From Lawanson to Washington: The Making of Olumide Kola-Lawal (OKL) and the Power of Purposeful Public Service

By , Olome Joseph
In an era when global development increasingly demands leaders who can bridge continents, institutions, and ideas, Olumide Kola-Lawal’s journey stands out as a compelling case study in purposeful public service. From the classroom of Ansar-Ud-Deen Primary school and lecture halls of the University of Lagos to the policy corridors of Washington, DC, his career reflects how conviction, adaptability, and sustained civic engagement can translate local passion into global impact.

Early Foundations in Lagos
Olumide’s story begins in Lawanson – Lagos, Nigeria’s bustling commercial capital, where he earned a Bachelor’s degree in English Education from the University of Lagos. While his academic training was rooted in language and pedagogy, his formative professional years quickly revealed a deeper calling: leadership, governance, democratic participation, and global development.

His early work with Youth 1960 in 2010 placed him at the heart of youth development advocacy during a critical period in Nigeria’s democratic consolidation. This was followed by his appointment as a Legislative Officer in Nigeria’s 7th National Assembly, where he gained firsthand exposure to lawmaking, oversight, and the inner workings of government. These experiences grounded him in the realities of public institutions – how policies are shaped, negotiated, and implemented.

Not content with observing politics from the sidelines, OKL transitioned into partisan politics, contesting for the Lagos State House of Assembly in 2015. Around the same time, he emerged as the pioneer Lagos State Coordinator of the Not Too Young To Run campaign, a youth-led advocacy movement that successfully pushed for constitutional reforms to lower age requirements for political office. The passage and signing of the Age Reduction Bill by President Muhammadu Buhari marked a defining milestone not just for the movement, but for OKL’s belief in strategic advocacy and collective action.

Crossing Borders, Expanding Perspective
Recognizing the need to complement grassroots experience with global policy training, OKL moved to the United States to further his education. He earned a Master’s degree in International Policy and Practice from The George Washington University, alongside a Certificate in Public Management from Virginia Commonwealth University.

These credentials sharpened his analytical toolkit and positioned him for work at the intersection of research, policy, and practice.
While studying, he remained deeply engaged in leadership and service, serving as Vice President of the GWU Elliott School Graduate Board and as a Senator representing the Elliott School of International Affairs.

These roles reinforced a consistent theme in his journey: leadership as service, and education as a platform for influence.

Washington, DC: Global Policy in Action
OKL’s professional ascent in Washington reflects both breadth and depth. He has worked with leading multilateral and international organizations, including the International Republican Institute (IRI), the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), and, most notably, the World Bank Group.
At the World Bank Headquarters, he has served in multiple capacities across strategic units: External Communications & Relations, the Office of the Executive Directors, the Global Facility for Disaster Recovery and Reduction (GFDRR), the Corporate Secretariat, and the Office of the Chief Economist for Africa. His work spans policy coordination, research, communications, and program management, with a strong focus on Africa and other developing regions.

As Program Coordinator for the World Bank Africa Fellowship and Visiting Scholars Programs, OKL has helped shape platforms that strengthen African research capacity and policy-relevant scholarship. His research contributions on education, jobs, and gender reflect a strong commitment to evidence-based development, particularly in understanding how human capital formation, labor market dynamics, and gender disparities shape economic opportunity and inclusive growth in Sub-Saharan Africa.

His advisory work has extended beyond Africa, engaging governments and stakeholders in the Caribbean, North America, Europe, and fragile contexts such as Somalia and Zimbabwe – demonstrating a career that is both globally mobile and locally informed.

Building Diaspora Power: The Nigerian Professionals Network
Parallel to his institutional career, OKL founded the Nigerian Professionals Network (NPN) in Washington, DC, a diaspora-led initiative designed to project positive narratives about Nigeria, foster social integration, and harness the intellectual and entrepreneurial capital of Nigerians abroad. NPN reflects his long-standing belief that development is not only driven by governments and donors, but also by organized, intentional communities.

Through networking, partnerships, and civic engagement, the Network provides a platform for Nigerian professionals to contribute meaningfully to development conversations and community impact, both at home and in the diaspora.
His flagship initiative, Nurturing Nigeria’s Future, is designed to harness the resources, expertise, and networks of the Nigerian diaspora to catalyze transformative investments at home.

Through this platform, he has supported state governors across Nigeria and key federal ministries, departments, and agencies in mobilizing diaspora capital, skills, and ideas – demonstrating how organized diaspora engagement can translate goodwill into measurable development outcomes.

Leadership, Recognition, and Service

Olumide’s leadership has been widely recognized. A Mandela Washington Fellow, he was selected from over 20,000 applicants in Nigeria and later served as National President of the Mandela Washington Fellowship Alumni Association of Nigeria (2016 – 2017). In this role, he coordinated nationwide initiatives, built partnerships with government and international organizations, and led programs aimed at youth entrepreneurship, community service, and post-conflict recovery.

His affiliations – with the Nigerians in Diaspora Organization (NIDO), the Global Diplomatic Forum in London, and the Institute of Strategic Management of Nigeria – further reflect a career anchored in networks, ideas, and collaborative problem-solving.

Key Lessons from Lagos to Washington

OKL’s trajectory offers several enduring lessons:

  1. Start where you are but think globally. His journey shows how local activism and national service can serve as a springboard to global influence.
  2. Advocacy works when it is strategic and collective. The success of the Not Too Young To Run movement illustrates the power of organized civic engagement.
  3. Education amplifies impact. By combining practical experience with advanced policy training, Olumide positioned himself to operate effectively across institutions and borders.
  4. Diaspora engagement matters. His work with the Nigerian Professionals Network highlights how diaspora communities can be active development actors, not just observers.
  5. Leadership is cumulative. Each role – student leader, legislative aide, advocate, consultant, and policy specialist – built skills and credibility for the next.

From Lagos to Washington, OKL’s story is ultimately about alignment:

aligning passion with preparation, advocacy with analysis, and national identity with global responsibility. In a world searching for leaders who understand both context and complexity, his journey offers a timely and instructive blueprint.

Olome Joseph is a public Policy Analyst and he writes from Lagos