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Nigerian Americans

Nigerian Americans (Igbo: Ṇ́dị́ Naìjíríyà n'Emerịkà; Hausa: Yan Najeriyar asalin Amurka; Yoruba: Àwọn ọmọ Nàìjíríà Amẹ́ríkà) are Americans who are of Nigerian ancestry. The number of Nigerian immigrants residing in the United States is rapidly growing, expanding from a small 1980 population of 25,000.[4] The 2022 American Community Survey (ACS) estimated that 712,294 residents of the U.S.A were of Nigerian ancestry.[5] The 2019 ACS further estimated that around 392,811 of these (85%) had been born in Nigeria.[6][failed verification] Which puts the total Nigerian American population a little over 400,000.

Nigerian Americans
Total population
392,811
Regions with significant populations
Texas (especially Houston) • Northeastern U.S. (especially NYC, Boston, and Philadelphia) • California (Los Angeles, Bay Area) • FloridaAtlantaChicagoTwin Cities, MinnesotaAmerican Southwest (Albuquerque, New Mexico and Phoenix, Arizona) • Washington, D.C.Maryland[1]
Languages
Predominantly

English (American, Nigerian), Pidgin, Igbo, and Yoruba (and other Southern Nigerian languages such as Nupe and Ibibio)[2]
Others

Edo, Ibibio-Anaang-Efik, Esan, Urhobo, Isoko, Idoma, Ijaw, Kanuri, Fulfulde, Hausa, Kalabari, Igala, Ikwerre, Tiv, Ebira, Nembe, Etsako, Itsekiri, and other languages of Nigeria[3]
Religion
Predominantly

Christianity (Protestantism, Roman Catholicism, Anglicanism)
Others

Animism, Islam (Sunni), Juju, Nigerian Chrislam, Odinani, Yoruba religion, agnosticism, and atheism[3]
Related ethnic groups
Nigerian Canadians, British Nigerians, Nigerian Australians, African Americans, Igbo Americans, Yoruba Americans

Similar to its status as the most populous country in Africa,[7] Nigeria is also the African country with the most migrants to the United States, as of 2013. In a study which was carried out by consumer genetics company 23andMe which involved the DNA of 50,281 people of African descent in the United States, Latin America, and Western Europe, it was revealed that Nigeria was the most common country of origin for testers from the United States, the French Caribbean, and the British Caribbean.[8]

Most Nigerian Americans, like British Nigerians, predominantly originate from southern Nigeria, as opposed to the Islamic northern half of the country.[9]

History edit

Atlantic slave trade (17th century – 1808) edit

The first people of ancestry from what is now modern Nigeria to arrive in what is now the modern United States were brought by force as slaves.[10] These enslaved people were not called Nigerians but were known by their ethnic nations due to Nigeria not being a country until the early 1900s, after the slave trade was over. Calabar and Badagry (Gberefu Island), Nigeria, became major points of export of enslaved people from Africa to the Americas during the 17th and 18th centuries. Most slave ships frequenting this port were English.[11] Most of the slaves of Bight of Biafra – many of whom hailed from the Igbo hinterland – were trafficked to Virginia. After 400 years in the United States and the lack of documentation because of enslavement, African Americans have often been unable to track their ancestors to specific ethnic groups or regions of Africa. Like Americans of other origins, at this point most African Americans have ancestors of a variety of ethnic backgrounds. Most of the people who were stolen from Nigeria were likely to have been Igbo or Yoruba.[12] Other ethnic groups such as the Fula and Edo peoples were also captured and transported to the colonies in the New World. The Igbo were exported mainly to Maryland[13] and Virginia.[14] They comprised the majority of all enslaved Africans in Virginia during the 18th century: of the 37,000 Africans trafficked to Virginia from Calabar during the eighteenth century, 30,000 were Igbo.[15] In the next century, people of Igbo descent were taken with settlers who moved to Kentucky. According to some historians, the Igbo also comprised most of the slaves in Maryland.[14] This group was characterized by high rates of rebellion and suicide, as the people resisted and fought back against enslavement. Many Nigerians of Igbo origin were also brought into the U.S. in the late 1960s as war refugees during Nigerian Civil War.

Some Nigerian ethnic groups, such as the Yoruba, and some northern Nigerian ethnic groups, had traditional, cultural identification marks, such as tattoo and scarification designs. These could have assisted a kidnapped and enslaved person who escaped in locating other members of their ethnic group, but few enslaved people managed to escape the colonies. In the colonies, slavers tried to dissuade the practice of traditional tribal customs. They also mixed people of different ethnic groups to make it more difficult for them to communicate and band together in rebellion.[16]

U.S. President Thomas Jefferson officially outlawed the Atlantic slave trade in 1808, although some enslaved Africans continued to be illegally smuggled into the country and the institution of slavery persisted until the American Civil War.

Modern migration (1960s – present) edit

In modern times, most Americans of unambiguous Nigerian ancestry are voluntary immigrants and their descendants.[17] Various leaders of the Nigerian independence movement such as Eyo Ita, Mbonu Ojike, and Nnamdi Azikiwe were educated in the United States during the 1930s-1940s. When President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, U.S. restrictions on immigration from regions outside of Northwestern Europe were eliminated, allowing for a greater number of Nigerians in the United States.

