Centre for Development Communication

Centre for Development Communication

Share

28/09/2025

Development Work Requires Education, Not Just English Literacy

Development communication is not about English literacy alone. It is a participatory approach that facilitates education, empowering people to think critically, question systems, and transform their communities.

This type of education is achieved through development communication because it treats communication as dialogue and negotiation, not mere information dissemination.

Also, it fosters learning rooted in indigenous knowledge systems, enabling communities to design homegrown solutions. It does not allow for the imposition of foreign solutions that are often unsuitable for local realities.

Unfortunately, my engagements with communities reveal that many development practitioners reduce development to English literacy.

For these practitioners, the goal is often to teach people how to read reports and interpret data. They fail to educate communities about the real issues beyond the figures, charts, and PowerPoint slides.

As a community chief in Orozo, Abuja, once said:

"Our people need education that will empower them to design and implement homegrown solutions to the problems affecting them—not just the big English-speaking NGOs coming here to speak all the time."

We often forget that literacy teaches people how to read and write, while education empowers them to think, question, and transform their communities.

A literate person may decode letters on a page, but an educated person can decode life, systems, and power.

In development, literacy is important — but education is indispensable. It equips people with the knowledge, skills, and confidence to create solutions, not just consume information.

If we want sustainable change, we must invest in education that empowers action, not just literacy that counts numbers.

Audu Liberty Oseni
Centre for Development Communication

Field Note: Climate Change is Deepening Rural Poverty and Inequality Among Women Farmers in Abuja 08/08/2025

Field Note: Climate Change is Deepening Rural Poverty and Inequality Among Women Farmers in Abuja

As part of our Indigenous Climate Action Network (ICAN) — a climate resilience initiative that deploys Indigenous communication approaches to listen, learn, and co-create context-appropriate adaptation and mitigation actions — I visited rural communities in the FCT to engage with women farmers and hear their lived experiences.

Across Jiwa, Abaji, and Chikuku, a shared reality emerged: climate change is steadily eroding livelihoods, worsening poverty, and amplifying inequality among rural women.

In Jiwa, near Dei Dei, one farmer captured the mood:
“We are now very poor. Our vegetable farms — our only source of food, income, and school fees for our children — have been ruined by unpredictable weather. We cannot do irrigation because we don’t have the means.”

Field Note: Climate Change is Deepening Rural Poverty and Inequality Among Women Farmers in Abuja As part of our Indigenous Climate Action Network (ICAN) — a climate resilience initiative that deploys Indigenous communication approaches to listen, learn, and co-create context-appropriate adaptation and mitigation actions — I visited rural communities in the FCT to engage with women farmers a...

We Don't Hate Corruption — We Hate Being Left Out of the Loot 22/07/2025

We Don't Hate Corruption — We Hate Being Left Out of the Loot

As a guest analyst on 93.9 Jordan FM Abuja, I argued that one of Africa’s silent crises is the selective outrage against corruption.

Click 👇 to listen

https://open.spotify.com/episode/08thaDFE2F6sTpv94RyG5h?si=ZMkRi7dURwmRpROSRRvaPA

We Don't Hate Corruption — We Hate Being Left Out of the Loot DevTalks · Episode

MAWA-Foundation (2025 Winner: Non-Profit Organisation Awards) - Acquisition International 21/07/2025

🌍 Centre 4 Development Wins International Recognition!

We’re proud to announce that the Centre 4 Development Communication (formerly MAWA Foundation) has been awarded Best Community Engagement NGO – Nigeria (2025) by Acquisition International.

This honour reaffirms our belief that true development begins with the people, not with projects.

It reflects our unwavering commitment to empowering communities through participatory engagement, transparency, and actions that speak louder than reports.

To all our partners, community members, and volunteers — this award is yours. You continue to inspire and sustain the mission every step of the way.

Thank you for walking this journey with us.

MAWA-Foundation (2025 Winner: Non-Profit Organisation Awards) - Acquisition International MAWA-Foundation is one of the 2025 winners of Non-Profit Organisation Awards.

Want your organization to be the top-listed Non Profit Organization in Abuja?
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.

Telephone

Address


West Central Africa
Abuja