, restrictions on human freedom, and other nonmonetary suffering. Nearly 90% of this amount was spent by developed economies; the rest by emerging market and developing economies. Low-income countries spent just US $12.5 billion, or less than 0.0001% of the total. Moreove ...
  • Authors
    October 11, 2021
    The current global pattern of democratic retrenchment has multiple causes, including economic inequality, American imperial overreach, and increased migration, all of which have led to disillusionment with democratic systems, and inspired a populist demand for populist leaders. This populist wave has also led to the personalization of political regimes, democratic and authoritarian, with power highly concentrated in the hands of a single individual, as seen in Turkey, Philippines, P ...
  • October 5, 2021
    Seconde nation la plus peuplée d’Afrique après le Nigeria, l’Éthiopie se distingue par un essor économique continu depuis trente ans. Des progrès notables sévèrement remis en question par le conflit avec la province du Tigré, qui dure depuis près d’un an. Pays phare de la Corne de l’Afrique, l’Éthiopie s’est distinguée par une croissance moyenne à deux chiffres (10 %) sur la période 2010-2019. Tombée à 6 % en 2020, celle-ci ne devrait pas dépasser 2 % en 2021 selon la Banque mondia ...
  • September 24, 2021
    In July 2021, the United Nations issued a condemnation against the “dramatic rise” in attacks against “descent-based slaves” in Mali, calling the violence “unacceptable”[i]. The statement was in response to a tragic episode in the eastern region of Kayes, where landowners using machetes and rifles assaulted a group of indentured laborers to prevent them working on the landowners’ fields. Tomoya Okobata, the UN's Special Rapporteur on Contemporary Forms of Slavery, said these “assaul ...