Power, Fairness, and the Architecture of Electoral Advantage - A Rawlsian Reflection Nigeria’s democracy has always been a choreography of hope and hesitation: a dance between the promise of popular sovereignty and the reality of political engineering. As the country approaches the 2027 general elections, the terrain is once again shifting beneath the feet of voters and political actors alike. The movements are not linear; they are squiggles: messy, erratic, and often deliberately drawn to confuse the eye. To understand these squiggles, it helps to borrow from John Rawls’ famous thought experiment: the Original Position , where rational actors design the rules of society from behind a Veil of Ignorance , unaware of whether they will emerge as powerful or powerless. In such a scenario, fairness becomes the only rational choice. No one would design a system that could later be used against them. But in Nigeria, the actors designing the rules are not behind any veil. They are fully ...
What a Diverse World?