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Law

‘Kingship, like governance, is about communal wellbeing’

Prince Olawale Adeyemi, is a lawyer, governance expert, and royal scion of Ijebu Ode. He earned a Juris Doctor and an Executive LL.M. in Securities and Financial Law from Georgetown

‘Kingship, like governance, is about communal wellbeing’
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Author 18290
April 7, 2026·5 min read
  • Lawyer: why I want to be Awujale

Prince Olawale Adeyemi, is a lawyer, governance expert, and royal scion of Ijebu Ode. He earned a Juris Doctor and an Executive LL.M. in Securities and Financial Law from Georgetown University and Hofstra University. In this interview with Anne Agbi, he speaks on the heritage, law and his vision for Ijebuland.

Too many aspirants claimed relationship to Fusengbuwa. How are you related to Fusengbuwa Ruling House of Ijebu Ode?

Few men approach a royal throne carrying both verifiable ancestry and a career forged across continents. I am Prince Olawale  Adeyemi, a direct male-line descendant of the Olufadeke/Obanlefa Abidagba, the most senior lineage of the Fusengbuwa Ruling House is one such figure.

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Why does your claim to the Awujale throne carry such weight?

Lineage in Ijebuland is not a matter of personal assertion. It is a matter of record. I descend through the male line from the Olufadeke/Obanlefa Abidagba male unit, the first and most senior Abidagba lineage of Awujale Fusengbuwa, widely recognised as the highest succession line within the Fusengbuwa Ruling House. A letter held at the Ibadan Archives, dated February 15, 1929, addressed to the colonial Resident of Ijebu Province, speaks to the enduring strength of that claim. Our family’s place in the royal order has never been in question.

Tell us more about your royal family background that gives you this confidence to aspire for the throne of Awujale?

My grand-uncle, Prince Bashiru Olumade Adeyemi, contested the stool in 1983. I was raised by my grandfather, Prince Fasasi Adebisi Adeyemi, who served as Olori-Ebi of the Fusengbuwa Ruling House for twenty-five years. The current Olori-Ebi, Alhaja Risikat Olorunosun (a.k.a “Agbakeke Adinni of Ijebuland” also known as “Mama Oni”), has since designated me as the most meritorious male descendant of the lineage to steward this legacy. This is a generational calling and not a recent ambition.The throne is not an ambition you wake up with one morning. For our family, it has been a responsibility carried across generations and a calling that you either honour or abandon.

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You studied and worked in the United States for decades. You are also a legal practitioner. How does that prepare you for kingship?

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I left Nigeria on scholarship to study Economics, Finance, and English Literature, then earned a Juris Doctor and an Executive LL.M. in Securities and Financial Law from Georgetown University and Hofstra University. The combination was always purposeful. A good king must understand markets, governance, and law as readily as he reads the mood of his people. My tenure as Senior Counsel at the United States Securities and Exchange Commission, where I received multiple Chairman’s Awards, taught me that authority without accountability is corrosive. The SEC’s mandate of investor protection and market integrity mirrors what kingship demands: fairness, sound judgment, and the capacity to balance competing interests in the public good. I have spent my career doing exactly that, in different contexts.

What does Ijebuland need most, and how do tradition and progress coexist under your leadership?

Infrastructure and entrepreneurship are urgent. Without consistent electrification, small businesses cannot grow. Without small businesses, there is no self-sustaining local economy. Ijebu people have always been commercially astute — we do not need to manufacture that spirit, only the environment to scale it. Through Adomi Advisory Group, I have worked on fintech and cultural tourism initiatives across Africa. Ijebuland’s cultural identity is an untapped economic asset. As for tradition, I reject the premise that it is at odds with progress. Our tradition is not a handicap. It is a foundation. I was raised in Ijebu-Ode, schooled in its culture, and it was that discipline and community ethic that became my competitive advantage everywhere I went.

What other areas are you looking at to transform Ijebu Ode and Ijebuland?

Youth empowerment and interfaith harmony are central to my thinking. A throne that does not speak to the young, or that excludes any of its people, is not a throne of the people. Kingship, at its best, is governance: the management of competing interests in pursuit of communal wellbeing. I have spent my entire professional life doing exactly that.

What do you say to those who questioned whether a man who spent years abroad can truly steward Ijebu traditions?

Look at the record. I was born and raised in Ijebu-Ode. My grandfather shaped my formative years. My wife, Princess Temilade Remi-Adeoye, is the daughter of former Alawuren of Oke Lamuren, Oba Remi Adeoye a.k.a. Rod Publicity. My ties to Ijebu royalty are deep and documented.

The Awujale throne has always been occupied by men who combined tradition with the best tools of their age. Today, those tools include international finance, legal governance, and the digital economy. I bring all of that and I bring it home.

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