President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s declaration of 2026 as the Year of Families and Social Development is more than a policy announcement; it is a philosophical statement about the kind of nation Nigeria intends to become.
At a time of global uncertainty and domestic socioeconomic strain, the President has chosen to return governance to its most fundamental unit, the family, recognizing it as the true bedrock of national security, economic productivity, and social cohesion.
This decision represents a decisive evolution in public policy thinking. Rather than treating social welfare as a peripheral or reactive function of government, the Tinubu administration is repositioning it as a core pillar of nation-building.
The message is clear: sustainable development does not begin with abstract macroeconomic indices but with stable homes, protected children, empowered women, and communities that can withstand economic and social shocks.
By elevating family-centric governance to the level of national doctrine, Nigeria joins a select group of forward-looking nations, including Türkiye, the United Arab Emirates, and Egypt, that have deliberately anchored long-term development strategies on strong family institutions.
It is a bold repositioning and one that shows President Tinubu’s belief that the fight against poverty, insecurity, and social fragmentation must begin at the household level.
Yet vision alone does not transform societies; implementation does. This is where the quiet but formidable leadership of the Honourable Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development, Hajiya Imaan Sulaiman-Ibrahim, has become central to the success of this new national direction.
From the outset of her tenure, Sulaiman-Ibrahim has made it clear that social development under the Tinubu administration would not be ceremonial, episodic, or driven by rhetoric. In her words, it is “no longer business as usual.” That declaration has been matched by a level of policy coherence, institutional energy, and executional clarity rarely seen in the sector.
Through the Renewed Hope Social Impact Interventions, she is driving a comprehensive nine-pillar, multisectoral framework aligned with the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action while remaining firmly grounded in Nigeria’s lived social realities.
The framework goes beyond traditional welfare models to tackle economic empowerment, family stability, universal child benefits, social protection, and expanded access to healthcare, housing, and professional care services, particularly for women, children, and other vulnerable populations.
What distinguishes Sulaiman-Ibrahim’s approach is its seriousness of intent. Programs are designed to be scalable, measurable, and coordinated across levels of government. Social development is no longer fragmented into isolated interventions; it is being woven into a coherent national system.
This seriousness is further reflected in Nigeria’s growing international engagements. Following President Tinubu’s state visit to Türkiye, a strategic Memorandum of Understanding was signed to deepen cooperation on family cohesion and social welfare systems.
The Minister has since confirmed that Nigeria is moving swiftly from diplomatic commitment to on-the-ground implementation, selectively adapting global best practices to local contexts rather than importing models wholesale.
At the center of this architecture is the Nigeria Families First Programme (NFFP)- the operational nerve center of the new family policy regime. Structured around economic empowerment, parenting and family stability, social protection, and human development, the NFFP embodies the administration’s people-centered philosophy.
It is designed not merely to cushion hardship but to strengthen resilience and restore dignity at the family level. In many ways, the unfolding family-first agenda reflects a rare alignment in governance: a President providing clear ideological direction and a Minister translating that vision into disciplined policy action.
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s strategic foresight, combined with Hajiya Imaan Sulaiman-Ibrahim’s focused and technocratic execution, is steadily laying the foundation for a stronger, more secure, and more inclusive Nigeria.