The modern generation of Nigerian migrants was initially motivated by the desire to pursue educational opportunities in undergraduate and postgraduate institutions in the United States. During the 1960s and the 1970s aftermath of the Nigerian Civil War, the Nigerian government funded the education of Nigerian students attending U.S. universities. While this was occurring, there were several military coups, interspersed with brief periods of civilian rule. The instability resulted in many Nigerian professionals emigrating, especially doctors, lawyers and academics, who found it difficult to return to Nigeria.[18]

During the 1980s, a larger wave of Nigerians immigrated to the United States.[19] This migration was driven by political and economic problems exacerbated by the military regimes of self-styled generals Ibrahim Babangida and Sani Abacha. Other émigrés comprised a large number of refugees, fleeing on account of religious persecutions, endless political unrests and ethnic/tribal conflicts, the presumption of Nigeria as a failing state, or just to enhance the quality of lives for themselves and their families (Ogbuagu, 2013). The most noticeable exodus occurred among professional and middle class Nigerians who, along with their children, took advantage of education and employment opportunities in the United States.

This exodus contributed to a "brain-drain" of Nigeria's intellectual resources to the detriment of its future. Since the advent of multi-party democracy in March 1999, the former Nigerian head-of-state Olusegun Obasanjo has made numerous appeals, especially to young Nigerian professionals in the United States, to return to Nigeria to help in its rebuilding effort. Obasanjo's efforts have met with mixed results, as some potential migrants consider Nigeria's socio-economic situation still unstable (Ogbuagu, 2013b).

Since 1980, the estimated population of foreign-born Nigerians has grown from 25,000 to 392,811 in 2019.[4][5]

Socioeconomics edit

Education edit

 
Oyekunle Olukotun, Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Stanford University, known as the "father of the multi-core processor"[20][21]

According to Rice University research, Nigerian Americans are the most educated group in the United States.[22][23]

According to the 2008-2012 American Community Survey conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau, 61.4% of Nigerian Americans aged 25 years or older hold a bachelor's degree or higher, compared to 28.5% of the total U.S. population.[24] The Migration Policy Institute reports that 29% of Nigerian Americans have a master's degree, PhD, or an advanced professional degree (compared to 11% of the U.S population overall).[4] Nigerian Americans are also known for their contributions to medicine, science, technology, arts, and literature.[25]

Nigerian culture has long emphasized education, placing value on pursuing academic excellence as a means to financial security.[26] Examples of Nigerian Americans in education include Akintunde Akinwande, Oyekunle Olukotun, Jacob Olupona and Dehlia Umunna, professors at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University and Harvard University respectively. Recent famous examples include ImeIme Umana, the first black woman to be elected president of the Harvard Law Review,[27] Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, the first woman to become the head of the World Trade Organization (WTO),[28] and Tanitoluwa Adewumi, a homeless child refugee who went on to become a chess prodigy.[29][30][31][32][33] Examples of Nigerian Americans in popular media include Dr. Bennet Omalu, portrayed in the 2015 film Concussion,[34] and Emmanuel Acho, host of the weekly activist webcast Uncomfortable Conversations with a Black Man.[35]

A large percentage of black students at highly selective top universities are immigrants or children of immigrants. Harvard University, for example, has estimated that more than one-third of its black student body consists of recent immigrants or their children, or were of mixed-race parentage.[36] Other top universities, including Yale, Princeton, Penn, Columbia, Rice, Duke and Berkeley, report a similar pattern.[37] As a result, there is a question as to whether affirmative action programs adequately reach their original targets: African Americans who are descendants of American slaves and their discriminatory history in the US.[36]

According to the 2021 Open Doors report, the top five U.S. institutions with the largest student population of Nigerian descent (in no particular order) are Texas Southern University, University of Houston, University of Texas at Arlington, University of North Texas, and Houston Community College.[38][39] According to Institute of International Education's 2017 Open Doors report, 11,710 international students from Nigeria studied in the U.S. during the 2016–17 academic year, the 12th highest country of origin and highest of any African country.[40]

Income edit

In 2018, Nigerian Americans had a median household income of $68,658 - higher than $61,937 for all overall U.S. households. [41] In 2012, Nigerian Americans had a poverty rate of 12.8%, lower than the U.S. national average of 14.9% and lower than the total African American poverty rate of 27.2%.[42][43]

Relations with other black Americans edit

In 2017, sociologist Onoso Imoagene argued that second generation Nigerian Americans are forming a distinct "diasporic Nigerian ethnicity" rather than assimilating into the mainstream African American culture, in contrast to what should have been predicted by segmented assimilation theory.[44] Limited sociological research suggests that Nigerian Americans may have a more positive opinion of the American police compared to the broader black community.[45] The Marshall Project and Prison Legal News have reported that the Texas Department of Criminal Justice heavily recruits Nigerians to serve as guards in Texas prisons, where a significant proportion of the prisoners are black.[46][47]

Demography and areas of concentrated residence edit

 
African Languages Spoken in American Households[48]

As of 2013, the World Bank estimated that 252,172 Nigerian migrants live in the US. This is 23% of all Nigerian migrants, the most of any destination country. Nigerian migrants represent 0.5% of all migrants in the U.S., the 32nd highest of all U.S. source countries.[49]

US states with the largest Nigerian populations edit

The 2016 American Community Survey estimates that 380,785 U.S. residents report Nigerian ancestry.[5]

The 2012-2016 ACS[6] estimates that 277,027 American residents were born in Nigeria. It also estimates that these states have the highest Nigerian-born population:

  1. Texas 60,173
  2. Maryland 31,263
  3. New York 29,619
  4. California 23,302
  5. Georgia 19,182
  6. Illinois 15,389
  7. New Jersey 14,780
  8. Florida 8,274
  9. Massachusetts 6,661
  10. Pennsylvania 6,371
  11. North Carolina 3,561

Religious demographics edit

 
Nigerian Muslim association in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, New York
 
Igbo Roman Catholics in the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels, Los Angeles, California

In terms of religion, the Nigerian community in the United States is split, as approximately 70% practice Christianity while 28% follow Islam and the remainder practice other religions (2%).[disputed ][50]

