Federation Maps and Fact Sheets for Nigeria
- Federalism introduced in 1954
- Current federal Constitution adopted in 1999
![]()
| Label | Data |
|---|---|
| Official name | Federal Republic of Nigeria |
| Population | 131,859,731 (2006 est.) |
| Capital | Abuja |
Constituent units
- 36 states: Abia; Adamawa; Akwa Ibom; Anambra; Bauchi; Bayelsa; Benue; Borno; Cross River; Delta; Ebonyi; Edo; Ekiti; Enugu; Gombe; Imo; Jigawa; Kaduna; Kano; Katsina; Kebbi; Kogi; Kwara; Lagos; Nasawara; Niger; Ogun; Ondo; Osun; Oyo; Plateau; Rivers; Sokoto; Taraba; Yobe; Zamfara.
- Federal Capital Territory of Abuja
Constitutional distribution of powers
- Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, in particular:
- Powers of the National Assembly:
- Chapter I, Part II, subsections 4[2], 4[3], 4[4]
- Second Schedule, Part I: Exclusive Legislative List
- Second Schedule Part II: Concurrent Legislative List
- Powers of the states:
- Chapter I, Part II, subsection 4[7]
- Second Schedule, Part II, Concurrent Legislative List
- Powers of the National Assembly:
Legislative Institutions
- Federal: Bicameral National Assembly consisting of a Senate and a House of Representatives. The Senate represents the states. The senators are directly elected by the people; there are three from each state and one from Abuja Federal Capital Territory.
- National Assembly of Nigeria, composed of:
- Senate; also Fact sheet on the Senate of Nigeria;
- House of Representatives
- National Assembly of Nigeria, composed of:
- States: Each has a legislature (House of Assembly)
Official languages
The Constitution states that English must be used in both houses of the National Assembly and, when appropriate measures taken, also Hausa, Ibo and Yoruba. The Constitution also stipulates that a state assembly may, along with English, use one or more languages spoken in that given state.
- Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria: Articles 55 and 97
