Colloquium

Building a Professionally Socialized Immigration Bar: A Comparative Case Study

By Jayanth K. Krishnan & Kunle Ajagbe
March 1, 2026

Nigeria faces urgent immigration challenges, but unfortunately, it has failed to develop a professionally socialized immigration bar to address these issues. While immigration legal work exists, particularly for high-net-worth investors and undocumented laborers, Nigerian lawyers have not formed a cohesive, specialized professional community around immigration law.

Drawing on theories of legal professional socialization, this Essay argues that formal education, mentorship, peer networks, and institutional pathways are essential to fostering specialization. Yet these elements are largely missing in Nigeria, where immigration law is marginalized both doctrinally and institutionally.

This Essay begins by exploring how legal education in Nigeria rarely encourages immigration specialization and offers limited coursework, clinical opportunities, and exposure to immigration-related career paths. It then examines the deficiencies in Nigeria’s immigration regulatory framework and judicial infrastructure, noting the continued subsumption of immigration matters under administrative or criminal law categories. Further, this Essay analyzes the near absence of a professional association or peer network for immigration lawyers in Nigeria, which prevents the field from developing the internal norms and support systems that facilitate specialization.

The final part considers whether fee-paying and pro bono work could incentivize lawyers to enter the field and whether the formation of a professional immigration bar would meaningfully improve access to justice for both business and humanitarian migrants. The Essay concludes that professional socialization is not merely desirable, but essential: without it, immigration law in Nigeria will remain fragmented and invisible, unable to meet the country’s legal, economic, or rights-based needs.