The Future Is Female: Centering African Women in Leadership and Development

Lady Diana Eyo-Enoette
Not all diplomats wear suits, some wear purpose – DeeEnvoy
“Africa cannot claim development while silencing half its population, women are womb of Africa carrying our history, present and future.” Lady Diana.
A few weeks ago, Nigeria made headlines with the “Reserve Seats for Women” Bill, which seeks to mandate 35% female representation in federal and state assemblies. For a country where women currently occupy less than 5% of legislative seats, this is more than policy reform — it is a bold and overdue disruption of a system that has historically sidelined women’s voices in governance.
But let’s be clear: this conversation goes far beyond numbers. It is not just about filling seats, it is about power, visibility, and voice in shaping the nation and, by extension, the continent’s future.
If half of Africa’s population remains absent from decision-making tables, can we truly claim inclusive governance? Can we attain or even sustain development under such conditions? The African Union echoes this urgency through its Agenda 2063, which envisions “an Africa whose development is people-driven, relying on the potential of African people, especially its women and youth, and caring for children.”
Equitable representation is not charity; it is strategy. It is acknowledging that women are not just beneficiaries of policies, they are architects of solutions. When women lead, communities prosper.
Research consistently shows that countries with higher female participation in governance experience lower corruption rates, stronger social policies, and greater economic stability.
So yes, this bill is significant. But it is only the beginning of a broader battle to dismantle the structural and cultural barriers that have, for far too long, treated African women as passengers in vehicles they should be co-driving.
Breaking Structural Barriers
For centuries, leadership spaces have been gated by culture, politics, and policy designed like exclusive clubs where women are permitted only on the margins. Women are often told to “wait their turn” or are funneled into roles that complement male leadership rather than compete with it. The system builds pathways for women to be assistants, deputies, or ceremonial figures, while reserving real power for men.
This exclusion is not random; it is structural, intentional, and deeply entrenched. It is reinforced by patriarchal norms that define leadership as masculine, by political parties that marginalize female aspirants, and by legal frameworks that fail to enforce gender equality. Even educational and financial systems conspire in silence, limiting women’s access to the skills, resources, and networks required for leadership.
The result? Women often work twice as hard for half the recognition, navigating spaces that were never designed for them in the first place. And when they do rise to the top, they are treated as exceptions, not the norm celebrated for breaking barriers that should never have existed at all.
The barriers are clear:
• Patriarchal norms that dictate leadership as a male prerogative.
• Educational inequity limiting the pipeline of female leaders.
• Financial exclusion — women entrepreneurs receive less than 10% of venture funding in Africa.
• Political gatekeeping — party structures often marginalize female aspirants.
And when these systemic issues converge, women are left with symbolic representation, not substantive power.
Traditional and Emerging Models of African Women’s Leadership
Queen Amina of Zazzau (present-day Zaria in Kaduna State) stands as one of the most iconic warrior queens of pre-colonial Nigeria, expanding her kingdom through strategic conquests and establishing trade routes that strengthened economic power. Her reign was marked by diplomacyand military brilliance a reminder that women have never been strangers to governance or strategy.
Similarly, in Yorubaland, Queen Moremi Ajasoro of Ile-Ife is celebrated for her courage and sacrifice in liberating her people during inter-tribal wars, shaping one of the most defining narratives of Yoruba history. Among the Igbo, Women’s War of 1929 (also called the Aba Women’s Riots) saw thousands of women rise against unfair colonial taxation and systemic injustice, forcing policy reversals and setting a precedent for organized female activism in Nigeria.
Beyond Nigeria, history echoes across the continent: Yaa Asantewaa of Ghana led a resistance that defied British imperial forces, and Uganda’s Queen Mothers wielded spiritual and political authority for centuries. These examples dismantle the myth that leadership is foreign to African women. It is not ability they lack, it is access, and it is the systems that deny them space today while glorifying their strength in history.
Fast forward to today, African women are leading multinational corporations, driving grassroots peace initiatives, and championing policy reforms. Think of Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala at the WTO or Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Africa’s first female president. These are not exceptions, they are reminders of what is possible when women are allowed to lead.
Why This Matters for Africa’s Development
Here’s the undeniable truth: countries that invest in women’s leadership invest in progress.
The evidence is overwhelming, when women lead, societies thrive. The World Bank projects that closing gender gaps in the workforce could inject $316 billion into Africa’s GDP by 2025. That’s not charity; that’s strategy.
Research consistently shows that women-led governments prioritize social services, education, and health, creating stronger, more resilient communities. Corruption rates are lower where women hold political office, because integrity, inclusivity, and accountability often define their governance style.
Conversely, when women are excluded from leadership, nations pay a steep price — in poverty, inequality, and insecurity. The lack of diverse perspectives in decision-making leads to policies that ignore half the population and perpetuate cycles of marginalization.
Beyond Policy: A Call for Mindset Shift
But let’s be clear, laws alone will not dismantle centuries of bias. Reserved seats and quotas are critical, but they cannot fully deliver equality without a cultural revolution that liberates leadership from the prison of gender stereotypes.
We must normalize women at every decision-making table in politics, business, academia, and technology. Leadership must be seen as competence-driven, not gender-assigned.
The question is no longer:
“Can women lead?”
History has answered that — from Queen Amina of Zazzau to Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.
The real question is:
“What happens when we continue to fail to let them?”
The cost of exclusion is too high for a continent that dreams of transformation. And the time for token gestures has passed. Africa’s development will rise or fall on whether it truly centers its women.
Africa Always,
Lady Diana Eyo-Enoette
Honorary Consul & Special Envoy on Sustainability | London Embassy to Africa (Sovereign
Kingdom of Hawaii).