Traditional attire edit

Among Nigerian Americans, traditional Nigerian attire remains very popular.[51] However, because the fabric is often hard to acquire outside of Nigeria,[52] traditional attire is not worn on an everyday basis but rather, reserved for special occasions such as weddings, Independence Day celebrations, birthday ceremonies and Muslim Eid celebrations. For weddings, the fabric used to sew the outfit of the bride and groom is usually directly imported from Nigeria or bought from local Nigerian traders and then taken to a local tailor who then sews it into the preferred style. Due to the large number of Nigerians living in America and the cultural enrichment that these communities provide to non-Nigerians, the traditional attire has been adopted in many parts of the country as a symbol of African ethnicity, for example, clothes worn during Kwanzaa celebrations are known to be very influenced by Nigerian traditional attire. In recent years, the traditional fabric has attracted many admirers especially among celebrities such as Solange Knowles[53] and most notably Erykah Badu. On the fashion runway, Nigerian American designers like Boston-born Kiki Kimanu[54] are able to combine the rich distinct colors of traditional attire with Western styles to make clothes that are highly sought after by young Nigerian professionals and Americans alike.[55]

Nigerian American ethnic groups edit

Nigerian-Americans can be subdivided into Nigeria's three largest ethnic groups - the Igbo, Yoruba, and Hausa-Fulani.

Igbo American edit

Igbo Americans are people in the United States that maintain an identity of a varying level of Igbo ethnic group that now call the United States their chief place of residence (and may also have US citizenship). Many moved to the US following the effects of the Biafran War (1967–1970).

Yoruba American edit

Yoruba Americans are Americans of Yoruba descent. The Yoruba people (Yoruba: Àwọn ọmọ Yorùbá) are an ethnic group originating in southwestern Nigeria and southern Benin in West Africa. The first Yoruba people who arrived to the United States were imported as slaves from Nigeria and Benin during the Atlantic slave trade. This ethnicity of the slaves was one of the main origins of present-day Nigerians who arrived to the United States, along with the Igbos. In addition, native slaves of current Benin hailed from peoples such as Nago (Yoruba subgroup, although exported mainly by Spanish, when Louisiana was Spanish), Ewe, Fon and Gen. Many slaves imported to the modern United States from Benin were sold by the King of Dahomey, in Whydah.

The native tongue of the Yoruba people is spoken principally in Nigeria and Benin, with communities in other parts of Africa, Europe and the Americas. A variety of the language, Lucumi, is the liturgical language of the Santería religion of the Caribbean.[56]

Fulani and Hausa American edit

Fulani and Hausa Americans are people in the United States that maintain a cultural identity of various levels from the Fulani and Hausa ethnic groups and now call the United States home. Most speak Hausa, Fulfulde as well as English fluently and Arabic on various levels. The first wave of Fulani immigrants arrived as a result of the Atlantic Slave trade. Recent Fulani and Hausa arrivals immigrated to the United States during the 1990s. They now make up a large percentage of the Muslim communities across America.

Organizations edit

Nigerian American organizations in the US include:

  • Houston, Texas-based Nigerian Union Diaspora (NUD)
  • Society for Africans in the Diaspora (SAiD Institute)[57]
  • Houston, Texas-based Nigerian American Multicultural Council, NAMC (namchouston.org)[58]
  • Washington, D.C.-based Nigerian-American Council or Nigerian-American Leadership Council[59]
  • The Alliance of Nigerian Organizations in Atlanta, Georgia[60]
  • The Nigerian Association Utah[61]
  • The Nigerian Ladies Association of Texas (NLAT)[62]
  • The Nigerian American Multi Service Association, NAMSA (namsa.org)[63]
  • First Nigeria Organisation[64]
  • United Nigeria Association of Tulsa[65]
  • The Alliance of Nigerian Organizations in Georgia is an organization that tries to satisfy the interests of the community, and represents all Nigeria nonprofit associations in the state (such as Nigerian Women Association of Georgia – NWAG-[66]), in tribal issues, ethnic, educational, social, political and economic. Through the ANOG, the Office of Nigerian Consulate in Atlanta reaches the Nigerian community associations.[60]
  • National Council of Nigerian Muslim Organizations in USA;[67]
  • The National Council of Nigerian Muslim Organizations is an organization that teaches Islam, study the elements of religion, favoring Muslim integration in the U.S., creating a Muslim American identity and promoting interpersonal relationships.[67]
  • Nigerian Ladies Association of Texas (NLAT) is an apolitical, non-profit formed by Nigerian women that promote fellowship, community and family values. NLAT is looking for ways to improve the lives of its members and their families and contribute to improving the life and development of Nigeria and the United States of America. The association teaches its members on individual rights (especially the rights of women, creating media to promote respect for these rights, to promote equality and peace between the sexes) and establishes job opportunities for Nigerians living in Texas, organizes and provides resources to women and children in Nigeria and the US, teaches Nigerian culture to the new generations, working with women's groups in the U.S. and drives programs to promote education and health services.[62] and the Nigerian American Multi Service Association (NAMSA) provides services to community members.[63]
  • Nigerian Lawyers Association (NLA): Incorporated in 1999, the Nigerian Lawyers Association (“NLA”) NLA's principal objectives are to cultivate the science of jurisprudence.[68] Its first president was John Edozie of Madu, Edozie, and Madu law firm.
  • NNAUSA is an organization for the Ngwa Diaspora in America[69]

Nigerian American associations representing the interests of determined groups include:

