A Policy Analysis of Nigeria’s University Admission Quota System: Rurality and the Reproduction of Structural Inequalities

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Abstract

This article offers a critical and historically grounded analysis of Nigeria’s university admission policy by interrogating its claims to equity through the lens of rural student representation. It draws on as reported by Bowe et al. (Reforming education and changing schools, Routledge, London, 1992) policy cycle model, and reframed to examine how inclusion is constructed, mediated, and ultimately undermined across four key dimensions: context of genesis, articulation, mediation and outcome. The current admissions policy allocates places through a single quota framework comprising merit, catchment, and Educationally Less Developed States (ELDS). Although designed to balance representation across ethnic and regional divides and meritocracy, this article argues that these provisions mask rather than remedy structural exclusion. Rural students are misrecognised within state-centric categories, with gendered and spatial inequalities rendered invisible by the policy's silence on intersectionality and its reliance on technocratic parity. Through critical analysis and interpretive engagement with policy texts, the paper reveals how administrative logics reproduce colonial legacies of segmentation, transforming the rhetoric of equity into a performative gesture. The article concludes by advocating a paradigmatic shift towards a justice-based model of inclusion, one that centres rurality not as a logistical anomaly, but as a historically situated and politically urgent axis of educational reform.

Original languageEnglish
JournalHigher Education Policy
Early online date15 Sept 2025
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 15 Sept 2025

Data Availability Statement

This study used secondary sources of information.

Acknowledgements

I would like to express my sincere gratitude to my project supervisor, Professor Michael Donnelly, whose guidance, expertise, and invaluable feedback were essential throughout the course of this research. His support and encouragement have greatly enhanced the quality of this work.

Funding

This work was supported by the University of Bath and the ESRC under the South West Doctoral Training Partnership.

FundersFunder number
Economic and Social Research Council

Keywords

  • Higher education access
  • Postcolonial inequality
  • Rural education
  • Spatial justice
  • University admissions policy

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Education
  • Sociology and Political Science

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