Nigerian wins prestigious Samuel Huntington Award at Cornell University

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Nigerian-born Tolani Yesufu ’21 has been bestowed with the 2021 Samuel Huntington Award alongside three other recipients.

Yesufu, a recent graduate, who is the sixth Cornellian in the history of the award, was honoured for the years she invested in social outreach work.

The Samuel Huntington Public Service Award provides a $20,000 grant to graduating seniors to pursue a yearlong public service project and she plans to direct it into a medical clinic in the Surulere area in Lagos, Nigeria, as the latest project in the Ameliorating Health in Africa initiative, a nonprofit she co-founded.

The proposed medical clinic is expected to be funded through various other grants and subsidized medical fees, in addition to partnering with the Health Emergency Initiative, a local nonprofit that finances medical treatments to patients in need.

Meanwhile, the Lagos State government will provide a building for her operations in the state.

Yesufu’s partner, Treasure Nwokeleme ’21, having both co-founded the Ameliorating Health in Africa initiative in June 2020, an organization that hopes to build the clinic as part of its mission to provide affordable health care to 10 million Africans before 2025 expressed delight at the feat.

The pair learned of the Samuel Huntington Award from Dennis Nyanyo ’18, a previous recipient and fellow Cornell student who won the award his senior year.

Nwokeleme and Yesufu also have a history on PPE distribution to frontline workers in Lagos and Osun State, as well as on a Office of Engagement Initiatives funded Violence Against Women project, a webinar program and social media group for survivors of sexual assault.

Yesufu’s adviser, Prof. Bruce Raymond Johnson, neurobiology and behavior, called her one of the best Cornell students he has ever had and was pleased with the results of the competitive award process.

In her reaction, Johnson said “I was extremely excited. This seems to be sort of the culmination and things kind of coming together for her, for the clinic,

“I’m not sure that there are many of us who have the kind of resilience that [Yesufu] has to pop back up, keep working and be a very friendly and personable person too.”

Yesufu now has a foundation and experience to run her proposal, having founded several social outreach programs throughout her time at Cornell addressing health and wellbeing in Lagos.

Amongst other, she has taken entrepreneurial lessons to heart throughout her Cornell career, from classes such as Graduate Management Business Administration 3000: Designing New Ventures, Graduate Management Business Administration 5380: Business Idea Factory and Hotel Administration 4140: Corporate Entrepreneurship.

“If we’re trying to develop in whatever area and however form, entrepreneurship has to be at the center of it and then social entrepreneurship takes the profit motive from it,

“As long as it’s solving that problem, and you can get it done, it’s gonna happen.” Yesufu had said.

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