  • The Association of Nigerian Physicians in the Americas[70] (ANPA)
  • Igbo studies association, USA
  • Nigerian Nurses Association USA[71]
  • Ogbakor Ikwerre USA, Inc. is a non–profit organization of Ikwerre indigenes residing in the United States of America and Canada. We are committed to the survival and prosperity of the Ikwerre people and the entire Ikwerre community. OIUSA is an incorporate body that was founded on July 6, 1996 in Los Angeles, California. The organization is incorporated in the city of Atlanta, Georgia, but headquartered in Los Angeles. Membership comprises individuals and associations that subscribe to OIUSA vision. Members come from all over the 50 states in the US and Canada
  • Nigerian Student Association[72]

Notable people edit

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Emeka, Amon. "'Just black' or not 'just black?' ethnic attrition in the Nigerian-American second generation." Ethnic and Racial Studies 42.2 (2019): 272–290.
  • Ette, Ezekiel Umo. Nigerian Immigrants in the United States: Race, Identity, and Acculturation (Lexington Books, 2012).
  • Ogbaa, Kalu. The Nigerian Americans (Greenwood, 2003).
  • Ogbuagu, B.C. (2013). “Diasporic Transnationalism”: Towards a framework for conceptualizing and understanding the ambivalence of the social construction of “Home” and the myth of Diasporic Nigerian homeland return. Journal of Educational and Social Research 3(2), 189–212; Doi:10.5901/jesr. 2013.v3n2p189; ISSN 2239-978X. http://www.mcser.org/journal/index.php/jesr/article/view/157.
  • Ogbuagu, B.C. (2013). Remittances and in-kind products as agency for community development and anti-poverty sustainability: Making a case for Diasporic Nigerians. International Journal of Development and Sustainability 2(3),1828-1857. Online ISSN 2186-8662 – www.isdsnet.com/ijds ISDS Article ID: IJDS13052905
  • Rich, Timothy. "You can trust me: A multimethod analysis of the Nigerian email scam." Security Journal 31.1 (2018): 208–225. online
  • Sarkodie-Mensah, Kwasi. "Nigerian Americans." in Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America, edited by Thomas Riggs, (3rd ed., vol. 3, Gale, 2014), pp. 329–341. online

https://isdsnet.com/ijds-v2n3-13.pdf https://www.isdsnet.com/ijds-v2n3.html https://isdsnet.com/ijds-v2n3-13.pdf

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This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Nigerian Americans news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Nigerian Americans Igbo Ṇ dị Naijiriya n Emerịka Hausa Yan Najeriyar asalin Amurka Yoruba Awọn ọmọ Naijiria Amẹ rika are Americans who are of Nigerian ancestry The number of Nigerian immigrants residing in the United States is rapidly growing expanding from a small 1980 population of 25 000 4 The 2022 American Community Survey ACS estimated that 712 294 residents of the U S A were of Nigerian ancestry 5 The 2019 ACS further estimated that around 392 811 of these 85 had been born in Nigeria 6 failed verification Which puts the total Nigerian American population a little over 400 000 Nigerian AmericansTotal population392 811Regions with significant populationsTexas especially Houston Northeastern U S especially NYC Boston and Philadelphia California Los Angeles Bay Area Florida Atlanta Chicago Twin Cities Minnesota American Southwest Albuquerque New Mexico and Phoenix Arizona Washington D C Maryland 1 LanguagesPredominantlyEnglish American Nigerian Pidgin Igbo and Yoruba and other Southern Nigerian languages such as Nupe and Ibibio 2 Others Edo Ibibio Anaang Efik Esan Urhobo Isoko Idoma Ijaw Kanuri Fulfulde Hausa Kalabari Igala Ikwerre Tiv Ebira Nembe Etsako Itsekiri and other languages of Nigeria 3 ReligionPredominantlyChristianity Protestantism Roman Catholicism Anglicanism Others Animism Islam Sunni Juju Nigerian Chrislam Odinani Yoruba religion agnosticism and atheism 3 Related ethnic groupsNigerian Canadians British Nigerians Nigerian Australians African Americans Igbo Americans Yoruba AmericansSimilar to its status as the most populous country in Africa 7 Nigeria is also the African country with the most migrants to the United States as of 2013 In a study which was carried out by consumer genetics company 23andMe which involved the DNA of 50 281 people of African descent in the United States Latin America and Western Europe it was revealed that Nigeria was the most common country of origin for testers from the United States the French Caribbean and the British Caribbean 8 Most Nigerian Americans like British Nigerians predominantly originate from southern Nigeria as opposed to the Islamic northern half of the country 9 Contents 1 History 1 1 Atlantic slave trade 17th century 1808 1 2 Modern migration 1960s present 2 Socioeconomics 2 1 Education 2 2 Income 2 3 Relations with other black Americans 3 Demography and areas of concentrated residence 3 1 US states with the largest Nigerian populations 4 Religious demographics 5 Traditional attire 6 Nigerian American ethnic groups 6 1 Igbo American 6 2 Yoruba American 6 3 Fulani and Hausa American 7 Organizations 8 Notable people 9 See also 10 References 11 Further readingHistory editAtlantic slave trade 17th century 1808 edit Further information Slave Coast of West Africa The first people of ancestry from what is now modern Nigeria to arrive in what is now the modern United States were brought by force as slaves 10 These enslaved people were not called Nigerians but were known by their ethnic nations due to Nigeria not being a country until the early 1900s after the slave trade was over Calabar and Badagry Gberefu Island Nigeria became major points of export of enslaved people from Africa to the Americas during the 17th and 18th centuries Most slave ships frequenting this port were English 11 Most of the slaves of Bight of Biafra many of whom hailed from the Igbo hinterland were trafficked to Virginia After 400 years in the United States and the lack of documentation because of enslavement African Americans have often been unable to track their ancestors to specific ethnic groups or regions of Africa Like Americans of other origins at this point most African Americans have ancestors of a variety of ethnic backgrounds Most of the people who were stolen from Nigeria were likely to have been Igbo or Yoruba 12 Other ethnic groups such as the Fula and Edo peoples were also captured and transported to the colonies in the New World The Igbo were exported mainly to Maryland 13 and Virginia 14 They comprised the majority of all enslaved Africans in Virginia during the 18th century of the 37 000 Africans trafficked to Virginia from Calabar during the eighteenth century 30 000 were Igbo 15 In the next century people of Igbo descent were taken with settlers who moved to Kentucky According to some historians the Igbo also comprised most of the slaves in Maryland 14 This group was characterized by high rates of rebellion and suicide as the people resisted and fought back against enslavement Many Nigerians of Igbo origin were also brought into the U S in the late 1960s as war refugees during Nigerian Civil War Some Nigerian ethnic groups such as the Yoruba and some northern Nigerian ethnic groups had traditional cultural identification marks such as tattoo and scarification designs These could have assisted a kidnapped and enslaved person who escaped in locating other members of their ethnic group but few enslaved people managed to escape the colonies In the colonies slavers tried to dissuade the practice of traditional tribal customs They also mixed people of different ethnic groups to make it more difficult for them to communicate and band together in rebellion 16 U S President Thomas Jefferson officially outlawed the Atlantic slave trade in 1808 although some enslaved Africans continued to be illegally smuggled into the country and the institution of slavery persisted until the American Civil War Modern migration 1960s present edit In modern times most Americans of unambiguous Nigerian ancestry are voluntary immigrants and their descendants 17 Various leaders of the Nigerian independence movement such as Eyo Ita Mbonu Ojike and Nnamdi Azikiwe were educated in the United States during the 1930s 1940s When President Lyndon B Johnson signed the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 U S restrictions on immigration from regions outside of Northwestern Europe were eliminated allowing for a greater number of Nigerians in the United States The modern generation of Nigerian migrants was initially motivated by the desire to pursue educational opportunities in undergraduate and postgraduate institutions in the United States During the 1960s and the 1970s aftermath of the Nigerian Civil War the Nigerian government funded the education of Nigerian students attending U S universities While this was occurring there were several military coups interspersed with brief periods of civilian rule The instability resulted in many Nigerian professionals emigrating especially doctors lawyers and academics who found it difficult to return to Nigeria 18 During the 1980s a larger wave of Nigerians immigrated to the United States 19 This migration was driven by political and economic problems exacerbated by the military regimes of self styled generals Ibrahim Babangida and Sani Abacha Other emigres comprised a large number of refugees fleeing on account of religious persecutions endless political unrests and ethnic tribal conflicts the presumption of Nigeria as a failing state or just to enhance the quality of lives for themselves and their families Ogbuagu 2013 The most noticeable exodus occurred among professional and middle class Nigerians who along with their children took advantage of education and employment opportunities in the United States This exodus contributed to a brain drain of Nigeria s intellectual resources to the detriment of its future Since the advent of multi party democracy in March 1999 the former Nigerian head of state Olusegun Obasanjo has made numerous appeals especially to young Nigerian professionals in the United States to return to Nigeria to help in its rebuilding effort Obasanjo s efforts have met with mixed results as some potential migrants consider Nigeria s socio economic situation still unstable Ogbuagu 2013b Since 1980 the estimated population of foreign born Nigerians has grown from 25 000 to 392 811 in 2019 4 5 Socioeconomics editEducation edit nbsp Oyekunle Olukotun Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Stanford University known as the father of the multi core processor 20 21 According to Rice University research Nigerian Americans are the most educated group in the United States 22 23 According to the 2008 2012 American Community Survey conducted by the U S Census Bureau 61 4 of Nigerian Americans aged 25 years or older hold a bachelor s degree or higher compared to 28 5 of the total U S population 24 The Migration Policy Institute reports that 29 of Nigerian Americans have a master s degree PhD or an advanced professional degree compared to 11 of the U S population overall 4 Nigerian Americans are also known for their contributions to medicine science technology arts and literature 25 Nigerian culture has long emphasized education placing value on pursuing academic excellence as a means to financial security 26 Examples of Nigerian Americans in education include Akintunde Akinwande Oyekunle Olukotun Jacob Olupona and Dehlia Umunna professors at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Stanford University and Harvard University respectively Recent famous examples include ImeIme Umana the first black woman to be elected president of the Harvard Law Review 27 Ngozi Okonjo Iweala the first woman to become the head of the World Trade Organization WTO 28 and Tanitoluwa Adewumi a homeless child refugee who went on to become a chess prodigy 29 30 31 32 33 Examples of Nigerian Americans in popular media include Dr Bennet Omalu portrayed in the 2015 film Concussion 34 and Emmanuel Acho host of the weekly activist webcast Uncomfortable Conversations with a Black Man 35 A large percentage of black students at highly selective top universities are immigrants or children of immigrants Harvard University for example has estimated that more than one third of its black student body consists of recent immigrants or their children or were of mixed race parentage 36 Other top universities including Yale Princeton Penn Columbia Rice Duke and Berkeley report a similar pattern 37 As a result there is a question as to whether affirmative action programs adequately reach their original targets African Americans who are descendants of American slaves and their discriminatory history in the US 36 According to the 2021 Open Doors report the top five U S institutions with the largest student population of Nigerian descent in no particular order are Texas Southern University University of Houston University of Texas at Arlington University of North Texas and Houston Community College 38 39 According to Institute of International Education s 2017 Open Doors report 11 710 international students from Nigeria studied in the U S during the 2016 17 academic year the 12th highest country of origin and highest of any African country 40 Income edit In 2018 Nigerian Americans had a median household income of 68 658 higher than 61 937 for all overall U S households 41 In 2012 Nigerian Americans had a poverty rate of 12 8 lower than the U S national average of 14 9 and lower than the total African American poverty rate of 27 2 42 43 Relations with other black Americans edit In 2017 sociologist Onoso Imoagene argued that second generation Nigerian Americans are forming a distinct diasporic Nigerian ethnicity rather than assimilating into the mainstream African American culture in contrast to what should have been predicted by segmented assimilation theory 44 Limited sociological research suggests that Nigerian Americans may have a more positive opinion of the American police compared to the broader black community 45 The Marshall Project and Prison Legal News have reported that the Texas Department of Criminal Justice heavily recruits Nigerians to serve as guards in Texas prisons where a significant proportion of the prisoners are black 46 47 Demography and areas of concentrated residence editSee also History of Nigerian Americans in Dallas Fort Worth nbsp African Languages Spoken in American Households 48 As of 2013 the World Bank estimated that 252 172 Nigerian migrants live in the US This is 23 of all Nigerian migrants the most of any destination country Nigerian migrants represent 0 5 of all migrants in the U S the 32nd highest of all U S source countries 49 US states with the largest Nigerian populations edit The 2016 American Community Survey estimates that 380 785 U S residents report Nigerian ancestry 5 The 2012 2016 ACS 6 estimates that 277 027 American residents were born in Nigeria It also estimates that these states have the highest Nigerian born population Texas 60 173 Maryland 31 263 New York 29 619 California 23 302 Georgia 19 182 Illinois 15 389 New Jersey 14 780 Florida 8 274 Massachusetts 6 661 Pennsylvania 6 371 North Carolina 3 561Religious demographics edit nbsp Nigerian Muslim association in Fort Greene Brooklyn New York nbsp Igbo Roman Catholics in the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels Los Angeles CaliforniaIn terms of religion the Nigerian community in the United States is split as approximately 70 practice Christianity while 28 follow Islam and the remainder practice other religions 2 disputed discuss 50 Traditional attire editAmong Nigerian Americans traditional Nigerian attire remains very popular 51 However because the fabric is often hard to acquire outside of Nigeria 52 traditional attire is not worn on an everyday basis but rather reserved for special occasions such as weddings Independence Day celebrations birthday ceremonies and Muslim Eid celebrations For weddings the fabric used to sew the outfit of the bride and groom is usually directly imported from Nigeria or bought from local Nigerian traders and then taken to a local tailor who then sews it into the preferred style Due to the large number of Nigerians living in America and the cultural enrichment that these communities provide to non Nigerians the traditional attire has been adopted in many parts of the country as a symbol of African ethnicity for example clothes worn during Kwanzaa celebrations are known to be very influenced by Nigerian traditional attire In recent years the traditional fabric has attracted many admirers especially among celebrities such as Solange Knowles 53 and most notably Erykah Badu On the fashion runway Nigerian American designers like Boston born Kiki Kimanu 54 are able to combine the rich distinct colors of traditional attire with Western styles to make clothes that are highly sought after by young Nigerian professionals and Americans alike 55 Nigerian American ethnic groups editNigerian Americans can be subdivided into Nigeria s three largest ethnic groups the Igbo Yoruba and Hausa Fulani Igbo American edit Main article Igbo Americans Igbo Americans are people in the United States that maintain an identity of a varying level of Igbo ethnic group that now call the United States their chief place of residence and may also have US citizenship Many moved to the US following the effects of the Biafran War 1967 1970 Yoruba American edit Main article Yoruba American Yoruba Americans are Americans of Yoruba descent The Yoruba people Yoruba Awọn ọmọ Yoruba are an ethnic group originating in southwestern Nigeria and southern Benin in West Africa The first Yoruba people who arrived to the United States were imported as slaves from Nigeria and Benin during the Atlantic slave trade This ethnicity of the slaves was one of the main origins of present day Nigerians who arrived to the United States along with the Igbos In addition native slaves of current Benin hailed from peoples such as Nago Yoruba subgroup although exported mainly by Spanish when Louisiana was Spanish Ewe Fon and Gen Many slaves imported to the modern United States from Benin were sold by the King of Dahomey in Whydah The native tongue of the Yoruba people is spoken principally in Nigeria and Benin with communities in other parts of Africa Europe and the Americas A variety of the language Lucumi is the liturgical language of the Santeria religion of the Caribbean 56 Fulani and Hausa American edit Main article Fula Americans Fulani and Hausa Americans are people in the United States that maintain a cultural identity of various levels from the Fulani and Hausa ethnic groups and now call the United States home Most speak Hausa Fulfulde as well as English fluently and Arabic on various levels The first wave of Fulani immigrants arrived as a result of the Atlantic Slave trade Recent Fulani and Hausa arrivals immigrated to the United States during the 1990s They now make up a large percentage of the Muslim communities across America Organizations editNigerian American organizations in the US include Houston Texas based Nigerian Union Diaspora NUD Society for Africans in the Diaspora SAiD Institute 57 Houston Texas based Nigerian American Multicultural Council NAMC namchouston org 58 Washington D C based Nigerian American Council or Nigerian American Leadership Council 59 The Alliance of Nigerian Organizations in Atlanta Georgia 60 The Nigerian Association Utah 61 The Nigerian Ladies Association of Texas NLAT 62 The Nigerian American Multi Service Association NAMSA namsa org 63 First Nigeria Organisation 64 United Nigeria Association of Tulsa 65 The Alliance of Nigerian Organizations in Georgia is an organization that tries to satisfy the interests of the community and represents all Nigeria nonprofit associations in the state such as Nigerian Women Association of Georgia NWAG 66 in tribal issues ethnic educational social political and economic Through the ANOG the Office of Nigerian Consulate in Atlanta reaches the Nigerian community associations 60 National Council of Nigerian Muslim Organizations in USA 67 The National Council of Nigerian Muslim Organizations is an organization that teaches Islam study the elements of religion favoring Muslim integration in the U S creating a Muslim American identity and promoting interpersonal relationships 67 Nigerian Ladies Association of Texas NLAT is an apolitical non profit formed by Nigerian women that promote fellowship community and family values NLAT is looking for ways to improve the lives of its members and their families and contribute to improving the life and development of Nigeria and the United States of America The association teaches its members on individual rights especially the rights of women creating media to promote respect for these rights to promote equality and peace between the sexes and establishes job opportunities for Nigerians living in Texas organizes and provides resources to women and children in Nigeria and the US teaches Nigerian culture to the new generations working with women s groups in the U S and drives programs to promote education and health services 62 and the Nigerian American Multi Service Association NAMSA provides services to community members 63 Nigerian Lawyers Association NLA Incorporated in 1999 the Nigerian Lawyers Association NLA NLA s principal objectives are to cultivate the science of jurisprudence 68 Its first president was John Edozie of Madu Edozie and Madu law firm NNAUSA is an organization for the Ngwa Diaspora in America 69 Nigerian American associations representing the interests of determined groups include The Association of Nigerian Physicians in the Americas 70 ANPA Igbo studies association USA Nigerian Nurses Association USA 71 Ogbakor Ikwerre USA Inc is a non profit organization of Ikwerre indigenes residing in the United States of America and Canada We are committed to the survival and prosperity of the Ikwerre people and the entire Ikwerre community OIUSA is an incorporate body that was founded on July 6 1996 in Los Angeles California The organization is incorporated in the city of Atlanta Georgia but headquartered in Los Angeles Membership comprises individuals and associations that subscribe to OIUSA vision Members come from all over the 50 states in the US and Canada Nigerian Student Association 72 Notable people editMain article List of Nigerian AmericansSee also edit nbsp Nigeria portal nbsp United States portalIgbo Americans Yoruba Americans Africans in the United States African immigration to Latin America History of Nigerian Americans in Dallas Fort Worth List of topics related to Black and African people Nigeria United States relationsReferences edit https www migrationpolicy org sites default files publications RAD Nigeria pdf Shobola Adeola Ayodeji March 2010 Scrambling for greener pastures and family disintegration in Nigeria IFE PsychologIA 18 1 221 236 doi 10 4314 ifep v18i1 51664 hdl 10520 EJC38787 a b Ogbaa Kalu 2003 The Nigerian Americans ISBN 9780313319648 a b c The Nigerian Diaspora in the United States PDF Migration Policy Institute June 2015 Retrieved July 5 2020 a b c Table Archived from the original on February 14 2020 Retrieved October 24 2019 a b Data Archived from the original on February 13 2020 Retrieved October 24 2019 Archived copy Archived from the original on October 29 2017 Retrieved December 25 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Micheletti Steven J Bryc Kasia Esselmann Samantha G Ancona Freyman William A Moreno Meghan E Poznik G David Shastri Anjali J Agee M Aslibekyan S Auton A Bell R August 6 2020 Genetic Consequences of the Transatlantic Slave Trade in the Americas The American Journal of Human Genetics 107 2 265 277 doi 10 1016 j ajhg 2020 06 012 ISSN 0002 9297 PMC 7413858 PMID 32707084 Gaudio Rudolf P 2011 The Blackness of Broken English Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 21 2 230 246 doi 10 1111 j 1548 1395 2011 01108 x Nigeria The Slave Trade Retrieved August 13 2015 Sparks Randy J 2004 The Two Princes of Calabar An Eighteenth century Atlantic Odyssey Harvard University Press p 39 ISBN 0 674 01312 3 Ethnic Identity in the Diaspora and the Nigerian Hinterland Toronto Canada York university Retrieved November 23 2008 As is now widely known enslaved Africans were often concentrated in specific places in the diaspora USA Igbo Languages in America 25 along with Kru and Yoruba U S ENGLISH Foundation Inc Archived from the original on May 25 2009 Retrieved May 8 2009 a b Chambers Douglas B March 1 2005 Murder at Montpelier Igbo Africans in Virginia University Press of Mississippi p 23 ISBN 1 57806 706 5 Chuku Gloria October 2006 Review of Chambers Douglas B Murder at Montpelier Igbo Africans in Virginia H Atlantic H Review retrieved April 21 2022 Ethnicity and the Slave Trade Lucumi and Nago as Ethnonyms in West Africa A Rising Share of the U S Black Population is Foreign Born April 9 2015 Nigerians in Chicago Posted by Charles Adams Cogan and Cyril Ibe Encyclopedia of Chicago Retrieved May 2 2013 Pongou Blessing U Mberu Roland June 30 2010 Nigeria Multiple Forms of Mobility in Africa s Demographic Giant migrationpolicy org Retrieved May 27 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Schubarth Cromwell February 27 2020 New Palo Alto chip unicorn s valuation nearly tripled to 2 5B www bizjournals com The Silicon Valley Business Journal Retrieved February 14 2021 SambaNova founded by alumnus Kunle Olukotun emerges from stealth mode with AI accelerated HPC system Michigan Engineering December 17 2020 Retrieved February 14 2021 Casimir Leslie May 20 2008 Data show Nigerians the most educated in the U S Chron Retrieved February 14 2021 African immigrants adapt well The University of Kansas June 18 2020 Retrieved June 3 2021 Detailed Look at Sub Saharan African and Caribbean Ancestry The United States Census Bureau Retrieved February 14 2021 The Most Successful Ethnic Group in the U S May Surprise You OZY June 7 2018 Retrieved February 14 2021 Adenle Tola June 13 2011 Why do immigrant kids perform so well in America 2 The Nigerian example Retrieved April 14 2013 Alexandra Larkin February 28 2017 130 year old Harvard Law Review elects its first African American woman president CNN Retrieved September 20 2020 Leon Concepcion de February 5 2021 Ngozi Okonjo Iweala Set to Become W T O s First Female Leader The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 14 2021 USA and UK prodigies clash in online match www fide com Retrieved February 14 2021 The 9 Year Old Prodigy Tanitoluwa Adewumi vs Hikaru Nakamura in Puzzle Rush Hikaru Nakamura archived from the original on December 22 2021 retrieved February 14 2021 10 year old Chess Prodigy Plays Blindfold chess24 archived from the original on December 22 2021 retrieved February 14 2021 Chess TanitoluwaAps116 vs GM Hikaru Chess com Retrieved February 16 2021 Kasparov Garry Opinion The heart warming tale of the 8 year old chess champion is quintessentially American Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved February 16 2021 Brett Favre on making football more safe Don t play archived from the original on December 22 2021 retrieved September 20 2020 A Conversation with the Police Uncomfortable Conversations with a Black Man Ep 9 YouTube www youtube com Archived from the original on December 22 2021 Retrieved February 14 2021 a b Rimer Sara Arenson Karen W June 24 2004 Top Colleges Take More Blacks but Which Ones New York Times Retrieved June 26 2011 Johnson Jason B February 22 2005 Shades of gray in black enrollment Immigrants rising numbers a concern to some activists San Francisco Chronicle 10 674 Nigerians studying in the US highest in 30 years TheCable Thecable ng November 15 2016 Retrieved October 24 2019 Population Of Nigerian Students In US Ranks First In Africa 10th Globally Sahara Reporters November 16 2021 Retrieved April 21 2022 Places of Origin iie org Archived from the original on November 15 2017 Retrieved October 24 2019 U S Could Actually Use More Nigerian Immigrants February 5 2020 Sub Saharan African and Caribbean Ancestry Groups Who s poor in America 50 years into the War on Poverty a data portrait Imoagene Onoso 2017 Beyond Expectations Second Generation Nigerians in the United States and Britain Akinropo Akinniyi Ademola 2018 Perception of Nigerian Immigrants of Police and Policing in the United States Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies Texas Lawmakers Surprised over Hiring of Non Citizen Prison Guards on Work Visas Prison Legal News Nigerians are Flocking to Work in Texas Prisons June 3 2015 African languages spoken in American Households United States Census Bureau Migration and Remittances Data Archived from the original on December 23 2017 Retrieved December 25 2017 Bayor Ronald H July 22 2011 Multicultural America An Encyclopedia of the Newest Americans 4 Volumes ISBN 9780313357879 Nigerian Traditional Attire Nigeria in USA Retrieved April 21 2022 Clothing The Peopling of New York City macaulay cuny edu Retrieved April 21 2022 KaKKi KaKKi Solange Knowles African Prints Retrieved August 13 2015 Designer Biography Kiki Kamanu Clothing OnoBello com Latest in Fashion Beauty News Features and Events Archived from the original on April 13 2014 Retrieved April 11 2014 Kiki Kamanu Retrieved August 13 2015 date December 2017 2 Houston groups connect Blacks to African roots www khou com Nigerian American Multicultural Council namchouston org Nigerian American Council Archived from the original on July 9 2017 Retrieved April 18 2020 a b Itoro E Akpan Iquot Home Page Alliance of Nigerian Organizations in Georgia USA ANOG Retrieved August 13 2015 Association of Nigerians in Utah USA Retrieved August 13 2015 a b Nigerian Ladies Association of Texas Retrieved August 13 2015 a b NAMSA Nigerian American Multi Service Association Retrieved August 13 2015 Nigerians in Chicago Rise Against Boko Haram Nigerian American Business Retrieved August 31 2014 United Nigeria Association of Tulsa Archived from the original on November 18 2013 Retrieved June 26 2013 Nigerian Women Association of Georgia NWAG Retrieved August 13 2015 a b National Council of Nigerian Muslim Organizations in USA https nigerianlawyers org Nigerian Lawyers Association http ngwanational org Ngwa National Donia Robinson Gold Star Web Sites LLC Association of Nigerian Physicians in the Americas Home Retrieved August 13 2015 Nigerian Nurses Association USA Home Retrieved August 13 2015 Harvard Nigerian Students Association harvardnsa wordpress com Archived from the original on May 7 2019 Further reading editEmeka Amon Just black or not just black ethnic attrition in the Nigerian American second generation Ethnic and Racial Studies 42 2 2019 272 290 Ette Ezekiel Umo Nigerian Immigrants in the United States Race Identity and Acculturation Lexington Books 2012 Ogbaa Kalu The Nigerian Americans Greenwood 2003 Ogbuagu B C 2013 Diasporic Transnationalism Towards a framework for conceptualizing and understanding the ambivalence of the social construction of Home and the myth of Diasporic Nigerian homeland return Journal of Educational and Social Research 3 2 189 212 Doi 10 5901 jesr 2013 v3n2p189 ISSN 2239 978X http www mcser org journal index php jesr article view 157 Ogbuagu B C 2013 Remittances and in kind products as agency for community development and anti poverty sustainability Making a case for Diasporic Nigerians International Journal of Development and Sustainability 2 3 1828 1857 Online ISSN 2186 8662 www isdsnet com ijds ISDS Article ID IJDS13052905 Rich Timothy You can trust me A multimethod analysis of the Nigerian email scam Security Journal 31 1 2018 208 225 online Sarkodie Mensah Kwasi Nigerian Americans in Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America edited by Thomas Riggs 3rd ed vol 3 Gale 2014 pp 329 341 online https isdsnet com ijds v2n3 13 pdf https www isdsnet com ijds v2n3 html https isdsnet com ijds v2n3 13 pdf Retrieved from https en 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